tv CBS This Morning CBS October 20, 2016 7:00am-9:00am EDT
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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is thursday, october 20th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning.? a hard hitting final pren stunning remark. norah and gayle are in las vegas. >> donald trump refuses to say he'll accept the election results and he accuses hillary clinton of weakening border security. >> clinton says that trump would be the russian's president's puppet. >> scam artists scam students demanding thousands of dollars to pay a phony tax. and tiger woods tells
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mistakes in his marriage and his one regret. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. >> do you make -- you will absolutely accept the result of this election? >> i'll tell you at the time. i'll keep you in suspense. >> donald trump won't vow to honor election results. >> that's horrifying and i, for one, am appalled that somebody who is the nominee of one of our two major parties, would take that kind of position. >> surely, he is not thinking about tryinto but it threatens the very foundations of what this nation is about. >> why do you think he did it, mark? >> i'm certain it's not the answer they rehearsed. >> a helicopter in the air firing guns. >> iraqi and u.s. forces make new gains in the fight to retake mosul. >> what is becoming clear this is going to take a lot longer than thought. >> in portland, oregon, a powerful natural gas explosion destroyed a building in a shopping district and injured
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firefighters. >> scary. >> officials in the philippines are warning typhoon could produce catastrophic effects. >> the city is already getting hammered. >> ball game! cleveland, for the sixth time ever! you will have a world series. >> all that. >> we are going to secure the border but we have some bad hombres here and we are going to get them out. >> that is defensive. it's defensive. >> why didn't he just say bad dudes? >> because there are dudes that would be offended! >> and all that matters. no regard for law enforcement in america. this time, defying not the fbi, but the fashion police by wearing all white after labor day! >> on "cbs this morning." >> lock her up! >> leading up to the debate, trump is repeatedly said this election is rigged and i got to say, there was some evidence tonight. look what it says behind hillary.
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you can't make that up. rig! announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places! ? welcome to "cbs this morning." norah and gayle are at the site of last nice's debate in las vegas. margaret brennan joins york. the argued over the economy and their plans to fight isis and choosing supreme court justices. but donald trump made the biggest headline. he refused to say if he will accept the outcome of the election if he does not win. >> in a cbs news battleground tracker poll out this morning, 63% of likely voters who watched the debate said the candidates should promise to accept the election results. 49% of likely voters in battleground states believe
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trump won and 12% call it a tie. norah and gayle led our prime time coverage last night and they join us from the debate site at the university of nevada-las vegas. very early good morning to the both of you! >> yeah. >> good morning, margaret. >> good morning margaret and charlie. that's right. people were stunned when donald trump suggested that he might try to challenge the election if it doesn't go his way. >> there was an audible gasp in the room when he said that and that is a comment everybody is still talking about this morning. but that is not all the the major garrett is outside the thomas & mack center with the biggest moments from last yit. >> reporter: night. >> reporter: a deep dive in the issues. character and taxes entitlements the federal debt and the disagreements fell along lines well established during this campaign but one thing stood out. something that really debates haven't disagreed about before, whether this election would be conducted fairly and the results
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prepared now to -- without principle? >> what i'm saying is i'll tell you at the time. i'll keep you in suspense j joo donald trump would not promise to accept the results of the presidential election and transfer peaceful transition of power. >> i'm not looking at anything now. i'll look at it at the time. >> that is every time things are not going donald's direction he thinks it is rigged. >> reporter: the gop nominee will reserve judgment until all votes are cast. >> he has the prerogative to wait and see how the election comes out. >> absent widespread fraud and irregulars? we will see. >> the stories are all totally false. i have to say that i think they want either fame or her campaign did it and i think it's her campaign. >> reporter: clinton said trump's answer revealed his true character. >> donald thinks belittling
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he goes after their dignity, their self-worth, and i don't think there is a woman anywhere who doesn't know what that feels like. >> reporter: quoting from stolen private e-mails, trump accused clinton of wanting to weaken border security. clinton said the bigger issue was russian espionage. >> will donald trump admit and condemn that the russians are doing this? >> that was a great pivot off the fact that she wants open borders, okay? how did >> because he would rather have a puppet as president. >> no puppet. you're the puppet. >> it's pretty clear you won't admit. >> you're the puppet. >> reporter: the puppet show was one of the iffy edge liners. >> he started tweeting that the emmys was rigged when he didn't get it. >> i sat in a beautiful hotel
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things about you and, boy, was he right. >> my social security payroll contribution will go up as will donald's if he can't figure out how to get out of it. >> such a nasty woman. >> several republicans we talked to afterwards gave trump solid remarks for his debate performance and said they weren't sure that trump did enough to win this election last night but may have done enough to keep it close and they said that could help down ballot senate races. one top republican told me the difference between a four-point loss and 12 honor point loss could be five senate seats and majority control. >> thank you, major. we saw the candidates challenge each other's ideas throughout the debate but some of the claims on both sides were off the mark. nancy cordes is in the debate spin room to do some fact checking, starting with donald trump. >> reporter: good morning. well, for the third debate in a row, donald trump expressed doubt that russians are behind
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democratic groups. that put him at odds, not just with clinton, but with the entire u.s. intelligence community. >> she has no idea whether it's russia, china or anybody else. >> i have 17 -- >> have you no idea. >> 17 -- do you doubt 17 -- >> you have no idea. >> military and intelligence agencies. >> reporter: in this case, clinton had it right. two weeks ago, the u.s. intelligence community announced it is confident that the russian government directed the recent compromises of on the issue of immigration. >> hillary clinton wanted the wall. hillary clinton fought for the wall in 2006. >> reporter: trump said clinton agreed with his signature proposal. >> i voted for border security and there are -- >> the wall. >> reporter: we rate trump's claim as partially true. as senator, clinton did vote for a bill to have 700 miles of fencing along the southern border but not a massive wall as
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trump accused clinton last night of hiring people to disrupt his rallies. >> she's the one and obama that caused the violence. >> reporter: the truth on that score is unclear. democratic contractors were caught on video appearing to plan to provoke trump supporters but there is no indication clinton's campaign paid for it or even knew about it. as in previous debates, trump denied making some controversial comments that are immortalized on video. >> ed that he could not possibly have done those things to those me attractive enough for them to be assaulted. >> i did not say that. believe me. she would not be my first choice, that, i can tell you. >> he also went after a disabled reporter, mocked and mimicked him on national television. >> i don't remember! he is going, i don't remember! >> reporter: clinton argued last night that her proposals on infrastructure, education, wouldn't add a penny to the national debt.
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she would actually add about $200 billion to the debt over ten years. gayle, they say that is still far less than trump who would add 5.3 trillion to the debt over that same time period. >> that is obeying differea big. now back to charlie and margaret in new york. norah, gayle. senator tim kaine is with us from charlotte, north carolina. senator, good morning. >> good morning, guys. >> reporter: what is your trump that he may not respect the election results? and if he does not, what happens? >> well, charlie, that was the big shocker of the evening. there were others, but, you know, i lived in honduras as a missionary 35 years ago and a military dictatorship. i certainly learned there that one of the central pillars of our democracy is people accepting the outcome of elections and the peaceful transfer of power.
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campaign where he has insulted everybody else and now he is going to insult a very central premise of our democracy was a huge shocker. i don't exactly know what it means. but it definitely means this. everybody should turn out and vote. early voting starts in north carolina today. let's send the biggest mandate we can so that his whines after the election do not attract any followers. >> senator, i asked this last night in post-debate coverage. i don't do t that? >> i don't have any idea, although i think hillary may have gotten at something, which is he doesn't take responsibility for stuff. and so if something doesn't go his way, he's not going to say i guess i should have ran a better campaign, i guess he shouldn't have been so divisive. he is going to blame it on everybody else and hillary used the example of him not winning an emmy and he jumped back in and saying i should have won the emmy that year. he doesn't now how to take responsibility.
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to be a good president. >> respectfully, senator, this made it all the way to the supreme court in 2000 when al gore contested the election results. does he not have a point in some way to say let's see what happens and then i'll make a judgment? >> if all he had said during the entire last few weeks is, of course, we are going to see what happens on election day, this wouldn't be controversy but he is going around again and again perpetrating a lie that the election is rigged. he is saying that over and over ai losing. and it's insulting to voters to look him in the face and say, you guys don't know how to conduct an election, to look at county and state election officials, you don't know how to conduct an election. we do know how to conduct elections. we do it. that is why his comment last night was so shocking. >> senator, 38% of the those we polled in battleground states say that clinton, they don't necessarily believe, tells the
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convince them otherwise. how do you do that? >> i think what we do is we almost use that closing argument that hillary made last night. when chris kind of gave them a chance to sum up. hillary just pointed out she has a lifetime track record of serving other people with a special focus on family and kids. what i say about this question on the trail is the best way to tell somebody's character in politics is look and see if they have a passion that showed up in their life before they ran for office, and whether they have held on to tpa throughout their life. hillary clinton has a passion. she is going to wake up every day focusing on how her family and children are doing for a barometer for how is the larger society doing. donald trump has a passion but the passion is himself. it's not to serve other passion that hillary clinton put on display last night and that she has demonstrated throughout her career. >> senator, thank you. let's go back to norah and gayle in las vegas with cbs news
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nation" moderator john dickerson. >> lots to talk about in last night's debate. >> here we are again. >> we have heard this song. >> we have gone through the "rigged" discussion which is depressing to hear that from a nominee. >> it's depressing for this reason. there are irregularities in election, sure. but donald trump is overstating the case to undermine the legitimacy of the election either to get himself out of what he thinks is a bad result you, watch out. go into niece neighborhoothese neighborhoods and cities. he is doing this all before the vote ever happened. the reason that sent shock waves through republican ranks is it's another sign of unpredictability from donald trump he is going to kick out a pillar of democracy because things aren't going his way and that is -- i mean -- this is one in a series not just -- >> many on team trump are
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>> al gore did it after the election. this is happening before the election. >> he was not claiming that the election was rigged at the time either? >> no. he was debating -- >> looking -- >> look at this case and this is doing it all beforehand and what he said in the debate which is not that, you know, is on top of everything he has been saying out on the stump which he has been using to rile up his voters so it has this double power. >> donald trump went into this debate behind. we saw in the cbs poll last night, people think she outreach. he has lost on ground. was he able to make any outreach last night? she was punching on every issue. >> she was. >> trade, abortion, guns. i mean, she was punching on everything. >> she was and he was doing we vl on his goals which is to basically point out she has been in the mix for 30 years and hasn't succeeded. his argument is change. the problem with the story about rigged is that the challenge with donald trump is always is it too much change? is it change that turns into chaos?
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so it's more -- it suggests he is a more risky candidate and that is what has worried the voters who haven't jumped into the trump camp. they always worry he is too risky. that was a risky answer. >> today, hillary clinton is getting high marks for her chronological take-down of donald trump and did years of experience and decade by decade of what she has done and ending saying i was in the briefing room for the assassination of al qaeda and he was screening room for "the apprentice." >> those who like donald trump is because he was off doing something else. the people who like donald trump thinks he has some rough edges but he can come in and use the business success. i thought his response to that was good. i've been off building a big brand and employing lots of people. i thought he pivoted quite nicely to his answer. >> his frustration seem to come
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she is a very nasty woman. >> particularly after having saying i have great respect for women and that is an undermine in the debate. >> that was a laugh in the room when he said i have great respect for women and ending with nasty women. not good. >> we have a lot more from las vegas coming up. bob schieffer with join us. now back to studio 57. iraq's prime minister says the battle to retake mosul from isis is going more quickly than expected. the military offensive advanced villages on the outskirts of iraq's second largest city. holly williams is with troops taking on the militants north of the city. >> reporter: good morning. i'm about 12 miles north of mosul where these kurdish forces have launched a new attack against isis this morning. they are trying to recapture 27 villages and then get within five miles of mosul. there are two villages over here controlled by the extremists and, this morning, we have seen
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with artillery. we have also seen two isis drones in the air this morning. very small. we don't know where they were armed but certainly the kurdish troops shot them down very quickly. earlier this month, two kurdish fighters were killed by an isis drone that was loaded with explosives. we have also seen iraq's elite special forces move into position east of they are trying to recapture several christian towns and villages along the main road into mosul. battalion commander with the special forces, we spoke with one of their officers who bragged they would be inside mosul within a matter of hours. the reality, though, it is very slow going clearing these towns and villages, even though most of their residents fled a long time ago. imagine how much more difficult it's going to be to retake
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where are tiger woods gets interview. >> here is what is interesting about you, more than any golfer -- any athlete i know. it's not just you, it's us. we can't let you go. i mean, there is a sense that we never -- >> oh, you care? >> well, yes! ahead the golf great talks about his marriage and how he plans to find new ways to win at age 40. the news is back in the morning
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you love all-day breakfast. but you don't love that you can't get all your favorites. but now you can get more of what you love. so you can find something else to not love. ? the definitive moment of the evening of the election of the american experiment came when chris wallace asked donald trump if he would accept the results of the election o and trump had this to say. >> are you saying you're not prepared now to -- to that principle? >> what i say is little tell you at the time and keep you in suspense. >> trump's controversial statement about not accepting the result of the election i do not envy his campaign manager kellyanne conway. i have information she is taking questions about it from reporters in the spin room.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning.? we will check back in with norah and gayle in las vegas in our next half hour. first, my candid conversation with golf legend tiger woods. he opens up about his struggles on and off the course and whether he still has the ability to win another major. plus, the irs impersonation scheme targeting college students and their parents. michelle miller talks to one victim who ahead how to make sure it doesn't happen to you. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. britain's "telegraph" reports on russia's. they will take part in the final assault on aleppo. russian backed the syrian backed government heads of the city. an investigation of a national security agency contractor.
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largest case of mishandling classified documents in u.s. history. top secret hacking tools used by the ns, were included trove of stolen documents in the contractor's home in august. they were offered on sale on the internet two months ago. so far, investigators have been unable to determine if the hacker sold the information or whether his computer was hacked. condemning the skilling of a officer. the woman shot tuesday after swinging a baseball bat at the police sergeant in her apartment. the officials say procedures for handling the mentally ill were not followed. the sergeant's badge and gun were taken away. forbes reports on tesla building all its vehicles with self-driving technology. tesla said self-driving hardware will be standard on vehicles going into production next year and at some point the vehicles
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time. tiger woods has a new time line for his return to the game. we sat down yesterday afternoon for a rare interview. the first time he has sat down for our interview. the tiger woods foundation is turning 20. we spoke about his struggle to come back after a series of injuries, the fallout from controversies involving his marriage and the one decision that remains his single biggest regret. when do you think you'll come back? >> i'm hoping to come back? december. >> you >> you believe you can do that? you'll be ready? something will happen between withdrawing from safeway and competing there? >> more hard work. >> reporter: more hard work? >> there it is. a win for the ages! >> reporter: here is what is interesting about you more than any golfer or any athlete i know. it's not just you, it's us. we can't let you go. there is a sense we never -- >> oh, you care? >> well, yes! there is a sense that we never understood how it was to be so
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we didn't get how one could be so dominant in a sport. we didn't understand how you could lose that either. you thought about that? >> of course, charlie. i miss being out there. i miss competing. i miss being with the boys and coming down the stretch. >> you like being tiger woods? >> i like beating those guys. and that is what i -- that is why i practice all of those hours is to be ready to take on those guys down the stretch. and do i miss absolutely. 100%. and to be at my age now at 40 years old, i'm the first one to admit, i can't do the things i used to be able to do, but most people can't at my age versus when they were younger. i have to find different ways to go about it. >> you have to find other ways to win? >> yes, i do. but i'm naturally a tactician. even when i was hitting the ball long and blowing over the top of bunkers that was the strategy. so i used my mind and eventually
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master my craft. >> but you used your mind and you learned that, you know, at -- you learned that from your father, i assume. >> correct. >> you learned mental toughness. you learned how to win. you still have that, don't you? >> oh, yes. that part hasn't left me. i know how to get it done. i just need to get into position to get it done. >> god, tiger! >> reporter: some have said to be a -- gift and a burden. how is it a burden? >> it's a burden in the sense the amount of obligations i have at a tournament. am n am nimity of what i lost. i regret not spending another year at stanford. >> that is the only regret? >> the only regret i have. >> of all the things that happened? the only thing? >> of all the things i've learned, been through, are tough, yes, they have been tough
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i wish i would have gone one more year at stanford. >> would you be the golfer you are without your dad? >> no. >> you would not be the champion that you became? >> without my dad or my mother, no way. >> both of them? >> no way. >> because your mother stood by you and you stood by him in. >> my mother was so supportive and loyal and so great as a mother, there is no way. >> she was also supportive after thanksgiving 2009 y public humiliation. some would suggest that humiliation, you withdrew, publicly. your private life exposed. has a lingering effect on your mind and your game. >> i've heard that too. >> i know. >> i made a bunch of mistakes but in the end, elin is my ex-wife. she is one of my best friends. we have two beautiful kid.
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together? >> because daddy made some mistakes. daddy made some mistakes and i'd much rather have them hear it from you. >> you've sat down and said i regret what i did? >> no, no, i haven't said that. i said everybody makes mistakes and the reason mommy is living in her house and daddy is living in his house is because daddy made mistakes and it's okay. >> you will all of the tools but the mental stuff was so important. you wanted to win and you wanted to win and y want to win. you didn't just want to win that tournament, you wanted to beat the hell out of everybody who was there. that is your mindset you had. you were a killer. >> winning was fun. beating somebody is even better. >> why is that? >> i don't know. i've always had that. you know, if you win a race, you win a meet by a second or two, it sure feels a lot better if you win it by five or six. you know?
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throwing no-hitters are even better. >> do you believe you'll get 18 majors? >> to be honest with you, no. >> you don't? >> no. >> you've accepted that? >> i've accepted i'm going to get more! >> in our next hour, we will hear about the memorable dinner tiger shared with arnold palmer and you can see the full conversation tonight on my pbs program. he is a warrior. whether he'll be able to come back, only he knows. he believes so but he also knows h >> i love that winning is fun, but beating someone is always better. he is fierce. >> that is why he became what he was. he basically says, i don't have more ability. i don't have more strength. i don't have more talent. i just worked harder and that is what he believes will get him back. >> interesting to watch, charlie. thieves are trying to steal thousands of dollars from college students and their parents. ahead, how irs impersonators are researching their victims to
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this morning" podcast on itunes and apple's podcast app. today, we have more of jan crawford's interview with anonymous food inspector from the michelin guy. why she says it's better than working with food. with my moderate to severe ulcerative colitis, the possibility of a flare was almost always on my mind. thinking about what to avoid, where to go... to me, that was normal. until i talked to my doctor. she told me that humira helps people like me get uc under control and keep it under control when certain medications haven't worked well enough. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure.
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fections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. raise your expectations. ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, control is possible. (burke) at farmers, we've seen almost everything, so we know how to cover almost anything. even mer-mutts. (1940s aqua music) (burke) and we covered it, february third, twenty-sixteen. talk to farmers. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two.
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? ? more college students and their parents are finding themselves the victims of an ongoing phone scam. in this scheme, thieves impersonate irs officials over the phone. they demand payment for fal student taxes that simply do not exist. over the last three years, taxpayers have lost more than $49 million in irs impersonation scams. michelle miller talked to a victim of this latest hoax. >> reporter: good morning. casey davis is a good student. a senior about to finish up at quinnipiac university in connecticut. she doesn't usually answer unrecognized calls but on the second ring, they got her. threatening her with arrest and
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her college degree if she didn't pay up. >> they really had me wrapped around my finger, believing every single word they were saying. >> reporter: casey davis thought she knew better but the quinnipiac journalism measure joined the growing list of students scammed by irs imposters. >> i knew like deep down this was real weird but they kept giving me evidence. the number they were calling from was the hamden police and told me all information and my address here at at >> reporter: so they had done some digging on you? >> way beyond digging. >> reporter: calling from a fake number that showed up as a local police station and armed with her personal information, the scammers threatened arrest if she did not pay $2,900 for a federal student tax, a tax that doesn't exist. >> they basically told me to resolve this or your life is over, in a way. >> reporter: how did they get you? >> i don't know! >> reporter: and while she may have been fooled into giving the
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system was not. >> never thought it would happen to us. >> reporter: tipping off her father, billy davis, who manages her account. that is when he frantically started texting her. >> i just felt that something was definitely wrong. >> reporter: he couldn't reach casey because her scammers kept her on the phone for four hours. she drove various miles to various stores paying in this unusual way. >> $$2,000 on one card. >> reporter: in all she handed over $7,900 in gift cards from target and itunes. during the ordeal, her father could only helplessly watch as the fraud alerts rolled in. as a dad, a parent, not to be able to help your child. >> it hurt. >> they are very persuasive. they are also aggressive so they intend to intimidate people into staying on the phone.
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spokeswoman for the irs. she says the only way to thwart attackers is to educate the public. >> it's most important for you to protect yourself from becoming a victim is knowing the signs. >> reporter: for example, the irs does not call to demand money in a specific form by phone. they don't threaten immediate arrest and will never ask for credit cards or personal information over the phone. casey davis says she is embarrassed, but wants others to learn from her mistake. mental strain and the financial burden that i went through, i would be completely, like, honored to do so. >> reporter: now police say they can't find casey's scammers because this type of thief typically demands payment through untraceable mode. the latest trend, these gift cards. how does it work? the victims are ordered to scratch off the back of the card and read out this sequence of numbers. as casey learned, the hard way,
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purchases and casey said while she was told to pay in gift card raised a red flag, the con artists had an elaborate explanation for her every single time she asked them a question. the point is you call in. they call in this number and they are able to transfer the money on this card to one they already have in their possession. >> they kept her on the phone four hours? >> it's unbelievable, it really is. >> michelle, thank you. scary moments in the cockpit. ahead, what happened when part of a plane's to come down high above oklahoma city.
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managed to touch down. then the nose tilted down and dragged along the runway. one then propeller kept spinning. the one pilot on board was not hurt. >> thankfully! hillary clinton and donald trump clashed in their final debate. ahead, we will look on the focus group of undecided voters. bob schieffer joins norah and gayle out in las vegas to show us where the campaign could go from here. you're watching "cbs this morning." now that karen's taking osteo bi-flex, she's noticing a real difference in her joint comfort... "she's single." ...and high levels of humiliation in her daughter. in just 7 days, your joint comfort can be your kid's discomfort. osteo bi-flex. made to move.
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? it is thursday, october 20th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? more real news ahead, including the final presidential debate. donald trump refuses to s he will accept the election results. norah and gayle are in las vegas with bob schieffer's reaction. first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. one thing stood out whether this election would be conducted fairly and the results respected. genuinely thinks the election is rigged. >> he made light of it all to keep people in suspense. >> why do you think he said
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else. >> does he not have a point to say let's see what happens? >> he is going around again and again perpetrating a lie because he know knows he is losing. >> many comparing it to al gore. is that a fair comparison? >> al gore did it after the election. this is happening before the election. >> his frustrating seemed to come through when he said she is a very nasty woman. >> particularly after saying i have great respect for women. >> people say have another debate with you and jill stein and maybe another candidate. >> we did and that doesn't go anywhere. >> maybe do it with your shirt off. >> maybe. >> there was even a time when he didn't get an emmy for his tv program three years in a row and he started tweeting that the emmys were rigged. >> i should have got it. >> is that trump's first order of business is going to be? emmy reform? >> donald, you really should get one. they are fantastic!
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i'm charlie rose with margaret brennan. norah and gayle are at the site of last night's presidential debate in las vegas. they will talk about bob schieffer in a moment. 63% of likely voters in battleground states who watched the debate say the candidate should promise to accept the election results, according to a new cbs news poll. >> donald trump refused to make that promise last night. but he and hillary clinton spent most of their final debate sparring over substance. >> we ar board a border and once that is secured we will make a determination as to the rest but we have bad hombres here and we are going to get them out. >> i want to get everybody out of the shadows and get the economy working, and not let employers like donald exploit undocumented workers which hurts them and also hurts american workers. >> we are a country of laws. we either have a border or we don't. now you can come back in and become a citizen.
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security and in effect a grand bargain on entitlements? is. >> i'm cutting taxes. we are going to grow the economy and grow at a record rate. >> that will not help the entitlements. >> it will totally help you. one thing we have to do is repeal and replace the disaster known as obamacare. >> we need to put more money into the trust fund and my payroll and social security will go up even donald's when he figures out how to get rid of it. >> sufficiech a nasty woman. >> that will come from raising the cap and/or finding other ways to get more money into. i will not cut benefits. >> if you go with what hillary is saying in the ninth month,
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mother just prior to the birth of the baby. now you can say that that is okay and hillary can say that is okay but it's not okay with me. >> that is not what happens in these cases and using that kind of scare rhetoric is just terribly unfortunate. the government has no business in the decisions that women make with their families in accordance with their faith with medical advice and i will stand >> one of the prides of this country is the peaceful transition of power and that no matter how hard-fought a campaign is, that at the end of the campaign, that the loser concedes to the winner, in part, for the good of the country. are you saying you're not prepared now to conduct to that principle? >> what i'm saying i will tell you at the time. i will keep you in suspense. >> clinton called that answer from trump horrifying. let's go to norah and gayle out in las vegas and they are
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schieffer. >> thank you, margaret. bob, it's very interesting to see the reaction from team trump. they are almost doing a cleanup on aisle three because last night, they were saying, look, what he meant to say is what he was really saying. and this morning they are making it clear, yes, he will accept the results. >> well -- >> but not what he said. >> as i said last night, you got to say something. they have tried to get him off this thing for two weeks and he kept going back to it and going back to it. the interesting thing to me, though, is this -- last night, somebody e-mailed me last night and said this is shockingly substantive at the beginning of this debate. but the thing about those tv cameras out there, you leave them on long enough and they are going to tell you something about who a person really is. we saw donald trump evolve into what many people think he is and that is someone who is simply not temperamentally suited for
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"wall street journal" and his column this morning said when he said he wouldn't let us know if he would accept the results of the election, he called it the most shockingly disgraceful statement by a presidential candidate in 160 years. >> the way he delivered it too, bob. it was petulant i'm keeping you in suspense. >> he was secretive about it and is all about and makes this so dangerous. he gave the impression last night maybe he doesn't care what the process is. to me, he showed no respect for one of the foundational parts of the american political system. >> the nonpartisan commission wanted a deep drill-down on the issues and i think we got that last night. as you said, bob, the supreme court out of the box, the issue of the second amendment, the
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wade. what do you think of trump's answer to that? >> when he said you're willing to rip a baby out of the womb at nine months, no woman carries a child for 8 1/2 months and then decides she wants to have an abortion. the abortions that happen at that period are usually about the life of the mother. nobody does that. and that is just -- that's just horrible to even contemplate. >> did you consider it about you consider it a good debate? because there were a lot of issues, a lot of issues that were covered. there was a lot of give and take. shouldn't a debate, at times, be contentious? i thought it was an excellent debate because these debates are not always just about issues. they are about taking the full measure of a person. we got the full measure of hillary clinton and donald trump last night. and, you know, one thing that has been completely overshadowed by this controversy over him not accepting the results, what is
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where in the united states is the constituency for making that argument? i just simply don't understand what that is all about. >> i think charlie has a comment. >> bob, there is a sentiment, i think in the country, when is this going to be over? i think you, in fact, said that. but my question. after this debate, what is the narrative for the rest of the campaign? >> well, i don't think we should expect anything but what we have seen so far. i mean, his obviously, trying to turn the page. but i saw nothing last night that indicated that he is going to change in any way, shape, or form. as to what it's going to be over, not soon enough for me. that would be the answer on that one. and i'm a guy who spent his whole life covering politics. >> november 8th! >> i was thinking that too. we will still be here. >> what is fascinating early voting starts in two days for nevada and they have a front row seat. >> glad to hear it!
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tiger woods has been thinking about how he stacks up against jack nicklaus. ahead, more of my conversation with the golf legend. what he says about the possibility of surpassing his record of 18 major tournament wins. our residents liza donnelly is back in our green room. she sketched last night during the presidential debate. you can see all of them on instagram. we will be right back. an opening night on broadway is kind of magic. i'm beowulf boritt and i'm a broadway set designer. when i started designing a bronx tale: the musical, i came up...
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when powerful people need someone to do their dirty work, they hire bob buesing. how far will he go? buesing fought to foreclose assisted-living retirement homes, threatening local seniors with homelessness. then, buesing defended wells fargo against charges of helping buesing's firm was even accused of overbilling local schools , running fees up to seventy thousand dollars. tampa bay is amazing. i work here, i raise my kids here, now, buesing's running for senate. i even take care of my mom here. but you know what? i could use a hand. hey! we hear you! it's why a-a-r-p is supporting family caregivers like you
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live, work and play for people of all ages. if you don't think "this is right for me" ? we are in nevada which is one of the battleground states that will decide who lives in the white house. cbs news contributor and republican strategist frank luntz invited 26 invited registered voters to take part in a focus group. five leaned clinton and five trump and 15 no preference. one refuses to support either candidate. they all watched the final
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the people at home, which candidate's performance tonight had the biggest impact on your vote. 3-2-1. and it was a tie. that was different than the other debates that we had. i want to illustrate this. i want you to describe donald trump's performance tonight. >> struggled. >> low. >> inadequate. >> passionate. >> flip it. what is a phrase to describe hillary clinton tonight? >> presidential. >> confident. >> snooze fe >> more believable. >> politician. >> frank luntz is with us. so did this debate help decide for any of them how they will vote? >> i don't think much change in the polling based on what we saw here. those who were leaning towards trump or considering him moved in that direction. the same thing with hillary clinton. they have seen it all. they have heard it all. and they don't like either candidate. i mean, that is the key component of these uncommitted
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like either candidate and they are forced to choose, the lesser of two evils. >> like you're voting against something as opposed to for it. you did a dial test. the red lines represent the voters leaning towards donald trump. clinton leaning voters are in the green lines and yell for ow the undecided. the higher the number the more they like the candidate's answers and this is where hillary clinton responded to trump's claim of a rigged election. >> that is not the democracy works. we have been around 240 years and we have had free and fair elections and we have accepted the outcomes when we may not have liked them and that is what must be expected of anyone standing on a debate stage during a general election. you know, president obama said the other day -- >> translation, please? >> it worked for everybody. the public doesn't want a sore loser. this is one of the dumbest things quite frankly -- >> you mean hillary clinton's answer worked for everybody? >> hillary clinton said what americans were thinking at that
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committing to whatever the final results are? they may be upset with what the candidate say and may not necessarily agree with them but when the election is over, it's over. >> in the next clip, donald trump attacks hillary clinton while she was secretary of state. let's watch. >> the problem is you talk but you don't get anything done, hillary. you don't. just like when you ran the state department. $6 billion was missing. how do you miss $6 billion? you ran the state $6 billion was either stolen. they don't know. it's gone. $6 billion dollars. if you become president, this country is going to be in some mess. believe me. >> well, first of all -- >> we have a fact check on cbsnews.com about that particular charge. how did the voters react? >> it's accountability. the number one attribute they want in their elected officials and don't think it exists. every time one holds the other accountable, it's successful and
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moments of the debate. >> the issue of gun control also came up last night. we did a dial test on that one too. >> i think we need comprehensive background checks. we need to close the online loophole and close the gun show loophole. there is other matters that i think are sensible that are the kind of reforms that would make a difference that are not in any way conflicting with the second amendment. you mentioned the -- >> did that work for her? >> it worked for her. the whole social issue opening. she was crushing him in the first 10 or 15 minutes on abortion, on guns, because they found her positions to be mo centrist. >> we did talk more about substance last night. immigration, watch that clip. >> we need strong borders. we need absolute -- we cannot give amnesty.
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the border control, i.c.e. they all want the wall. we stop the drugs and shore up the border. >> clearly he did well, but what about when he used the phrase bad hombres out? that was trending. >> that was trending. people did not like that. people were offended by that. >> the interesting thing when he talks about a wall, it always comes down just a little bit. but when he talks about protecting america, fighting for america, that is one of the key components for both candidates. people saw them as fin that term specifically. then they were dialing them up. if they thelt this was either about politics or personality, they dialed them down. >> in most of the polls that we have been taking overnight, hillary clinton was the winner. but in your group, donald trump was a winner. what did your group see that other people didn't? >> it was a tie. even those polls, it's only been six, eight, ten-point difference. it was really close. >> the cbs news poll is ten
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won, saw her as being presidential. those who saw donald trump won, saw him as bringing about change. >> thank you, frank. >> thanks. >> always good to see you. >> thank you. >> now back to the studio in new york. >> thank you. mother nature isn't usually known for her comedic moments. up next, animals caught in their most hilarious moments on camera. you're watching "cbs this morning." if your sneezes are a force to be reckoned with... you may be muddling through allergies. try zyrtec? for powerful allergy relief. and zyrtec? is different than claritin?. because it starts working faster on the first day you take it. try zyrtec?. muddle no more?. we asked woman to smell two body washes and pick their favorite. i prefer b. b.
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? the finalists are out for the 2016 comedy wildlife photography awards. the winner gets to go on a safari to kenya. the pictures capture funny moments in bear getting slapped by a fish. a meerkat that seems a little frustrated. and a fox who got his head stuck in the snow! the winner will be announced next month. >> it may be that one. m.i.t. is pushing the boundaries in ground breaking research. why alzheimer's could be possible in the founder's lifetime.
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>> that is tom cruise and cuba gooding jr. with james corden on "the late late show with james corden.." >> coming up this half hour, the massachusetts institute of technology, mit, has just set a new world record in nuclear energy. it's part of a research campaign to make a better world. m.i.t.'s president is in the toyota green room with the ground breaking developments in energy and medicine. alson actor matt leblanc. the star of "friends" now plays a father of three in the new comedy "man with a plan." ahead, how being a dad in real life helped him prepare for that part. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. the cleveland plain dealer says the city will be the epi center of the sports world next tuesday. the indians will host the opening game of the world series that night. they clenched the american league pennant yesterday by beating the blue jays in
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banner before the team's nba season opener. cleveland wants more than a half century without a major pro sports title before the cavaliers won last spring. the "chicago tribune" reports on opening night for the chicago production of the smash hit musical "hamilton." a sold-out crowd at the private bank theater yesterday and hamilton creator lin-manuel miranda was on hand at the curtain call. he thanked chicago for welcome. more of my conversation with tiger woods. as a teenager, he struck up a conversation with arnold palmer. the two remained close until arnold palmer's death. arnold palmer died within the last couple of weeks. what did he mean to you? >> he was a friend. he was a friend. and a person that would pick up the phone and call and probably one of the fondest memories i have was at napa. i was in college and arnold
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an arnold picks up the tab, you know? i'm not going to say, i'm a college student, i'm going to pick up my tab, but it's arnold palmer. i end up -- my coach found out. did you pick up the tab? no, arnold did. i reported to the ncaa. i'm declared ineligible. i have to write arnold palmer a check, $25 for my steak dinner. he has to cash the check. fax the copy back to was declared eligible to play in the all-american. >> how about jack nicklaus? do you believe he is the greatest golfer ever to live? >> i think i'm pretty good too. >> better than nicklaus? >> i think he and i would have a hell of a duel back in the day. >> do you think he is better than you even though he has 18 and you have 14? >> i think right now i could kick his ass. >> right now? >> yeah, he is 71. >> it's true!
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something? >> you think? no. but i think that jack has always been one of my heroes. i looked up to him and i looked at his record. >> have you lusted for his record? >> i wouldn't say that. i think that was the gold standard. because he had won the most majors and the second most tour events. here he is at 18. >> and you're at 15? >> 14, correct. >> you believe you'll have more than 18? >> correct. >> and if you don't, y w >> i didn't get there. >> my conversation with tiger woods, first time he had ever done that. >> amazing. >> he really was -- you got a sense of who he was and the drive that has made him great. fascinating insight, i think, into an athlete's mind. and work ethic. my conversation with tiger woods is tonight on my pbs program. i hope you'll join us there.
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of technology, m.i.t., is known for its ground breaking research and innovation. m.i. tich m.i.t. announced its nuclear reactor set a record. researchers on the campus are also trying to develop a meltdown nuclear reactor and the focus on clean energy. m.i.t. president rafael reif said the following. we welcome rafael reif to studio 57. good morning. >> good morning. thank you for having me, margaret. >> a meltdown proof nuclear reactor only sounds like a good thing, but do you see more willingness in this country to rely on nuclear power as clean energy? >> i would say not right now.
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coming out of the m.i.t. and other places are better understood. i could see how it can change the perception of people and feel a little more comfortable with something like nuclear reactors. >> talking about that, talking about what we are going to talk about with respect to alzheimer's, reminds us that universities are research too. they are a place where remarkable ground breaking research is taking place, other than just teaching. >> well, i would say -- i would say yes but add one more thing. there is plenty of tch plenty of research, but there is plenty -- the research produces results that produces innovation that can lead to clean energy and so forth, but negs to that, with the research and the teaching come educated people who are the ones that move the ideas from academia to the marketplace to our society. >> well said. you also believe we may find a cure? is that the right word? for alzheimer's in your lifetime? >> for the work i've seen by moo
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we will see a treatment, if not a cure, for alzheimer's dog my lifetime, correct. >> when will that happen? >> when will that happen? first of all -- let me just say this much. at m.i.t., in places like m.i.t., you can actually see the future. you can really see the future. but it's not clear that that future will actually happen. so we need support from the system, from the system of research and innovation for that future that we can see in a marketplace. so the fact that i see that we are closer and closer to have a cure for alzheimer's, or for innovation for clean energy, that is not guaranteed. that does not mean it will move to the market. >> so are you also concerned about science funding from the government? >> correct. i think we have the best innovation and consistent in the world. the whole world is trying to imitate us.
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one is support from the federal government for basic research. that is the mother of all innovation, the source of everything. and that has been eroded year by year for the last ten years or so even longer. that research produces lots of innovation. we need to make sure that that innovation moves to the marketplace, to make an impact to society. those are the two areas which we have to pay attention to. >> are you saying only the government has the scale to do scale to do that. there is no way philanthropy organizations can support that kind of search. >> if we don't although do that we lose our leadership in science and in medicine? >> we will absolutely lose our leadership. we are on our way to losing our leadership if we are not careful. right now, our economy, our i innovation and known-based economy is benefiting from federal funding research -- >> your position in the world?
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economics, one of your professors. you had two m.i.t. linked men up for the nobel peace prize as well. what does that kind of recognition do to solve this deficit in funding? >> well, we speak -- we have the podium and the microphone to speak about this issue because we understand it, but we need people who are willing and open-minded to understand these point of view. >> thank you, rafael re thank you, charlie. >> thank you. >> from nuclear science to hollywood. matt leblanc has always been one of our favorite friends. >> fine! take their advice. don't ever listen to me. when the package is this pretty, don't care what is inside! >> we are proud to say he is now joining the cbs family on the new sitcom "man with a plan." he'll join us to discuss his
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rip-offs, and long-term contract traps. that's the right way to do solar. amendment 1: good for the economy. i spent many years as a nuclear missile launch officer. if the president gave the order we had to launch the missiles, that would be it. i prayed that call would never come. [ radio chatter ] self control may be all that keeps these missiles from firing. [ sirens blearing ]
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er service, head t to your neiborhood enterprise car sales and let the people who buy more vehicles than anyone... flip your thinking about buying your next one. ? ? welcome to my house ? actor matt leblanc of "friends" fame is coming to cbs with a new comedy "man with a plan." he has a dad who spends more time with his kid when his wife goes back to work. >> headphones off and everybody line up. >> what? >> line up. i can't believe i have to
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your stuff everywhere? >> we always do. >> who cleans it up? >> mommy. >> and she is not upset about that? >> i don't know. >> okay. well from now on, hang your backpacks up and clean up the truck before you get out and close the door! that's right! any questions? >> matt also serves as executive producer on the series. we are pleased to have him. welcome. >> thank you. this character, the show that made you want to be executive producer and play this role? >> well, i had been doing episodes for showtime which is, you know, cbs is a parent company of showtime and we did about nine episode a year for the last five years. i wanted to kind of whet my whistle for going back to work. i wanted to do more and i really missed the sort of sitcom format in front of a live audience.
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so such and it's chronological story telling like theater. i met with some writers and i'm not getting any younger and i've never played a dad and i am a dad and i never played a guy in a relationship, so i thought this was the time to sort of make that next step. and i know jeff and jackie, we sort of saw eye-to-eye on an idea for a show and to play this guy who is more involved in his kids' lives and it was their idea that my wife go back to work and sort of flush the whole i think it's pretty fun. we are proud of it. >> great. >> how many real-life moments on rin the in this? you are a dad, as you had. >> it's a combination. we have a writing staff and some of them have kids and jeff and jackie have kids and i have kids and sort of everybody tossing ideas into the ring. some of it is -- you know, kids are funny. kids, when they are little, there is no filter. if they don't want to spend time with you, they say, "i don't
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no, oh, i got -- >> no spin. >> the answer is no. >> they want to spend more time with their kids than with their parents. >> it's brutally honest and that sometimes stings. >> are you a hands-on dad? >> pretty hand-on. >> your character says funny dad times. >> prior to the pilot, my wife was a stay at home mom for 13 years and in the pilot, the youngest of our in kindergarten full-time so she wants to go back to work. prior to that, i've been daddy fun times. i was only there after i got home from work and the kids were all sort of cleaned up from school and on their best behavior when dad gets home. now i get to see sort of behind the curtain, like you will. like "the wizard of oz" you see what it's like behind the curtain how awfully it is to be a parent sometimes. >> matthew perry, do you see him
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stuff. they are a tuesday night show and they shoot on tuesday night and we shoot on friday nights so the schedules are exact opposite. our long days are his short days and vice versa. >> any guest appearances in the works? >> not that i know of just yet, but uncle moonves does ask. >> why was "friends" so successful? we got not much time. >> i think "friends" was a show, are there were six individuals that represented six very different types of people so everyone could sort of identify with people would say, oh, my mother is just like phoebe or that is like me or my brother is like that. you know? so it gave you -- which is ironic because they say the birds of a feather flock together and it was birds of absolutely not the same on that feather. >> i think that gave us a very broad demographic and it was funny and it had heart.
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funny tend to be, in my opinion, the more favorite ones. >> it's now streaming on netflix? >> yes. that's true. still going. >> yes. >> do people call you joey ever? >> all the time. >> that role continues to define you? >> that's okay by me. that was ten years we were all really proud of it and it's not something i try to get away from. i mean, it's just something that will follow me forever. i could think of worse things to be called. >> good luck, matt leblanc. thank you. man with a plan on cbs monday, 8:30, 7:30 central. >> dash cam video up next shows a heroic and life saving response.
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out to the prairie and tied him to a split-rail fence, then beat him some more and left him for dead. in the aftermath of matt's death, my family saw the best of america in the love and support we were shown. so when i see the hate that donald trump has brought to his campaign for president, it terrifies me. i'd like to punch him in the face, i'll tell ya. ahh, i don't know what i said, uhh, i don't remember. he's a mexican. i could stand in the middle of fifth avenue and shoot somebody, and i wouldn't... words have an influence. hate can rip us apart.
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this is mike's office. if he doesn't show up, he doesn't get paid. too often marco rubio didn't show up and failed us when he did. i am patrick murphy. to get things done, you've got to show up. you've got to work together. whether it's protecting social security and women's health care or growing the economy, we've got to start solving problems i am patrick murphy and i approve this message
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my son has stopped breathing. >> okay. is he is not broeathing? >> he is not responding. >> frightening dash vocam video shows moments when a child stopped breathing. a police officer pulls up at a fast food restaurant and braden was limp in his mother's army. braden's father takes over when they get a cpr mask from the cruiser. moments later, thankfully the boy started breathing again and the 3-year-old has fully recovered and miller is being recognized as a hero. lucky he arrived. >> that does it for us. margaret, great to have you. >> it's been fun. >> norah and gayle, safe travels back from las vegas. we look forward to hearing what you left in vegas and look forward to having you here in studio 57 tomorrow. >> gayle is really good at the table. >> charlie, can i just say we love, love, love the tiger woods
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elise: we couldn't believe it. that poor girl was raped by two football players and their friends. we were sure they would go to jail. so, when i heard state attorney mark ober decided to go easy on them, i was scared -- scared for my daughter. none of those young men served a day behind bars. ober said losing a baseball scholarship was punishment enough.
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he doesn't get paid. too often marco rubio didn't show up and failed us when he did. i am patrick murphy. to get things done, you've got to show up. you've got to work together. whether it's protecting social security and women's health care or growing the economy, we've got to start solving problems instead of pointing fingers. i am patrick murphy and i approve this message
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it's not uncommon for autistic kids to flap their hands. and so when i saw that, that was completely disqualifying. i'm a republican, but this election is so much bigger than party. my son max can't live in trump world. . i don't always agree with her, but she's reasonable. and she's smart. she can work with people to solve problems. i want to be able to tell my kids that i did the right thing when it really mattered.
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