tv CBS This Morning CBS October 24, 2012 7:00am-9:00am EDT
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good morning. it is wednesday, october 24, 2012. welcome to cbs "this morning." president obama and governor romney campaign for every vote they can get in key swing states. >> forecasters are keeping a close eye on tropical storm sandy. could it hit the east coast? >> should you be charged extra for asking questions at the doctor's office. we're going inside over the growing battle over hid >> we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. we're on the homestretch now. and i think the people of colorado are going to get us all the way there. what do you think? >> the presidential candidates
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storm through the swing states. >> governor romney is in nevada and iowa today. >> the president campaigned in florida and ohio, push agnew 20-page summary for a second term. >> it's not a sketchy deal. >> debate experts agree that president obama won on substance. big deal. lance armstrong won on several substances. >> weak earnings report from blue chips sent shivers from wall street. the dow jones fell 243 points. >> we obtain e-mail alerts that were without out by the state department as attack unfolded in benghazi, libya. >> the e-mail showing ansar al sharia claimed responsibility as the assault was on going. >> another republican candidate sets off a firestorm about his comments on race and pregnancy. >> life begins in that horrible situation of rape, that it's something that god intended to happen. >> a deadly shark attack in southern california, a
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39-year-old man was killed while suing in the waters off of surf beach. >> two teenagers drive through a gas station. >> the man behind the gangnam sensation came to the united nations. >> you're required by law to wear a seat belt. put your damn seat belt on. >> all that -- >> do i get to answer or do you want to go on your own personal jihad here. >> a jihad, steve? >> do you think it's more a campaign for undecided voters? >> there's about six undecided voters left in the entire country. >> on cbs "this morning." >> undecided voters. we know they are out there. these campaigns have spent billions of dollars trying to capture them with lawn signs remember tv ads and for some ohio voters an amorous david axelrod with a rose in his ohio voters an amorous david axelrod with a rose in his teeth. captioning funded by cbs
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>> welcome. the president cal candidates are on the final leg of the campaign. >> president obama has rallies in iowa, colorado and ohio. jan crawford is covering the romney campaign in las vegas. >> reporter: those are just three of the ten or so tossup states that could decide that election. there's less than two weeks to go and you can be sure those candidates will be heating them repeatedly. at a rally in denver romney mentioned what everyone knows the debates have fueled his surge in the polls. >> they have super charged our campaign. >> reporter: within the final debate behind them the candidates took their arguments on the trail.
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romney said his new momentum has come in part because the president has no new ideas. >> he's become a president of status quo. and the policies of the president are a continuation of what we've seen over the last four years. >> reporter: to enforce that message, the main outside groups supporting romney announce ad 17.7 million dollar ad buy. >> we never go forward by settling for the status quo. >> reporter: an outside group supporting the president also unveiled a new ad hammering a line of attacks that was successful for democrats over the summer over romney's tenure of bain capital. >> mitt romney and bain capital turned it into a junk yard. >> reporter: in ohio the state that could well decide the election president obama stayed on the offensive, arguing the debates have gone well for him. >> i hope i made clear that there's a big difference between me and mitt romney.
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and it's not just that he's got better hair. >> reporter: reacting to criticism that he has yet to release specific plans for a second term mr. obama's campaign also released a 20-page booklet of his proposals. >> it's not a sketchy deal. it's not an okey-dok. >> reporter: he hit romney for his constantly changing position. >> we had a severe outbreak last night. it was at least, at least stage three romnesia. >> reporter: now later today two outspoken and colorful figures say they got some major news to announce that could will decide this election. celebrity lawyer gloria allred said she's reportedly has new information on governor romney as billionaire donald trump says he's got something to share on the president. we don't know what it is. we don't know if it's a publicity stunt or can change the race. but i'm sure you're all on the
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edge of your seats for that. >> really? jan crawford thank you. cbs news political director john dickerson is covering the obama campaign. he's in dayton, ohio. good morning. what's the closing argument for the president? >> reporter: well, what i heard here yesterday he was in dayton and back in columbus later. the argument is basically he will fight for you, he's got the back of the people here. and at the rally i was at yesterday his advisers were walking around as people on the ground happy not only to have people at the rally because they were there to support the president but because some of them had voted and some could be turned into those who work to get others to vote and get the early vote out here. the message is president will work hard four and go vote now and get your neighbor to do it. >> get the ground game going. what about the polls in ohio? what are they saying?
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>> reporter: they are very, very close in ohio and basically both sides sort of are ignoring the polls and assume it's dead locked in ohio. so the president has been pushing the message of the auto bailout in ohio, his larger argument coming out of the debate you can't trust mitt romney, he's been changing his position and he said basically the presidency is all about trust. forget the economy, foreign policy, it's about trust and who can you trust to fight four. he uses the auto bailout, one in eight jobs in ohio they say they're dependent on the auto industry and you can trust for me. i'll fight for you. >> john, we talk a lot about the women's vote and the importance of the women's vote but gallup has some interesting numbers out there's been a larger change in men than in women's preferences compared 2008. at this time in the race, barack obama, john mccain, the same among male voters, and look at this hug split.
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romney advantage over obama. republicans have that advantage. but this is a big gap for obama. what's happening with obama's support among men? >> reporter: it's a big and dangerous gap. the president can't make up for a gap among men with women. he's got to shrink that gap with men and the thinking basically is that it's on the economy and his stewardship and this notion that four more years of this, what the president has, his economic policy isn't going to cut it and men are the ones who are moving on that issue particularly. >> so, john, hang on just a moment because i want to get your reaction to this other big political story. jeff glor is here with the story about indiana's republican u.s. senate candidate. he's in some hot water over comments he made. >> all three candidates oppose abortion but none went as far as the state's current treasurer last night. >> too certainly stand for life.
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>> the remark came during the end of tuesday's final debate for indiana's open senate seat. when richard mourdock was asked about abortion. >> i think even when life begins in that horrible situation of rape, that it is something that god intended to happen. >> after the debate mourdock clarified his comments saying god creates life and that was my point. god does not want rape and by no means was i suggesting that does. rape is a horrible thing and for anyone to twist my words otherwise is absurd and sick. but democrats were quick to capitalize. senior obama campaign adviser david axelrod tweeted mitt's man mourdock apes akin in indiana debate reflecting a gop that is way out of mainstream. >> first of all, from what i under from doctors that's really rare, if it's a legitimate rape the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down.
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>> three days ago governor romney endorsed mourdock in a new ad. >> this fall i'm supporting richard mourdock for senate. >> last night the campaign distanced itself. a statement released shortly after the debate the governor disagrees with richard mourdock's comments and they do not reflect his views. mourdock succeeded richard luger in a republican primary earlier. up until now he had been locked in a tight race. >> jeff glor, thank you. i want to bring back in john dickerson. john, this is one of those stories at the late stage of the campaign. could it cost republicans control of the senate? i mean they are so close to winning back the majority. >> reporter: yeah. they need three or four seats depending on whether mitt romney wins and then brings in a vice president who can break the tie in the senate to win the majority. this has been a close race, and so anything like this could not get off stride. the question is whether there's
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a model here from taking republican candidates and telling women they are out of mainstream on abortion. republicans did that in 2010 in colorado and in nevada. so that template worked in those cases so republicans have to be nervous it might work here. in the akin race while his comments in missouri did make that race close he's been able to recoup a little bit. it's late in the race here so it may be hard for mourdock to bounce back. >> john dickerson, thank you. the campaign is also watching wall street closely. the dow jones industrials lost 200 points twice in the past three days of trading. it's a remind terrify economy is still the number one issue in the election. rebecca jarvis is here. good morning. what's happening in the markets? >> what's happening right now, $500 billion in value has been wiped out in just the last three days as far as the stock market is concerned. at the root of this is earnings. it's earnings seasons and a
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number of major multinational companies from dupont to you nighted technology, 3m have come out recently and said we're not doing as well as we thought we were doing. 90% of the companies that have looked at what's going to happen in the future have given negative guidance about the future and at the heart of that negative guidance is this fiscal cliff, the $600 billion in tax hikes and spending cuts that are set to come at the end of this year if congress doesn't act, those things are hanging over, all of corporate america because they can't plan for the future. they can't determine with that level of uncertainty what happens next for them. >> we're showing you what this fiscal cliff means for everybody. it can mean $2,000 for families, government programs cut, the jobless rates go up. that's the uncertainty that's also hanging over wall street. can it change things? we know congress isn't going to do anything until after the election. >> exactly. that's part of the issue. you heard it from jpmorgan and
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goldman sachs and i hear it every single day from business leaders with $2,000 coming out of the average american family's pocket in terms of their tax burden next year if we go over that fiscal cliff, all of a sudden that changes things. people are already cash-strapped in this economy. if that money goes out, all of a sudden they don't have the ability to buy the things that are helping to generate business and jobs in this economy. >> and there's a general global slowdown in the economy. >> absolutely. you have it in europe, you see it right now in china which has slowed down. those two factors. when you look at companies that have been particularly negative they are the big multinationals that have exposure not only here but need to see growth elsewhere in order to recover fully as well. >> rebecca jarvis, always good to see you. in the caribbean tropical storm sandy is expected to become a hurricane later today. it is heading towards jamaica and cuba and could affect the east coast of the u.s. this
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weekend. david bernard chief meteorologist from our miami station cbs 4 is with us. david, tell us what's happening. >> sandy is very close to hurricane with 70 mile-per-hour winds, just south of jamaica this morning. and it's moving a little bit quicker to the north at 14 miles per hour. but let's kind of look ahead as we go into the weekend and early next week. by the weekend sandy is predicted to be north of the bahamas and continuing to move to the north. here comes a big winter time jet stream dip with a lot of cold air and the question is does this jet stream dip capture sandy and pull it towards the east coast, or does sandy just go out the sea? however, there's a third possibility, and that is the storm goes out the sea but all the warm air associated with the tropical system merges with the cold air and this jet stream dip and that forms a new low which could be a major nor'easter that could mean extremely heavy snows across the appalachians, western
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pennsylvania, heavy rains along the coast and some very strong winds. interesting set up and one that will have to be watched very closely. >> thank you, david bernard. we have a new hour by hour picture of the attic that killed the ambassador to libya. sharyl attkisson has new information. four americans died including ambassador chris stevens. the first alert was sent that afternoon it read u.s. diplomatic mission in benghazi under attack. the alert was sent to the white house situation room and government offices. the next e-mail read the firing has stopped attempting to locate embassy personnel. two hours after the first e-mail a third alert reported an islamic military group had claimed responsibility. this is the earliest record so far showing u.s. officials were told it could be a terrorist attack. it became a campaign issue as republicans criticize the obama administration for not calling
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it terrorism sooner. >> and massachusetts officials are beginning to shut down the pharmacy blamed for a nationwide meningitis outbreak. 23 deaths have been reported around the country, 308 patients in 17 states have been infected with the virus. jim axelrod is in boston. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. state officials here in massachusetts say they found a leaky boiler, dirty floor mats, even black specs of fungus visible to the naked eye in sealed vials. >> the board of pharmacy has voted permanently to revoke necc's license to operate in massachusetts. >> reporter: state officials say their preliminary investigation revealed a failure to follow the most basic laboratory standards. >> examination of necc records indicate ad failure of the facility to sterilize products for even the minimum amount of time necessary to ensure
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sterility. >> reporter: massachusetts authorities were troubled by the firm's testing procedures on the very steroids suspected of causing the outbreak. >> they shipped orders from the suspect lots before receiving their own test results confirming that those lots were sterile. >> reporter: necc released a statement saying they have always cooperated with the state pharmacy board and said quote it is hard to imagine that the board has not been fully apprised of both the manner and scale of the company's operations. >> reporter: there's bean lot of plants. in 2006 the fda sent a warning letter that some of their procedures could lead to quote potential microbial contamination. the former chief counsel of the fda. >> it's clear the company made a conscious decision to disregard that warning letter because only a few years later they were engaged in the very behavior that the fda warned them about.
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>> reporter: as part of this investigation state of massachusetts is now conducting inspections of other compounding pharmacy, the first one was yesterday, no word yet on the results. norah. >> jim axelrod, thank you. a beach near santa barbara, california is closed this morning after a deadly shark attack. 39-year-old francisco was bitten in his upper torso while surfing pfs he was pulled from the water and pronounced dead on the scene. it happened at surf beach. experts believe the shark was a great white. the same area where another surfer was killed by a shark two years ago. >> "the washington post" reports the obama administration is secretly develop agnew plan to hunt down terrorists. it's a database called the disposition matrix. it contains the name of terror suspects and resources available to track them down. it allows the united states to keep adding names of terrorists
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to be killed or captured. >> "usa today" says college costs are going up at a slower rate. a new report says prices at four year public universities rose nearly 5% this year. that's much less than previous years but federal grant money also seems to be leveling off and average tuition is still rising a lot faster than family incomes. >> the "new york daily news" says hedge fund manager david paulson donated $100 million to central park. he says it's simply impossible to imagine what new york would be without central park. >> and the "los angeles times" has a list of this year's most used online passwords. splash data says the most common were once again, password and one, two, three, four, five, six. new to the list jesus, welcome and mustang. there you go. >> where did that come from? >> i don't know. i guess people have
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>> las vegas police say this man stole $1.6 million worth of chips from a well-known casino. the problem he'll have to go back there to cash them in. >> it's one of the dumbest crimes you can possibly make. >> this morning we'll show you how other crooks tried and failed to profit from casino crime. >> and doctors bills are getting longer. one woman said when she asked questions during her physical she was charged an extra 50. what should patients do about those hidden fees on cbs "this morning".
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>> this is very interesting. did you know it's possible we could wind up with a president mitt romney and a vice president biden. it's true. if there's a tie in the electoral college the senate picks the vice president and the house picks the president. they really should make them share an apartment if that happens. that would being a great romney and biden. a dog on every car and a foot in every mouth. >> that's pretty good. >> there you go. welcome back to cbs "this morning." las vegas police are searching for a california man accused of taking more than $1.5 million in chips from a casino.
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>> the theft was cut on camera and as ana warner reports the suspect faces some very long odds. >> reporter: these surveillance pictures allegedly show the thief as he walked through the venician casino and snuck into a closed off area reserved for high rollers. designee managed to pry open the lock on the chip container. >> reporter: the man vanished with his $1.6 million haul because at that early hour at 6:00 a.m. on october 10th nobody was using the room. the suspect is 31-year-old akingide cole who has a mohawk style hair cut and a large growth on his left ear. he's from palmdale, california. >> he's been looking for work for months. and he hasn't been successful with it. >> reporter: it's not nearly as complicated heist as the one grand slammerized by the film "oceans 11." >> casino security can't be beaten. >> reporter: the odds of getting away with it are worse.
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>> even though people get away with some of this stuff sometimes, initially it's very difficult to take it through the conclusion. >> reporter: it's the most recent in a string of attempts to chip away at house money. michael bellton was two men who pepper sprayed a dealer and stole $115,000 in chips. he apologized in court and got two to five years in prison. in 2010 at the bellagio, the so-called biker bandit ran off with chips worth $1.5 million. this security video captured him dashing through the casino wearing a motorcycle helmet and brandishing a gun. the catch here is that authorities say in these cases the thieves likely can't even cash in. the chips can only be reteamed at the casino from where they were stolen. anywhere else they are worthless. >> one of the dumbest crimes you can possibly make. >> reporter: once again the house always wins.
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for cbs "this morning," ana warner, los angeles. >> senior correspondent john miller former fbi deputy director joins us now. good morning. i assume you would be out there reporting on this story. take a week? >> maybe a couple of weeks. >> large expensive undercover. >> this sounds like one of those stories you would call a knuckle head story. >> you took the words out of my mouth. the dynamic is exactly the same, norah. we talked last week about the art thieves and how they steal priceless paintings but then can't sell them because they are too hot. when you do what these guys do you steal like 25 and 50,000 dollar chips there's a limit of universal players. when some stranger shows up with a big stack of those it's not like her not knowing who he is. on a much more practical level when they have a theft like that, like u.s. currency when they counterfeit it they come
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out with a new $100 bill they come out with different sets of chips and anti-counterfeiting devices in them and ways to track them. so we're deep in knuckle head territory here. >> not to just like go to the movies that's why in "oceans 11" they didn't steal the chips they went for the cash. >> las vegas invented information sharing and invented high end intelligence sharing, they invented all the technology. even in the high end robbery the las vegas response is different which is it's all going on in the security cameras and you think security would rush in. their tactic is let them do the robbery we'll solve the crime later. we have a movie out there but we don't want a shootout on the floor. they are very start. >> tell us about the black book than guy who developed the app. >> in 1967 they were using the black book. it's actually silver. it has everybody who is banned from every casino. this is the first information in intelligence sharing all the hotels shared it. when one guy tried to check in
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another hotel five seconds later every casino was aware. jeff jonas comes along in the computer age and says wait a minute first of all we can automate this. when somebody shows up on somebody's camera we have facial identification. then when you rub data against data you get more data. by pooling everybody's information making obvious connections, not obvious connections, if somebody has turn up with the same e-mail address but under a different name the system would immediately flag that. now jeff jonas who was a vegas guy, still lives there goes to work for ibm. when i was in the cia he was a rock star in our hallways we were developing the terrorist identity, data market environment he was the guy who taught us to make that information correlate and make those connections. vegas was way ahead of the intelligence community on this because it's all about the money. >> interesting. john miller knows things. >> he does. i thought he was going to talk
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about a different black book. but i learn something new this morning. >> the house always wins. >> mourdock got attention in 1975 and then again in 2002. "48 hours" will be with us to update on michael skakel's case. >> mark cuban and new media nir will be in studio 57 tomorrow only on cbs "this morning". ancr: at jennie-o we think some things are worth getting up early for like a better breakfast so on august eighth we woke up a sleepy town to show that eating well can be easy and delicious with jennie-o turkey bacon and sausage cooked thoroughly to 165 definitely very good it's excellent this is delicious makes me want to eat breakfast more it's time for a better breakfast i can't stop eating this make the switch look for jennie-o at a store near you
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a parole board in connecticut will decide later today if michael skakel should be let out of prison. he's the cousin of the kennedys. as "48 hours" correspondent troy roberts reports skakel still insists they convicted the wrong man. >> reporter: ten years ago michael skakel was found guilty and sentenced to 20 years to
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life for the 1975 murder of his neighbor, 15-year-old martha moxley. >> today what i've been doing for 27 years i'm praying that i can find justice for martha. you know this whole thing was about martha. >> reporter: now 52-year-old skakel is up for parole and even though he continues to maintain his innocence the mocks lie family believes the right man is behind bars. >> we knew michael had done this. >> you don't think there's any doubt? >> absolutely no doubt. >> reporter: in october 1975, michael skakel and martha moxley were both 15-year-old neighbors living in greenwich, connecticut. moxley was last seen leaving for a halloween party with skakel. her body was found on tlaun of her home the next morning. beaten to death with a golf club police say belonged to the skakel family. >> we can't undo it.
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>> reporter: from the start the case had all the trappings of a hollywood melobarack obama becoming the subject of books and tv movie. not only did it take place in one of the wealthiest enclaves but involved one of the powerful families. >> they were our neighbors, rich and kennedy's. >> reporter: skakel is the nephew of ethel kennedy. his cousin and law professor bobby kennedy jr. has written about the case and believes the prosecution got it all wrong. >> he doesn't deserve to be spending 20 years of his life in jail for a crime that he didn't commit. >> reporter: in 2010 the state supreme court ruled against skakel's request for a new trial saying a claim implicating two other men in the killing had no credibility. >> somebody decided that skakel was going to jail, and that all of the other evidence, the
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abundant evidence against other people would be ignored. >> troy roberts with us now. troy, what are the chances that he'll be granted parole today? >> i would be very surprised. he's only served only half of the minimum 20 year sentence. this is his first parole board hearing and this is a highly publicized case. he hasn't admitted guilt. stranger things have happened, but i don't think he's going to be walking. >> as they fointd an alternative theory to the case as who may have done it. >> they've thrown a couple of things out. his defense team claimed an african-american and an asian boy in the neighborhood had committed this crime. but it didn't go anywhere. >> if he gets granted the parole, when could he be eligible for release? >> the three panel board does approve his bid for freedom he could be released next march. >> troy
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>> you know most airlines tack on fees for just about everything. now doctors do it too. this morning we'll show you why they charge you for phone calls, filling out forms and even making copies. you're watching cbs "this morning". [ cat 1 ] i am not a vegetarian... look at these teeth! they're made for meat! [ cat 2 ] do i look like i'm stalking plants? [ male announcer ] most dry foods add plant protein, like gluten
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♪ now these thieves weren't messing around in michigan on sunday. one of them drove his pickup right through the wall of a convenience store. they didn't get far. one man is in custody, the second suspect is being sought. welcome back everybody to cbs "this morning." a minnesota woman is trying to bring attention to those hidden fees that are in medical bills. she says her doctor charged her extra for simply asking questions during her annual physical. >> it is becoming a problem for
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patients all over the country. so, is this happening? >> it's happening and it sounds crazy but crazy with an explanation. the insurance company will pay once a year 0 for a preventative visit. what's happened in the last year. but if something new comes up that takes time they don't pay for that so what the doctor is doing is charging another code for that. of course the patient should be warned beforehand. >> why is it happening? >> it's happening because of perverse incentive. doctors are paid for doing stuff to patients in stead of providing health. i'm an internist. if you come in complaining of heart burn, i can take a long time talk towing about your history what's going on in your life, maybe you're afwra elevated about this job you have. maybe i don't need to do any procedure if i can talk to you. >> talk to her about that. >> or i can do a procedure. the insurance company will pay me for a lot more than spending time and figuring out what's
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going on. >> what about the doctor's argument their time is valuable and they do have to make a living that they should charge for that time when they are consulting. why shouldn't they get paid. >> she should be but not under a system where the meter is running. as a doctor, i want to encourage you to tell me everything. i want to avoid that by the way moment as you're leaving. oh, by the way i have crushing chest pains. my colleagues may hate me for this but there are systems like in the cleveland clinic where people are on salary and there's no incentive for ordering stuff. that may not be the only solution but we have to figure out a way where doctors are encouraged for providing health than doing stuff to them. >> it's good point because charlie and i were talking about lawyers. lawyers talk for every minute and when you're on the phone are you charging me. and every time you think about going to your doctor, something doesn't feel right. he'll just charge me for asking
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him a couple of questions. >> i want to encourage you to talk to me. the system has all these perverse incentives. >> are there other hidden fees? >> you know, there are hidden fees in terms of the photo copies that you make and things like that. the bottom line is people are so afraid to talk about honey. when you call-up that office manager say how much will it cost me, period. i don't want anything after the fact. >> the other thing that disturbs me when you see the doctor first it's about money buff get the doctor. you go through the process. you're not here until we have you cover. at some point you have a good relation with the doctor but that first visit it's part of the process. >> the first visit -- there's so much tension anyway who are you. >> great information. thank you. you could say james dyson has been cleaning up the competition for years. the man who invented the dyson vacuum cleaner is here. pet owners may like his latest
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creation. he's got it straight ahead on cbs "this morning". ♪ >> this portion of cbs "this morning" is sponsored by silk. try silk on your cereal, it's the taste most people prefer over dairy milk. lawn clippings! a mattress. a sausage link. mermaid. honey!? driftwood. come on, you gotta help us out here a little. [ male announcer ] febreze eliminates odors and leaves carpets fresh. ♪ [ male announcer ] febreze. eliminates odors and leaves carpets fresh. ♪
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♪ it is 8:00 a.m. welcome to cbs "this morning." tropical storm sandy may become a hurricane today which could mean trouble for the east coast. the man who re-inconveniented the vacuum cleaner james dyson will show us judge engineering is becoming a lost art. but first here's what's happening in the world and what we've been covering on cbs "this morning." >> the president's status quo campaign going forward with the same ideas as we've seen over the last four years is why he's slipping. >> the presidential candidates are focus tongue battleground states that will decide the election. >> they are very, very close in ohio. >> billionaire donald trump says he's got something to share on
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the president. i'm sure you're all on the edge-of-your-seat for at that time happen >> inn's senate candidate is in hot water over comments he made. >> even when life begins in that horrible situation of rape that it's something that god intended to happen. >> sandy is very close to a hurricane with 70 mile-per-hour winds, just south of jamaica this morning. >> sandy could affect the east coast of the u.s. this weekend. >> what's happening in the markets? >> $500 billion in value has been wiped out in just the last three days. >> las vegas police say this man stole $1.6 million worth of chips from a well-known casino. >> this sounds like one of those stories you would call a knuckle head story. >> you took the word out of my mouth. >> friends who are maybe no longer in the same role and you write songs. >> very delicate. >> domino's cave out half million slices of free pizza. then later today everybody gave
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them back. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. people on the east coast are keeping their eye on a major storm that may be coming this way. >> david bernard is chief meteorologist of our miami station cbs 4 and joins us now. david what's happening with tropical storm sandy? >> let's start with the very latest from the hurricane center. this just came in a couple of minutes ago. the position is less than 100 miles south of kingston, jamaica moving quickly to the north at 14 miles per hour. now sandy may become a hurricane later today as it approaches the southeastern coast of cuba. looking ahead as we go into the weekend, we're going to talk about what the possible scenarios are for the northeastern portion of the united states. we got a big winter like jet stream dip coming through the plains this weekend. that may capture the storm and propel it into the east coast with tropical storm, maybe even hurricane force wind conditions. it's too early to say. there's an option that it goes
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out to sea. now kind of a third middle of the road option is that all the warm air and energy associated with sandy remains and clashes with the cold air coming from the west and that forms a new low which can be a very powerful nor'easter. while you have storm conditions along the coast, significant coastal flooding we could be talking about extreme snows in the inland areas of the appalachians, say western portions of pennsylvania. so a lot of weather is going to be on the map as we go into the weekend and right now we have more questions than answers but people need to be aware of the potential for a big storm late this weekend and early next week. >> all right, david bernard thank you for that information. for the first time the federal government is going to monitor debt collectors. the consumer financial protection bureau says it wants to shut down abusive tactics. they have to communicate honestly with customers. the rules will cover 175 companies and 30 million americans are facing debt collection. >> in britain the bbc is under
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fire over a child sex abuse scandal failing to control one of hits famous personalities. mark phillips is in london with that story. good morning. >> reporter: there is something darkly familiar with this story. a great institution smeared by scandal, a respected figure accused of child abuse. lots of young victims. in this case it's not penn state it's the british broadcasting corporation and not jerry sandusky, it's the man named jimmy savile. he was a flamboyant dee apology and tv band stand host in the hey day of british '60s and '70s pop culture. he was a national institution. the idol of teeny boppers and younger children across the land which was convenient for him because it turns out jimmy savile is accused of acserial child molester who preyed on his fans.
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witnesses say he sometimes took them into his motor home that followed him on his charity runs or took him into his dressing room at the bbc or that he would abuse children during visits to hospitals or he would molest them at a mental institution where disturbed children were sent. steven george who before his sex change was a teenage girl was one of those institutionalized children. >> and he then put his hands between my legs and there's nothing i could do. the kind of institution it was you couldn't stand up and say oh, look this is what this man is doing stop him or whatever. they would have punished us. >> jimmy savile, died a year ago. but the rumors that he was a predatory pedophile persisted and a bbc news program began to prepare a report. suspiciously that report was cancelled just as a series of tributes to savile were about to be broadcast. the new head of the bbc george
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entwistle is trying to defend it and in front of a hostile parliamentary committee denied a cover up. >> this is gravely serious matter and one cannot look back with anything other than horror. >> reporter: investigations have been launched. who knew what savile was up to and why didn't they stop it? jimmy savile once rubbed shoulders with the good, great and famous. now his reputation has been destroyed. and the question is, will he take the reputation of one of the world's great media organizations down with him? there's another american angle to this sordid story. the man who was in charge here at the bbc during the time when the jimmy savile story was being suppressed is moving on to a new job. his name is mark thompson and the new job is president and chief executive officer of the "new york times." the stain of this story is spreading far and wide. >> thank you, mark phillips. they say that things are bigger
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in texas and apparently they are faster too. today the last leg of a texas toll road opens with the nation's fastest speed limit. so you can legally drive 85 miles per hour on this stretch of texas highway 130. it runs south of the austin airport to east of segane. i don't think this is good. if the speed limit is 55 i see how easy it is to go to 70. if you start at 85 people go to 90. >> feel the need for speed. remember that line. >> the idea of being able to go somewhere you can drive fast is exhili rm im exhilirating. >> you think this is a good idea? >> i do. but we have to be aware of how
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many people die in traffic accidents. >> as you were reading that about going 85 miles per hour, charlie pumped his fist. >> you did too, by the way. >> i know. i love texas. i'm from texas. falling is one of the biggest fears older people has. here's the most common reasons why they fall and how to stay on your feet. that story coming up next on cbs "this morning".
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caught on fire. [ laughter ] apparently the stuff is pretty dangerous. you open flames faster than the new york yankees. >> ouch. you don't expect to get burned when you put on sunscreen. >> i don't use sunscreen. but people hate pulling hair out of the vacuum cleaner. james dyson has a new device. he's the inventor who developed the first bagless vacuum. when you come to work we put twourk. he'll tell us why hard ware is more important than software and more important than google. >> thank goodness somebody is cleaning our green room. >> right now dr. holly phillips will help seniors stay on their feet. >> good morning. in today's health watch what's up with falling down. for people over 65 fear of falling is real. that's because falls are the
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leading cause of injury and accidental death as we age. and now a first of its kind study using videos of actual falls reveals the most common causes. researchers analyze close circuit images of 227 tumbles and the by 130 people. they found more than 40% of the falls were caused when seniors shift their weight and lose their center of gravity. other causes included trips or stumbles and hits or bumps. slipping accounted for only 3% of the falls even though slipping has been the focus of most studies on the problem. experts hope this new information will improve understanding and help prevent falling but in the meantime to avoid accidents, the cdc suggests regular exercise to increase leg strength and balance, eye checks to update eye glass and maximize vision and home safety reviews to reduce tripping hazards. remember it's much easier focus on preventing a fall than to recover from one. i'm dr. holly phillips.
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>> "cbs healthwatch" sponsored by aquafresh clean. take clean to the extreme. it showers your whole mouth with rich micro-active foam. thousands of germ-killing bubbles seek out hard to reach places and help kill the sources of bad breath then rinse clean away leaving a cool tingling that just won't quit extreme clean from aquafresh. take the feeling of clean to the extreme. military families face, we understand. at usaa, we know military life is different. we've been there. that's why every bit of financial advice we offer is geared specifically to current and former military members and their families. [ laughs ] dad! dad! [ applause ] ♪ [ male announcer ] life brings obstacles. usaa brings advice.
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♪ sir james dyson has been a cutting-ed cutting-edge innovator for 20 years. >> he's the first person to tell you the world needs more inventors. welcome sir james. i don't know from vacuum cleaners but i do know you're right the world needs inventors. i think of thomas edison, for example. what kind of mindset makes a great inventor? >> well an engineer. that's a good start. but the mindset to be curious. and to get angry when things don't work properly. to observe how things work, what's efficient about them and
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then have the curiosity to find out a better way to do it. >> and ask the right questions? >> yes. >> why can't we have a better whatever. >> right. >> fill in the blank. >> emotion and anger is good as well. >> anger? >> that's how it started with me for the vacuum cleaner. the bag became clogged and wasn't picking up the dust and i would have to bend down and pick it up. >> do you think the world doesn't appreciate inventors enough? >> young children really interested in invention and engineering and somehow it getting knocked out of them and by the time they get to university or high school, they start to do academic subjects. you produce 12 times as many lawyers as you do engineers. but the trouble is the world is changing and international trade means that export, you have to have something unique, better technology. and so unless we produce lots more engineers and technologists and scientists we won't be able to export.
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>> as i'm listening to you and hearing your explanation and the tone of your voice i'm thinking why weren't you in the james bond movie. >> exactly. the war, that all occurred during the war. you have to be inventive during the war because you have to develop weapons and systems. >> and breaking the code. >> never thought of inventors as angry. when you said having emotion and anger. you saw hair in a vacuum cleaner and you got ticked off. >> yes. over many years. because i vacuumed first as a child when i was 6. when i was 26 i was having the same problems. having to pick things up. i took the vacuum cleaner apart and discovered the achilles heel which was the bag. the bag clogged and didn't allow the airflow through therefore you lost suction. that's the thing that got me
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going. 20 years later, they hadn't improved the vacuum cleaner. >> as you see we use the dyson vacuum here. charlie loves the dyson. we got all different kinds of dyson because you have a big variety. you're a little pricey. does price not factor into what you do? >> well i believe a machine should work well so i don't design it down to a price i put in what i think it should have and the kind of quality it should have. i know that's not for everybody. but you use a vacuum cleaner a lot. i think it should work proper. >> the other thing you make a point of is bill gates and other people at google and every where else in silicon valley talk about software and you're here to talk about hardware. there's not enough hardware. >> yes. i do believe that. the reason -- software is fine. we use software in our new technology. but the problem is i think young
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people are growing up in an environment that facebook and google and these sort of things that's the place to be. that's the place to go and so on. but you see that very small employer, general motors employs four times as many people as google. caterpillar employs more people than facebook. future is in manufacturing. >> that's an interesting -- >> the hardware business is growing faster than the software business. >> but in terms of what kind of manufacturing and new industries and manufacturing for products for the future? >> yes. but that's why we got have more scientists and more engineers to create science and technology faster than our competitors abroad. china produces probably 20 times as many engineers as in the united states. india probably the same. 40% all graduates from singapore are graduates. >> a lot of people are fans because hair in a vacuum cleaner you're so right is so annoying.
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♪ welcome back to cbs "this morning." john grisham is a master of the modern legal thriller. his new novel "the racketeer" is about a lawyer trying to find a way out of prison. >> grisham's previous book was about his other passion baseball. the world series begins tonight and he is to coin a word unhappy about that.
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john grisham. cardinals? >> not the year for the cardinals? >> last year wasn't either. i kind of like to see the cardinals in the world series. >> you've love them for a long time. >> since i was born, yeah. it's in the dna. >> let's talk about your book, because this is so exciting to me because for the first time many of your books, have i told you i love you today. >> no big deal. >> that's the beauty of it. race does not factor into this. how does this happen for you. >> over the years i had some wonderful fans who happen to be black. be cool if there was a black o protagonist. >> the first line grabs you right away. i'm a lawyer and i'm in prison. it's a long story. >> very long story. takes 340 pages to figure it out. >> who is malcolm.
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>> malcolm is our hero in prison. he has five more years. small town lawyer in virginia. got caught up in stuff and went to prison. against that backdrop a federal judge is murdered and malcolm knows exactly who did it and why. and there's a rule 35 in the federal system that if you are in prison and you have some valuable information that will help the fbi, the authorities solve a crime on the outside, the crimes they want to solve, you can batterer your way out. and that's what malcolm manages to do and here we go. >> it's such a tale you weave in the middle it. >> when i was writing the book i told my wife and editor i feel sorry for ted tor because you're going to have no idea what's going on. i knew but getting there was difficult for the reader. it all ties in nicely at the end
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because you're clueless halfway through the book. >> i read all your books. "pelican brief," "the firm." a lot of your books you're taken away. you can see this turning into a movie? >> yes. >> your writing now thinking about -- >> i know when i finish a book, every book will be looked at by a lot of people in the movie business. that's part of what i think about. i can't cast these things. i don't have images of certain actors when i write a book. that's a diversion. i'm so plugged into the plot. that's why the books work and hollywood likes them it's one scene after another, fairly simple writing style with a tight plot. again that's part of the appeal. but, yeah, they will be looked at and this one generated more movie buzz than the last half
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buzz. >> i see denzel washington. >> everybody says that. >> we sent the book to a dofz our favorite people in hollywood and there's some great folks out there we met over the years and everybody says that. we got to get denzel. nobody has heard from denzel. you never get the one you want. can never get the right actor. >> guess who else like your books. critics. >> yeah. >> i've sold a zillion books with bad reviews and good reviews. >> from "the washington post," grisham's 30th book offers a thoroughly display of characteristic values. an insider's view of our complex often fatally flawed legal system. >> keep reading, charlie. sounds good. >> you are getting. what's happened? >> you know -- >> you got good at this >> after 30 books i figured it out. the reviews come and go. sometimes a book comes out -- you have to love a book to
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finish it. you have to love the story to get through it. i'm crazy about all of it when i'm done. it's intriguing to see when a book is a published good reviews, bad reviews, how they are received. i don't worry about reviews. >> your first book, a time to kill, it didn't -- it was rejected at first so you ended up buying 1500 copies of your own book 1,000 copies of your own book. >> there was a publisher printed up 5,000 copies. i realized selling books is far more difficult than writing them. i sold them in libraries and coffee shops and finally gave most of them away. and those things -- they never went back to the second printing. never a paper back. later it came. and those hard back editions are very rare these days. >> they are worth big bucks? >> about $4,000.
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morning." >> guy fieri has taken the concept of celebrity chef to a new level. he owns restaurants all over the country and you can see him on tv, more than 35 hours a week. we took a trip to midtown and caught up with him at his brand new place in times square. >> love your show. >> thank you. >> stroll the streets of new york with guy fieri and you'll realize why he's called a culinary rock star. >> how you doing, man? >> great show. >> except you would be hard pressed to find a rock star as friendly and relatable as guy. the guy next door. >> where you from? >> upstate new york. >> thank you, brother. i was up in syracuse. >> his popularity is due to the host of the food network's," diners, drive-ins and dives." by crisscrossing the country with his signature saying and spiky blonde hair he's brought the masses to the heart of
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america's culinary world. a fact he's proud of. >> these mom and pop joint is what build our young chefs, keep our communities fed, are really probably one of the last socially engaging environments that we have in our communities. part of the eagle's legs are made out of beer can labels. >> his latest adventure is anything but mom and pop. >> i've never seen an american eagle like that. >> this month he opens his eighth restaurant, guy's american bar and kitchen in new york's times square. just like his personality, it's big. 500 seats big. >> having fun? >> it's more than having fun. it's kind of like if you tell somebody that you're going disneyland but now you own disneyland. this is new york city, times square, mind blowing. >> like with any new restaurants the city's elite and judgmental food critics have been harsh on
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the chef. >> this is a snack of all bar snacks. >> he's more pabts blue ribbon than pinot noir. >> when somebody says i wouldn't feed this to my cat what do you say? >> they must not like their cat very much. i know what i like. i know the success of my food. you can't have eight restaurants and doing it that wrong. >> the food network's guy fieri. >> jokes about his unhealthy cooking style is nothing new. but he handles it all with his signature charm. >> i was told there would be no work involved. >> yeah. i was told there would be no tough questions. >> and makes no apologies. >> i'm not saying don't eat this, just don't eat it every day. the reality is moderation needs to become a word we all learn.
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>> growing up in northern california guy learned about healthy eating early. raised on mainly tofu by hippie parents he's been in love with food and the business of food for as long as he can remember. when he was just 10 he had his own pretzel cart. >> i worked on the cart. every day i come back. i finished the pretzel cart. what do you want to name it. when you're 9 or 10 what do you name it? it was called the awesome pretzel kid. >> did you look back and say i was an entrepreneur at an awesome age. >> didn't know everybody wasn't doing that. i just enjoyed it. >> and the enthusiasm paid off. by age 37 he already owned four successful restaurants and was starting a family when his friends convinced him to apply for a new reality show called
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"the next food network star." >> my wife and i were pregnant with our son. your crazy? she goes you have a feeling you'll being a great at this. you should try this. >> ladies and gentlemen -- >> and she was right. >> guy! >> he won. and the rest is tv reality show history. six years later he hosted nine shows and forbes ranked him as the 10th wealthiest chef pulling in $8 million last year alone. if you ask his fans it boils down to guy being the right mix of flavor and flare. if you ask guy, it's about only one thing. >> food. it's what we all love. we all have trouble getting countries to get along. let's have a big cookout. bring world leaders together. i'll bring the barbecue. >> world peace with guy.
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>> world peace. >> you know it was really interesting to talk to him. he's both the most popular show on food network. he travels all over the country. this guy is making $100,000 a speech which is what ex-presidents make. he's very popular. >> i love his attitude too. i love his attitude. look at the food and i'm thinking he can cook. >> the new york food critics have been very tough. >> he had a great line for that. they must not like their cat very much. good line for that. >> yeah, exactly. >> he said if you have eight restaurants you must be doing something right. >> like he started off as an entrepreneur as a young kid with his pretzel truck. >> it's all in the family for norah o'donnell. look up chef jeff and see what we're talking about. it's been 30 years since ted danson became the own of a bar called cheers. sam malone is just one of his
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>> what are you doing? >> the guy did it. >> no, actually, greg, he's a suspect. >> there's blood all over the place. >> all the more reason to rein it in so we can nail it. >> when it's people you care about the rule book goes out the window. but when it means something to me -- yeah i should have told you. >> ted danson is in charge of the midnight on csi crime scene investigation. he joined a year ago after
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starring in "becker" and "cheers." >> first "csi." what is it about those series that captured the imagination of television audiences? >> i don't know. i don't know. i really don't. it's forensic. it's looking at murder and mayhem from a different point of view, from a scientific point of view which is intrigue. and it's the number one watched show in the world. so, what they are doing over 13 years seems to be really working. they do not pretend to be anything else than an amazing forensic mystery. it takes you along for the ride and you approach it from a scientific point evof view whic doesn't let people look from the dark side but let's them in. >> when we ran that clip, you went no. you don't like to look at yourself on camera?
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>> no. >> why? >> because when i work i'm joyful, i love it, i can do no wrong. at least i don't judge myself. as soon as i see myself i become this horrible judgmental person. i rather not go there. >> let's talk about your character on "csi," you play db russell. how dupre pair for that? was it a little bit of a learning experience in terms of playing a forensic investigator? >> sure. but you're also an actor who reads the script and you try to words on and you learn by, by trying the words on. >> yeah. >> the play is the thing. the story. every day you learn more. i did go because i want ad taste of gravitas. because people are dealing with death and dark side of life and most people, certainly i, try to avoid. i didn't want to come in and be silly about something pretty heavy. so i went to an autopsy, a
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quadruple autopsy in vegas, and before i knew it i was holding a man's skull cap while they weighed his brain and i have never -- i can still feel the adrenaline rushing through my body. it was so powerful an experience. very sobering, and, yeah. made a difference in my life. i'm glad i did it. i don't know what impact hit on my acting but it gave me a sense of heavy duty stuff. >> can we talk about elizabeth. >> she's great. she's great. wonderful for the show. i think she's beginning to enjoy herself too. it's scary to go from independent films to an hour long drama. >> you just celebrated 30 years of "cheers." >> i did. you were talking about my age for a minute. springtime. yeah. it was great. really fun. >> we took northeast it here.
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>> yes, we did. >> i'm wondering what you remember of it. i remember the finale of "cheers." people were weeping when that show went off the air. >> third most watched final episode in the history of television. >> yes. and i shouldn't take away from it by saying there are only four networks back then. made it easier to reach those numbers. we watched a film package or clips from all the shows, and it was all the write earns actors and everyone who had worked on it, and it was funny. it was funny and had heart. it was very funny to watch us after, in our 64 or whatever, in my case year old bodies and entertainment tonight asked would you consider coming back and do a he reunion show. then people behind the cameras talking and reuniting.
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you saw a bunch of people with these 64-year-old faces and white hair going what, what did she say? a reunion. and that's what the reunion show would be. what? we got the punch line. >> be fun to see how sam malone has matured over the years. i loved your character. >> you can be an adolescent into your early 40s and then it becomes unattractive. i don't know what they would do. >> let's talk about your passion for the environment and the ocean. do we have time? we have 30 seconds, ted. i'm sorry to do that. >> go to oceana.org. amazing website. we run the risk of fishing out of our ocean. this country is doing a great job but check it out. oceana.org. >> you can see a brand new episode of "csi" tonight at 10:00. >> that does it for us. up next your local news. see you tomorrow here on cbs
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