tv CBS This Morning CBS October 28, 2014 7:00am-9:01am EDT
7:00 am
♪ good rnmoing. it is tuesday, october 28th, 14 20. welcome to "cbs this morning." the cdc revised the ebola protocols yet again after the quarantine backlash. isis captures from the front line. and after 45 years on stage a final farewell tonight, the allman brothers. >> but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> whatever they say, it should t no unduly burden those health care workers. >> rage is on. he>> t cdc recommending voluntary home quarantine for
7:01 am
people at the highest risk for ebola infection. >> governor christie is standing by his decision to take extra precautions. >> my first job is to protect the people of new jersey. >> from the syrian town of kobani -- >> it claims the militants control most of the .city >> molten lava threatening to incinerate dozens of homes. >> this is the burn sight. you're left with nothing. >> a denver broncos fan is missing. paul kitterman disappeared. >>e w do not suspect foul play. and a member of the public collides with the british foreign minister david cameron. >> police say there's nothing sinister about the incident. >> he's the prime minister. a device similar to a weather balloon is hoping to track down eric frein, the suspect in killing of a
7:02 am
pennsylvania state trooper. >> a man who drove an suv in a & pool. >> all that -- >> beyonce will create a global line of sportswear. >> beyonce said i will not rest until i have all the money on earth. >> the game'sn o line. he's got to throw it. he does! it's incomplete. and washington wins. >> an unbelievable win. >> and "all that mattered" -- >> toronto has a signaling to the end of thera e of rob ford. >> if you know anything about the ford family we never, ever ever give up. on "cbs this morning" -- >> ebola in new york city. >> ebola in new york city. >> patient was all over new york. at the bowling alley and two subway trains. >> ebola has come to new york and if they can spread it here they'll spread it everywhere. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs
7:03 am
welcome to "cbs this morning." clearing up the ebola crisis. that is the goal of new guidelines from the cdc this morning. they follow other suspected ebola case. this one is in baltimore. the new rules explain how people returning from west africa should be treated in the united states. they outline how to quarantine travelers and health care workers. >> meanwhile, australia is the first country to ban all visas from all nations strickened with ebola. it's a controversial move. jericka duncan is at the bellevue hospital where the most recent patient is fighting for recover. >> reporter: good morning, dr. craig spencer remains in serious but stable condition here at bellevue hospital. meantime, there's a patient right now in isolation being monitored for ebola at the university of maryland medical center in baltimore. as u.s. officials continue to
7:04 am
work to contain the crisis. >> not everybody is at the same risk. so they stratify the risks. >> reporter: the new guidelines issued by the cdc classified travelers from west africa into four different risk categories. >> high some low but not zero. and no identify about risks. and then they match the risk to the kind of restriction. >> reporter: health care workers who treated ebola patients using personal protective equipment pose some risk. while those who came in direct contact with body fluids will be considered high risk. and they will be directly monitored by public health officials for signs of infection. their movement in public will also be restricted but a quarantine is not automatic. >> is this person reliable to adhere to the restrictions of not traveling in certain types of mediums of not going into crowded areas. but there's a determination that that person who could do it
7:05 am
technically, you could put a restriction on that person. >> reporter: meanwhile, kaci hickox whose quarantine in new jersey sparked widespread criticism was released monday. the nurse who recently returned from sierra leone was whisked away in one of two black suvs to her home in maine. a 5-year-old boy who recently came home from new guinea tested negative for ebola. despite the negative tests, officials were not taking any chances initially. >> the child at first did not appear to have any symptoms. the mother has no symptoms whatsoever. so, a lot of caution is being taken here. >> reporter: she's now being cared for here at bellevue hospital. the same hospital where dr. craig spencer continues to receive treatment for ebola. and right now, you see a picture there of amber vinson. we're just getting word that she
7:06 am
is expected to be released from emory. she's again the nurse who was diagnosed with ebola. she is going to be released later today. but despite the new guidelines there are inconsistencies at the federal level. a major general in the army said that he and his troops are returning back from liberia. and are being isolated at their base for 21 days. charlie. >> jericka, thanks. this morning, new jersey governor chris christie insist it was right to isolate kaci hickox. her quarantine were the differences between state and federal guidelines. bill plante is at the white house where officials are asking the state not to go up on their own. bill, good morning. >> good morning. the white house and the medical community weighed in heavily to get new york to ease its quarantine and to get public opinion on the side of nurse hickox so that governor christie would release her. now they hope the new guidelines
7:07 am
from the centers for disease control will convince other states not to follow christie's lead. >> i didn't revert to that -- why are you saying -- >> reporter: new jersey governor chris christie took a break from campaigning in florida to say he would not apologize. >> i have no reason to -- my job is not to represent her. to represent the people of new jersey but she needs to understand that the obligation of elected officials to protect the public health of all the people if that inconveniences her for a period of time that's what we need to protect the public, what's we will continue to do. >> reporter: new york city mayor bill de blasio said officials need to be smarter. >> and what happened with nurse hickox was unacceptable and disrespectable to her and not a way to treat a hero. >> reporter: hickox said new jersey's mandatory quarantine sent the wrong message.
7:08 am
>> a woman like kaci hickox who is making a commitment to volunteer her time in west africa and working contentiously with highly contagious ebola patients is a service that's deserving of praise and respect. >> reporter: director tom frieden said the new cdc protocols aim to reduce the need for governors to act on their open. >> state health departments genera guidelines. if they wish to be more stringent than what cdc recommends, that's within their authority and the system of government that we have. >> white house certainly doesn't want a political fight with governors over how they're protecting their citizens although that's what's been going on certainly, but the administration does hope that it can be very public in pushing these new cdc guidelines as more health care workers return from west africa. norah. >> bill thank you so much. isis is stepping up its propaganda war this morning.
7:09 am
it released a video claiming to show a british captive in the syrian town of kobani on the border with turkey. isis fighters have spent more than a month trying to capture kobani. holly williams has more on the video. holly, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, the new isis propaganda video uses a british hostage, journalist john cantlie who has already appeared inside previous productions released by islamic militants but this video is quite different. >> hello i'm johncantlie. and today we're in the city of kobani. >> reporter: the new isis video is as usual quickly produced. but this time journalist and now hostage john cantlie played the role of a reporter in what appears to be the embattled town of kobani. the video claims these aerial shots were filmed from an isis drone. kobani lies in a key strategic position on syria's border with
7:10 am
turkey. six weeks of deadly urban warfare has forced 200,000 people to flee their homes. at least 170 u.s.-led air strikes have targeted isis in and around kobani. the heaviest fight since the air campaign began. but in the video cantlie claims the strikes haven't stopped the militants' advance. presumably under duress. this had month, u.s. planes dropped bundles of weapons, ammunition and medical supplies to local fighters resisting the islamic extremists. but isis claims it captured one of the american drops which included hand grenades. after being held captive for nearly two years, it is the sixth isis video cantlie has appeared in. in the past though he's always been shown indoors dressed in an orange jumpsuit akin to those worn by prisoners in guantanamo
7:11 am
bay. john cantlie's 81-year-old father passed awayholly, thanks. >> a sophisticated weapon has turned up inside and it was said the tool was programmed on russian machines. specific a government base in moscow. the reports did not say which company was targeted by the hackers. hawaii is promising to have dozens of people who could be off from their homes in days. a lava flow is cutting off the town of pahoa. mileka lincoln is there talking with homeowners on order to get out. >> reporter: this is the site that residents of pahoa village
7:12 am
have been dreading for months. residents have been packing up ordered to prepare to evacuate over the weekend. >> we're obvious very sad because for them like many other people, life is changing and they're just adapting it. >> reporter: it's 30 miles of brush destroying everything in his path from roads to community cemeteries. it's taken four months to reach this neighborhood of some 50 homes. temperatures here along the lava flow can reach up to 2,000 degrees and there's nothing you can do to stop it. while the crews work to protect the utility poles, residents are realizing they may be able to save themselves but there's not much they can do to protect their pahoa village resident alii hauanio is preparing for the worst. >> a lot of memories a lot of
7:13 am
family gatherings here. >> reporter: his family lost another home 25 years ago. unlike last time though he watched the lava pass through. officials are allows residents to actually get close enough to witness lava engulf their home. >> to see it in actuality, i think it might bring closure, you know to know it's done. turn the page and we're starting another chapter. >> reporter: lava flows from kilauea are nothing new. it's one of the most active volcanos and has been erupting continuously since 1983. but the lava usually flows south, shifting to the northeast just in the past two years. now becoming a devastating reality. >> i'm sure mixed emotions will come out in the community and continue to unfold because it is a life-changing events for many residents. >> reporter: "cbs this morning,"
7:14 am
mileka lincoln, pahoa village.@b and in south korea -- with the dictator's right ankle. a spy agency says it could return because of kim's obesity, smoking. one week from today, americans will vote in the midterm elections in louisiana. three-term democratic senator mary landrieu is in a tough fight. >> there's a debate last night put distance between her and president obama but not too much. >> i'm not backing up from things i have supported president obama on. i support him on education policies. and yes, i supported him on some of his health care policies. and i can go through a laundry list. i'm not backing up from him. >> political director john dickerson is with us. good morning. listening to her, is the emerge
7:15 am
emergent issue here president obama? >> watching what every top democratic candidate have had to do, be their own person but yet not be a clumsy walk away from the president. but yes, you look at their ads, what they say, obama, obama, obama. which means if you look at what's being talked about in the debate and talked about in the way that you have to drive home an idea it's all about this president. it's not necessarily about a set of ideas. >> so therefore, if republicans win the senate and control the congress they have that? >> right. we've gotten the public to ratify those ideas. they also give a kind of to-do list for the new people in office. well on the to-do list we don't like obama. if republicans take control there's a big debate what do we do next. >> if republicans take control they're going to win in six
7:16 am
seats that mitt romney won in the democratic election. where's the compromise in that? >> 52% of the pew polls say they're voting to punish president obama. the same republicans, only 38%, say they want compromise. the people who control the senate are the people who don't want compromise. and yet you look at the majority of the public and they do want compromise. >> so you say the headline will be everyone is voting against president obama. but doesn't history so that nearly every six-year itch every midterm election since world war ii the president's opposing party has lost an average. and it's really about ethical public. >> well they're run in deep red states. after $4 billion has been spent what is the message that then you take into governing. right now, it looks like the message is we do not like this president that we the republicans, are going to have
7:17 am
to worry about. >> why do the republicans not like this president so much? is it a spillover from obamacare or something else? >> well in the states who control the senate they don't like the president because he's got a "d" next to his name. and at intrusion in their lives. from the secret service to ebola to the irs scandal is that the federal government doesn't work. so it's not -- it's inefficient. ineffective and it's mucking around in their lives. >> john dickerson, thank you. one week from tonight, cbs news will cover the midterm elections. we'll have updates throughout the evening and a full report at 10:00, 9:00 central here on cbs. an american airlines jet landed in london after a 17-hour delay. 140 from heathrow turned around. a passenger reportedly found a suspicious hot spot riddled with
7:18 am
errors. they decided no crime was committed. >> i saw it when i was going on my phone to try and find the airline wi-fi. i did see it i thought it was weird so i didn't go into it. >> if it's a joke you can't be of sane mind to even making thee judgments and naming your wi-fis al qaeda. >> american airlines said in a statement the flight departed just before 2:00 p.m. local time monday. investigators are searching text phone messages and social media accounts of a teenage gunman north of seattle. police say 14-year-old jaylen fryberg sent a text message warning his victims. he pulled out a gunman in the cafeteria and shot five students including himself. >> the question that everybody wants is why. candidly, i don't know the why is something we can provide. >> two of the students ss died.
7:19 am
a third string quarterback -- >> that's mine -- we'll do it again. a third string quarterback made the most of his third start in dallas last night. colt mccoy gave washington the lead. earlier in the game quarterback tony romo went down with a back injury. his backup brandon weeden tied the game. he tried to bring it back in overtime but could not win the gton beat dallas 21-17. afterwards, everyone wanted to talk to mccoy. >> you see that? >> yeah. >> that was a team official pulling mccoy away from an interview with espn spanish language channel. >> wow. ahead on "cbs this morning," it's not just the secret
7:20 am
7:21 am
it's good but is it good for drivers. >> ahead, the state of michigan passes legislation that blocks fess la from selling its electric cars directly to customers. >> the news is back here on the morning. stay tuned for your local news. >> announcer: "cbs this morning" sponsored by hershey's chocolates. one of a kind kisses. walmart pharmacy is now a preferred pharmacy in even more medicare part d plans. if you're a member in a plan where walmart is a preferred pharmacy, you could save up to 80% on your co-pays over other pharmacies. and this could lower your prescription co-pays to as low as a dollar. there's an easy way to save, so you can spend your time doing the things you enjoy the most. learn about plans available in your area
7:22 am
by calling 1-800-966-2790 or visit walmart.com/healthcare. save money. live better. walmart. moms know that no two mouths are the same. that's why there's a listerine® product for every mouth. one to clean your whole mouth. one for those hard to reach places. one to protect kids mouths from cavities. even one to freshen breath on-the-go. with over 100 years of innovation in oral care... there's a listerine® product for every mouth in your house. for cleaner, healthier mouths go beyond brushing alone. listerine®. power to your mouth ™. do you have nutritional gaps in your diet? try the improved formula of boost® original nutritional drink. each delicious serving provides... 10 grams of protein to help maintain muscle and 26 essential vitamins and minerals including calcium and vitamin d to support bone health. plus, boost contains 3 grams of fiberport digestive
7:23 am
7:24 am
finger ] [ wisest kid ] campbell's tomato soup with grilled cheese. perfect together. what should we do next? i'm liking braids. [ gong ] m'm! m'm! good! when heartburn comes creeping up on you... fight back with relief so smooth... ...it's fast. tums smoothies starts dissolving the instant it touches your tongue ...and neutralizes stomach acid at the source. ♪ tum, tum tum tum...♪ smoothies! only from tums. for most people, earning cash back ends here, at the purchase. but there's a new card in town. introducing the citi® double cash card. it lets you earn cash back when you buy and again as you pay. that's cash back twice. it's cash back with a side of cash back. the citi double cash card. the only card that lets you earn cash back twice on every purchase with 1% when you buy and 1% as you pay . with two ways to earn, it makes a lot of other cards seem one-sided. we give you relief from your cold symptoms. you give them the giggles. tylenol® cold helps
7:25 am
relieve your worst cold and flu symptoms. but for everything we do we know you do so much more. tylenol® at chili's, fresh is now. now, that's a burger. and now you can pay and go when you're ready. now, isn't that convenient? the new lunch double burger from chili's lunch combo menu, starting at 6 bucks. fresh is happening now.
7:29 am
on gun safety, larry hogan isn't being straight. after filling out their questionaire, hogan was awarded an a- from the nra. but now he refuses to release his responses. the nra opposes comprehensive background checks. they want to weaken maryland's gun safety laws. even support letting suspects on the fbi terror watch list buy guns. on gun safety and terror the nra is wrong. hogan gets an a- from the nra. on protecting maryland we just can't trust him.
7:30 am
♪ i've got to say, no heat no shower [ bleep ] no -- [ laughter ] for most new yorkers, it would be like hmm what's the square footage? what's the rent? is there a broker's fee? coming up in this half hour apple is trying to change the way we buy things but some retailers are seeing that decline. and in studystudio. plus tesla hits a road block in michigan. the home of the american auto industry has a new law targeting the electric carmaker.
7:31 am
that stor time to show you headlines from around the globe. the new york daily news said the federal government is suing after allegedly stealing millions of dollars in government money. filing false claims between 2008 and 2012. the city's loss it says it disagrees. and the mass surveillance program is bigger than previously revealed. last month the post office approved 50,000 requests to secretly track people's mail. bloomberg said the makers of auto air bags and the cars that use them nationwide auto lawsuits. with the force spraying metal shrapnel. and the toronto star said
7:32 am
mayor rob ford easily won back his old city council seat. ford gave up his run for mayor after he was diagnosed with cancer. >> and i guarantee, i guarantee that four more years you're going to see another example of the ford family never, ever, ever giving up. >> john tory a moderate conservative won the mayoral election. he beat ford's brother by 41% of the vote. and following a major security breach in northern england, a jogger ran into british prime minister david cameron before a stop him. mark phillips is in camden. good morning. >> reporter: british prime ministers who live behind these doors don't live in the same security bubble as u.s. presidents but there's a risk to
7:33 am
that kind of latitude and that risk has now been exposed. it all happened in the blink of an eye. some men in suits. a kerfuffle, a man wrestled to the ground. slowed down, we can analyze the play. one of the men is david cameron, prime minister. coming in to the right of the picture, dean balboa farley a jogger on the way to the gym. a jogger does what joggers do he tried to dodge his way through the crowd. cameron's protection detail reacts much too late some say. farley said he had no idea he'd just become the center of a security breach. >> i looked around next thing i know i've got a half dozen suited men surrounding me and man handling me to the floor. the whole while, i'm wondering what's going on. i'm like who are you, what's going on pipe didn't see david cameron. i didn't know it was david cameron until the police an hour
7:34 am
later told me what was done. >> reporter: cameron with what may be a smile on his face was taken away. >> i can put on the record for once the iron on the police protection. >> reporter: how does anyone get that close? britain, too, is under threat from the so-called islamic state militants in syria and iraq. and the memory of the attack in ottawa is supposed to have heightened the security of western political leaders. ken warp is a former protection officer for britain's royal family. >> he had a case of the prime minister leaving the build essentially ahead of his protection team. there seemed to be no forward advance, as we would say to clear the way. and suddenly to the right, and these things happen in a manner as we had this man collide with the prime minister. >> reporter: the jogger said he didn't see the prime minister
7:35 am
but the more important question is why the prime minister's team didn't see the jogger. and london's metropolitan police which runs the protective unit has now launched an inquiry. apple's new mobile payment system launched last month and some stores changing their mind. cvs and rite aid have made up their minds to stop accepting apple pay. he said he isn't worried. >> we've known it for weeks. i followed pretty closely. the first 72 hours, we'd gone over the 1 million mark on activations of cards. we're just getting started, but the early ramp looks fantastic. and i'm getting flooded with e-mails from customers that are just, you know, it's sort of that ahh moment. you've used the phone.
7:36 am
and that's all you have to do. >> scott stein, a editor and partner. good morning. i wish i had apple pay when i went for a run when i just like to bring my phone and don't want a credit card or money. i haven't downloaded yet. what's behind cvs and rite aid saying we're not going to use it. >> right. there are a lot of point of payment areas that work with apple pay without necessarily being partners. now the cordless pull-down model, the idea that rite aid is one partner that's going to be launching an app called currentc. it's an alternative for apple and android but it's not going to be using your credit card. it's going to tie into your debit or bank accounts. it may apply discounts. they claim they're looking at
7:37 am
alternative alternatives, but this technology has been out there with google and android. >> we're going to see a lot more of these companies that do what apple pay does come forward? >> i think so. i think what's happening is a turf war. not just about apple pay, but credit card companies -- >> and transaction fees? >> and transaction fees. with the percentage that they have to pay them so this organization, the currentc the american customer exchange they've been around a while. now it comes up against apple pay. and it seems like the moment they've decided to pull the plug on that. but, yeah i think you will see hopefully a lot of phones incorporate secured payment systems like apple pay. the question is what merchants will use it. and i think customers want it. >> rite aid released a statement, rite aid does not currently accept apple pay we
7:38 am
are continuallying various forms of mobile payment technologies and are committed to offering convenient reliable and security payment methods. does that mean that apple pay may not be reliable? >> that's a total dodge. right now, apple pay, one of the most secure. the information is stored on the phone, not in the cloud. apple is going to great length to show that it's not focused elsewhere. and now with the currentc it's going to be accessed by retailers. >> and considering everything is apple pay successful? is it working for most people? >> when it works, it seems to work good. but that's exactly it. when it works. it usually seems to be about the terminal. i think it takes a lot when people want to use new technology. >> thank you. it's one of the most innovative cars on the road but
7:39 am
drivers can buy a tesla in detroit. politicians choosing that over consumers. that's next. and a potential threat from the sky. >> if it's popping up in your airspace it just makes your job that much harder? >> that is correct is correct. drones. you're watching "cbs this morning." on friday elon musk the founder of tesla motors said that artificial intelligence could be our biggest threat. i don't understand, our biggest threat? how much money do you have in your pocket right now? i have $40 $21. could something that small make an impact on something as big as your retirement? i don't think so.
7:40 am
7:41 am
yoplait light is now better than ever. it still melts in your mouth. with 90 calories. and is now aspartame free. yoplait light. it is so good; it's better than ever. ♪ warm up to winter with a white chocolate delight from mccafe. if you have moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis like me and you're talking to your rheumatologist about a biologic... this is humira. this is humira helping to relieve
7:42 am
my pain and protect my joints from further damage. this is humira giving me new perspective. doctors have been prescribing humira for ten years. humira works for many adults. it targets and helps to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. 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. before treatment get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections 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. talk to your doctor and visit humira.com this is humira at work
7:44 am
motors. michigan's governor signed a law la banning the electric carmaker from doing business its way in that state. elaine quijano is here. elaine, good morning to you. >> good morning to you. unlike other auto companies that use franchise units, tesla sells its cars directly to the customer like this store here in new york. because of the new law, that wi otll n be the case in michigan. tesla motors the silicon valley upstart known for building the world's fastest elect car has hit a road block in the state of michigan home to america's auto industry. it began last week when governor rick snyder signed a law clarifying that automakers were not allowed to sell vehicles directly to a retail customer other than through franchise dealers. the law stopped tesla which uses a direct-to-consumer base business model from setting up shop in the state. unlike traditional car companies, tesla sells cars
7:45 am
through its company website and operates showrooms like this one. and it's at odds like other companies that sell to traditional car dealerships. >> tesla's business models is not have franchise car dealerships like every other carmaker does. the carmakers across the country are fighting it because it threatens their livelihood. >> reporter: in a video governor snyder said although the law is controversial it has strong legislative support. >> i hope they'll take up that concern and have a discussion in the future about what could be the best answer for michigan. >> reporter: but tesla disagrees and said the proposal was unclear and made at the last minute. in a statement to "cbs this morning," tesla said tesla has every intention of taking the governor up on his invitation to come to michigan to debate this issue in a public forum. it's now one of six states with
7:46 am
active laws banning operating under this current business model. another five states are debating tlaegs could further protect car dealers. >> they spent a lot of money building brick and mortar dealerships. the dealers pretty much wrote the franchise laws in this country. so they're fighting against having factory-owned stores. >> reporter: now isn't states where direct sales are banned tesla customers have to travel out of state to make their purchases. the company has some ambitious expansion plans. it intends to fight michigan's legislation so customers who want to buy their cars won't have to be inconvenienced. charlie. >> thank you so much elaine. >> tesla is saying game-on. anytime they say, look let's debate this in the light of day, it's serious. >> elon musk say very creative guy. >> he seller is. the company says planes without windows could o
7:48 am
(whoooosh! smack!) (whoooosh! smack!) (whoooosh! smack!) (whoooosh! smack!) (whoooosh! smack!) (whoooosh! smack!) (whoooosh! smack!) thanks carol! (electric hedge trimmer) everybody loves the sweet, fluffy deliciouslness of king's hawaiian bread. crest gave one friend crest 3d white whitestrips. and the other, a whitening toothpaste. here's what they thought. i can't tell if the paste whitened. well the whitestrips worked. yeah. the paste didn't do that. crest whitestrips work below the enamel surface to whiten 25x better than a leading whitening toothpaste. crest whitestrips. the way to whiten. [ fishing rod casting line, marching band playing ] [ male announcer ] the rhythm of life. [ whistle blowing ] where do you hear that beat? campbell's healthy request soup lets you hear it in your heart. [ basketball bouncing ] heart healthy. great taste. [ m'm... ] [ tapping ] sounds good. campbell's healthy request. m'm! m'm! good.® ok, if you're up there, i could use some help. smart sarah. seeking guidance. just like with your investments. that sets you apart. it does? it does. you're type e*. and seeking another perspective is what type e*s do.
7:49 am
7:50 am
at chili's, fresh is now. now, that's a burger. and now you can pay and go when you're ready. now, isn't that convenient? the new lunch double burger from chili's lunch combo menu, starting at 6 bucks. fresh is happening now. ♪ ♪ man: [ laughs ] those look like baby steps now. but they were some pretty good moves. and the best move of all? having the right partner at my side. it's so much better that way. [ male announcer ] have the right partner at your side. consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. go long.
7:51 am
♪ window or aisle seat? in a few years that question may no longer need 'answer. a british company wants to get rid of windows on airliners. it may be replaced with displays with images outside the plane. the company says a plane with no windows is lighter and uses less fuel and that could lower ticket prices. the idea may take off. >> i'm totally freaked out by that. >> it looked like you're riding in midair. do you like that senator? >> and the feel,too. >> do you like that idea of windowless planes? >> i wish we could open the windows. >> and everybody would depressurize and die. >> and you would freeze. >> and a parachute. our coverage continues. we're not going to talk about windows, we'll talk politics. maybe you'll announce you're running in 2016.
7:52 am
>> maybe, maybe. >> and michael lewis is here to talk to -- you can believe it's the 25th anniversary of -- are you ready? that's ahead on "cbs this morning." we'll be right back. ♪ drop and roll ♪ ♪ drop it more...drop ♪ ♪ i wanna know your name ♪ ♪ i wanna i wanna know your name... ♪ ♪ you got me droppin' the cut ♪ ♪ you got me droppin' it down... ♪ ♪ ♪ name droppin' on them boys with the tags, don't stop ♪ ♪ me and my crew just droppin' and dancin' ♪ ♪ stop, stop and drop it ♪ ♪ you got me droppin' it up ♪ ♪ got me droppin' it down ♪ hungry for the best? it's eb. want to give your family the very best in taste, freshness, and nutrition? it's eb. eggland's best. better taste. better nutrition. better eggs.
7:53 am
ring ring!... progresso! it's ok that your soup tastes like my homemade. it's our slow simmered vegetables and tender white meat chicken. apology accepted. i'm watching you soup people. make it progresso or make it yourself this is jim. a man who doesn't stand still. but jim has afib, atrial fibrillation an irregular heartbeat not caused by a heart valve problem. th puts jim at a greater risk of stroke. for years, jim's medicine tied him to a monthly trip to the clinic to get his blood tested. but now, with once-a-day xarelto®, jim's on the move. jim's doctor recommended xarelto®. like warfarin, xarelto® is proven effective to reduce afib-related stroke risk. but xarelto® is the first and only once-a-day prescription blood thinner for patients with afib not caused by a heart valve problem that doesn't require regular blood monitoring. so jim's not tied to that monitoring routine. gps: proceed to the designated route. not today. for patients currently well managed on warfarin,
7:54 am
there is limited information on how xarelto® and warfarin compare in reducing the risk of stroke. xarelto® is just one pill a day taken with the evening meal. plus, with no known dietary restrictions jim can eat the healthy foods he likes. don't stop taking xarelto® rivaroxaban, unless your doctor tells you to. while taking xarelto®, you may bruise more easily and it may take longer for bleeding to stop.ur risk of bleeding if you take certain medicines. xarelto® can cause serious bleeding and in rare cases, may be fatal. get help right away if you develop unexpected bleeding, unusual bruising, or tingling. if you have had spinal anesthesia while on xarelto® watch for back pain or any nerve or muscle related signs or symptom do not take xarelto® if you have an artificial heart valver abnormal bleeding. tell your doctor before all planned medical or dental procedures. before starting xarelto®, tell your doctor about any conditions such as kidney, liver, or bleeding problems. jim changed his routine. ask your doctor about xarelto®. once-a-day xarelto® means no regular blood monitoring, no known dietary restrictions.
7:55 am
8:00 am
it is tuesday, october 28th 2014. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead, including senator elizabeth warren. we'll ask her about the response to ebola and next week's midterm elections. burst fit the "eye opener" at 8:00. >> despite new guidelines there are inconsistencies at the rafedel level. >> the administration hopes that these new guidelines will convince other states not to follow christie's lead. >> the new isis propaganda video uses a british hostage but this viisdeo te qui different. >> the residents here realizing they may be able to save themselves but there's not much they can do to protect their homes. >> they don't like the president because he's got a "d" next to
8:01 am
his name and because of the federal government doesn't work. >> the british prime minister lives in the same security bubble as u.s. presidents but there say risk to that kind of now exposed. >> we get a lot of companies that do put out the pay app come forward? >> i think so. >> it's caused hesitation in stores like here in new york but because of the law that will not be the case in michigan. >> in the movie "ouija" they used the board to contact the dead. and in the opening scene, they're talking to -- >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 is presented by walgreens. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. new cdc ebola guidelines are in effect this morning. they're aimed at finding common ground and protecting public health. the new rules recommend a 21-day isolation period for people at of
8:02 am
getting ebola. states can still set their own rules. >> and a nurse from maine is home this morning after a forced quarantine in new jersey. kaci hickox was isolated after her return home from west africa. and she called her stay in the tent inhumane. governor christie defends that. >> i know she didn't want to be there. nobody wants to be in the hospital. i understand that. she had a greater rick to the public. i think when she has time to reflect she'll understand that as well. >> meanwhile, amber vinson will be released from the atlanta hospital after contracting the disease from a patient. with just a week away for the elections, the battleground tracker shows republicans are poised to take the seat with 51. democrats are not ready to concede. >> democrat elizabeth warren is ready to stand up and fight.
8:03 am
it focuses on middle class opportunities. and it's a big theme in her memoir "fighting chance." good morning. >> good morning. >> first on the issue of ebola, governor chris christie said this morning he doesn't think his policy involuntarily quarantine is draconian. he said the cdc is behind on this. >> well he should bring out the scientists for advice on that. because we know we want to be led by the science. that's what's going to keep people safe science, not politics. i think that's what's critical. >> are you worried about it? >> of course. well, of course, i'm worried. part of this reminds me this is why elections matter and why they matter over time. you know ebola is not new. we've known about it for a long time. we were putting money into funding ebola many years ago. and republicans have cut funding overall for medical research.
8:04 am
for the national institute of health and ebola has not been a priority. so now we're in a position instead of making that up front, we wait until people die, now we're going to spend billion, of dollars and some real risk to our country. we can't just go one crisis to another. what congress is supposed to do is help us make the investments early. and make sure that it keeps >> let's turn now to the election because republicans need six seats to take over the majority. you serve in the u.s. senate. democrats are in control. the republicans need six seats. on average, since world war ii the opposing party of the president has won about six seats. what's going to happen if republicans take control? >> oh it's going to be ugly throughout if republicans take control. >> how many ways can we talk about this? >> but the republicans themselves have made this clear. you know mitch mcconnell who, by the way is getting a real
8:05 am
challenge from alison grimes. mitch mcconnell said number one, he's going to make sure that lots of people have access to health care. he's going to repeal the affordable health care act. that means young people don't get to stay on their current policies. you can be cancelled. you outrun your insurance coverage. the second thing he said he's going to right behind that is reduce the accountability of the big financial institutions. roll back which of what was done in dodd frank. and he said it's going to be the first priority to take the legs out from underneath that consumer protection bureau the one that we fought so hard for that actually to level the playing field so people don't get cheated on mortgages, on credit cards. that little agency has been in effect three years now. and it's already returned more than $4 billion, forced big financial companies to return
8:06 am
money that they cheated people out of. now, that's government that works. and that's what mitch mcconnell wants to get rid of. >> but i mean you've made wall street an issue. >> you bet. >> in all of your public life and in all your books as well. but democrats are facing re-election campaigns where the president is the issue. and many think that you're not making the economic arguments well enough. you're not making the middle class well enough. >> democrats are focused too much on reproductive rights et cetera. >> i think we have a choice in this election between democrats and republicans. let me make it as concrete as i can because this is where the evidence is. we believe that no one should work full time and still live in poverty. that means raising the minimum
8:07 am
wage. democrats support it. if we do that we would literally move millions of children out of poverty. the republicans filibuster. democrats say we need to lower the interest rate on student loans. the government should not be making billions of dollars on profits off the backs of our kids. republicans filibuster. >> i'm asking you, why is the president so unpopular? >> let's remember what the republicans said. we're going to do everything we can to make him a failed president. we're going to block every move -- >> the president is unpopular because of republicans? >> well they have made it clear that they don't want democrats, and they certainly don't want the president to have any to move the american country forward. and to help strengthen america's middle class. look at the things we fought for. under president obama's leadership, we fight to raise the minimum wage. we fight to reduce the interest
8:08 am
rate. we fight for equal work. >> what is going to be your main focus? and what can you say that doesn't sound like a political talking point? what do we need to focus on now, the democrats to make sure that they maintain control as a candidate? >> i think it's really what we stand on. for me that's the whole heart of it. you can see who's out there fighting to reduce the interest rates on student loans. that's the best example i can get. that all of the democrats stood up for this. the republicans filibustered it. do you know why they filibustered it? they filibustered it because, as they said you'd have to have millionaires and billionaires throw a little more money into the kitty to make up for this. >> and massachusetts, "the boston globe" just endorsed a republican candidate for governor. your home state. >> i know. i know. i don't -- i think they're wrong for doing that. there's an example, but it is
8:09 am
it's about whose side do you fight on. martha coakley is a wonderful example. she's been for the last years the attorney general. she's stood up for wall street. she's been on the defense of marriage act, she led the way. a woman's rights to be able to go to planned parenthood without being harassed. martha's been on the front line. charlie baker -- are you ready? charlie baker got an award for being the -- of the-year-old. >> you know what you told me in the green room? >> you can. >> she said i like to stir things up. i like to be a troublemaker. >> that's what i talk about in my book "a fighting chance." we've got to stir things up so all our kids get a chance. >> you're a troublemaker. >> we really appreciate it. cbs news election night coverage begins next tuesday on the "cbs
8:10 am
8:11 am
8:12 am
for most people, earning cash back ends here, at the purchase. but there's a new card in town. introducing the citi® double cash card. it lets you earn cash back when you buy and again as you pay. that's cash back twice. it's cash back with a side of cash back. the citi double cash card. the only card that lets you earn cash back twice on every purchase with 1% when you buy and 1% as you pay . with two ways to earn, it makes a lot of other cards seem one-sided.
8:13 am
moms know that no two mouths are the same. that's why there's a listerine® product for every mouth. one to clean your whole mouth. one for those hard to reach places. one to protect kids mouths from cavities. even one to freshen breath on-the-go. with over 100 years of innovation in oral care... there's a listerine® product for every mouth in your house. for cleaner, healthier mouths go beyond brushing alone. listerine®. power to your mouth ™. i did it.... i did it too... they took nature's bounty hair skin and nails it's a vitamin supplement that nourishes from the inside... with biotin for beautiful hair and strong nails. and vitamin c and e for vibrant skin. give it a month, if your hair, skin and nails don't look and feel more beautiful we'll give you your money back. i did it...and i feel beautiful. take the nature's bounty hair, skin and nails challenge visit naturesbounty.com for details.
8:14 am
in delicious gummies too! on gun safety, larry hogan isn't being straight. after filling out their, hogan was awarded an a- from the nra. but now he refuses to release his responses. the nra opposes comprehensive background checks. they want to weaken maryland's gun safety laws. even support letting suspects on the fbi terror watch list buy guns. on gun safety and terror the nra is wrong. hogan gets an a- from the nra.
8:15 am
8:16 am
anthony mason shows us the legacy. that's next on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. [thinking] started my camry. drove to her wedding. did not forever hold my peace. [laughing] wow! the bold new camry. one bold choice leads to another. toyota. let's go places. sir, we're going to need you on the runway. (vo) theraflu starts to get to work in your body in just 5 minutes. (vo) theraflu breaks you free from your worst cold and flu symptoms. (vo) theraflu. serious power. once there was a girl who snooze-buttoned her morning run away... one cap of downy created such irresistibly soft sheets she wanted to stay in bed forever.
8:17 am
8:18 am
and we owe a debt to every single one. when the v.a. refused to treat women with ptsd... it was senator warner who got the rule changed. he's forcing the v.a. to bring new technology to reduce... wait times for vets like me. when military families were forced to live in toxic housing mark warner got it fixed. he even came back down to check on us. i'm mark warner and i approve this message because... whether it's military housing or veterans' healthcare... we've got to get it right. and i won't stop working until we do.
8:19 am
8:20 am
known around the world. anthony mason is here with an inside look at the band's final days. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. no other band has had the connection that it the allman brothers have with the beacon theatre selling out more than 200 shows since 1989. for the city that will mean so much for so long. >> reporter: the allman brothers virtually invented rock. ♪ a legendary live act, the band has survived breakups and tragedies. to keep jamming for 45 years. ♪ lead guitarist derrick trucks at age 35 he's the youngest member of the band. >> the thing that impressed me, whenever we hit the stage that was always that energy and blood and sweat on the drums and two
8:21 am
hours later, these guys 65 years old, it's been an inspiration the whole time. >> reporter: formed in the late '60s by duane allman and his younger brother gregg, the band recorded with their third album recorded live "at fillmore east." >> it was about the sheer power coming off of this band. and it's a record that's stepping off a trajectory of becoming one of the biggest in the world. >> reporter: but just two weeks after their record went gold duane allman was killed in a motorcycle accident in macon, georgia. he was 24. >> after duane died they got together and said well do we go or do we not go? and the feeling, was you know what duane would have wanted to keep playing. that's what we know how to do.
8:22 am
that's everything that we've been working on. and they got in there and they found a way to rearrange and move the band forward. >> it's kind of accustomed to what duane allman was like from the very beginning. he lit a fire. and it's still -- >> burning? >> -- burning. >> reporter: despite brief breakups and repeated cast changes, the band kept forging ahead with gregg keeping his brother's dream alive year after year. duane's daughter galadrielle allman. >> that's what the allman brothers was that he would make a band with equally talented musicians. >> reporter: as you see the band now, do you see in some way your father? >> absolutely i do. >> it's impressive. it stayed true the whole way.
8:23 am
i can't think of another band that's been able to do that. ♪ >> reporter: but the road may not go on forever after all for the allmans. in january both trucks and guitarist warren haynes announced they were leaving the band. tonight's concert at the beacon will be their last. >> it's a huge honor to be a part of it. 45 years is a serious run for any band. i've been there 15 now. -i never thought i'd make it two or three. >> does that effectively mean the end of the allman brothers do you think? >> we'll see. with that band it's one way or the other. >> this past summer gregg allman said this would be the end but then seemed to change his mind. this time with the allman brothers, though it's definitely done. gregg allman once said it wouldn't end for him until he was carried off the stage on a stretcher. >> gregg allman has been here. it's interesting the influence
8:24 am
that duane allman still has on the band all these years later even though he died at age 24. >> that's what derrick trucks said he's always been in the band. there have been other leaders. >> well trucks and warren they both have their own bands. the there are rumors that gregg allman will start his own band. he's done that before. the allmans have a way of coming back to life. their fans hope that happens again. >> when you really love something, it's hard to give it up. >> thank you anthony. michael lewis, speaking of superb
8:26 am
8:27 am
less. just finished an afternoon of frisbee, maybe ye ou'v earned a little more. balance what you eat and drink with what you do. that's how you mixify. balance your mix at mymixify dot com. thank you, cable. for the slower internet upload speeds. for fewer video on demand titles. for taking longer to upload our movies. for making me wait longer to share my photo albums. thank you, cable. for taking longer to upload my fantasy picks. thank you, cable. thank you, cable. because if we never had you... we wouldn't know the incredible difference verizon fios makes. the numbers don't lie. in customer satisfaction studies fios is rated #1 in internet speed and reliability 8 years running. #1 in internet customer satisfaction...and hd picture quality. join the millions who enjoy the difference fios makes and get a fios triple play online at an amazing price guaranteed for two years. sign up now and get $300 back with a 2-year agreement
8:28 am
8:29 am
it's easy for politicians to forget that taxpayer money actually comes out of your pocket. i'm peter franchot as comptroller i know you work hard for your money. that's why i make sure that most of you get your state refund in three days or less. with new technology we've collected over 3 billion dollars from tax evaders. that's more money for schools, roads and public safety. and i've led the fight in annapolis against wasteful spending. this is your money and i'll never forget that. peter franchot maryland's comptroller. ♪
8:30 am
welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour he left wall street but it never really left him. michael lewis is back. he's here in studio 57. we'll go back to the '80s in his first role of exposing it's underworld of high finance. >> joey mcintyre is also here. we'll talk about his new role on the cbs comedy "the mccarthys." and some headlines from around the globe. the seattle times said it's outraged that the fbi intimidated the paper's website using a fake story to catch a suspect. he created documents sayinged fbi created an e-mail link in a newspaper file that was bogus. with that listening of software of a teenager suspected making bomb threats at a high school. the fbi defended its actions saying it led to an arrest and conviction.
8:31 am
bloomberg said it's getting the film of a british tycoon. it will cost $20 million. gold leaf will cover the banisters and ceilings. and the south china morning post, a tennis champion is losing a $45,000 prize after an over-the-top victory celebration. he's a chinese and olympic champion after a big win in germany on sunday. he kicked the board. and later said he was sorry, threw his t-shirt in the crowd. and he said he was shamed by his display. >> as these guys fight over the shirt. ping-pong is very popular. this morning "u.s. news and world report" reveals the list of best universities. most are american. oxford is number five. stanford is fourth.
8:32 am
number three university of california-berkeley. m.i.t. is number two, and overall, harvard. the u.s. dominates with 135 schools on the list. germany with 42 britain with 38. china has 27. michael lewis has a bookshelf full of best-selling books. he explored the world of baseball the showed us the moneymakers in flash boys. but the book that launched the michael lewis brand is the debut of "liar's poker." at its 25th anniversary. michael lewis joins us. welcome. >> i didn't know i was a brand. >> oh yes. >> why do this after 25 years, we thought you would do another
8:33 am
book -- >> well it's hard to write a book -- i'll just start re-releasing them. mix them up. chop half of it in the back of "blind side." >> you know the book has never stopped selling. it surprising me. when i read it i thought it was a lot to do about -- it's a time capsule. who would have thought the '80s would persist. >> wall street has been so good to you. >> you would think i'd run out of material. but it has -- you know i think what happened was, in that period, the newj& model for wall street you know now, we wouldn't have too big to fail back then. but the things that led were put in place there. >> you say people were doing nothing making tons of money. >> that's so true. the reason i wrote the book in
8:34 am
the first place, because i wanted to give investment advice. >> tell us what it was like back then. you said the outrageous behavior that then they'd be fired today. and if you had to write the book today the characters would be deadly. what do you mean? >> it used to get it have strippers -- you don't know that -- >> were they -- did you know they were strippers? >> often the plan the stripper was to surprise some trader on his birthday. she'd be a secretary. people would say, oh, another stripper. you don't do that. i think there's a point here. the point is like for the behavior, the surface behavior is far less obscene that it was. and less colorful. and the surface characters much less colorful. more corporate more buttoned
8:35 am
up. more disguised in a way. the underlying financial stuff has gotten worse. i mean like the thing going on now that would not have been tolerated. >> on that very point, 1989 the dow was at 2700. today it's near 17,000. you wrote in "flash boys.," you wrote a great piece. you say the market is rigged against the average investor. >> well it is. >> how? >> you make a trade, pennyies are being skimmed off all the time but it ends up being millions. it's systematic. they have faster access to market movement so you're trading against someone always who knows where prices went. they know -- they know by milliseconds but nevertheless it's to their advantage. the result is you have people in the markets who trade for a thousand days and never lose
8:36 am
money. it's a game. and it's been gamed for a reason. >> how has the s.e.c. taken on trading? >> the short answer is no individual s.e.c. member actually has any interest in anything in the financial specter. because it's that -- it's a collaborative spirit in which they operate rather than a combat the natural next step is it's got to work on wall street. hundreds of people have left the s.e.c. to go to traders and lobbyists of traders. you put a trader next to me he wouldn't actually feel better about the stock make you feel so confused that you'd say maybe he knows something i don't know. >> so you made a lot of money from selling books and writing books. >> what's your point, charlie? >> you invest your money, don't you? >> i do. >> how do you do?
8:37 am
>> very tack etitly. i don't trade with the stock market. i buy index funds or warren buffett. >> that's exactly what i do. warren buffett. >> what it is to me i think whatever happens, that man can defend me against it. i mean it's referred to high frequency trading, knows what's going on. if it would go bad he's in a position to capitalize on that. i feel well that's the bottom that's it. but i don't think about it. i think people spend way too much time thinking about it. >> why have you never written an commodities? >> i mean, give me some time. i was a baby when i started -- i still think of myself as a young man trying to find material. who knows, it could happen. >> just trying to write about
8:38 am
wall street because you did "money ball." which was mandatory viewing for us when we did this show. >> and what about the baseball -- kansas city? >> you don't know what's going to happen. >> they say home games, michael, you have an advantage? >> well see, the advantage i think largely that the umpire is more likely to give you a call because he gets cheered. i think that's the force of the home field advantage but i think the players themselves -- >> let me close with this. on "liar's poker. "kwu wrote the afterward, wall street is the like the quiet guy who has a quiet diversion to his family while cheating on his
8:39 am
8:40 am
he's been called a super lobbyist, the ultimate washington insider. ed gillespie paid millions to lobby for the oil companies for a student loan company that overcharged taxpayers. his firm even lobbied for five foreign governments including a dictator now awaiting trial for war crimes. and then there's enron. gillespie lobbied for them while they committed the largest corporate fraud in us history. ed gillespie. the million dollar lobbyist whose never looked out for you. [ male announcer ] at northrop grumman, we know in the cyber world, threats are always evolving. at first we were protecting networks. then, we were protecting the transfer of data. and today it's evolved to infrastructure... ♪ ♪ ...finance... and military missions. we're constantly
8:41 am
8:42 am
on gun safety, larry hogan isn't being straight. after filling out their questionaire, hogan was awarded an a- from the nra. but now he refuses to release his responses. the nra opposes comprehensive background checks. they want to weaken maryland's gun safety laws. even support letting suspects on the fbi terror watch list buy guns. on gun safety and terror the nra is wrong. hogan gets an a- from the nra. on protecting maryland we just can't trust him.
8:43 am
♪ yeah he's an idiot which is why i should be the new assistant coach. >> dad say two-time boston globe all-star. i just want to remind you that i was a two-time boston globe all-star. i'm not a screamer like the j.v. team. >> that's why you play j.v. that's why you play j.v. >> coaching is all about volume and repetition. volume and repetition. >> that's his line. volume and repetition. the new cbs comedy "the mccarthys" is about a close-knit boston team that loves sports. if you lived in '90s or your kids did, you may remember him from something else. ♪
8:44 am
>> oh, my gosh. >> oh mcintyre the youngest member of new kids on the block. the band sold more than 80 million albums worldwide. how cute were you? do you know how many posters your face was on in little girls' rooms who were screaming? >> well we do -- we're still doing it we talk about the old times with our fans all the time. >> were you the justin bieber before there was justin bieber? >> no we definitely we definitely had quite a moment in the young girls' lives. >> look at your face -- when you look at your face that young, what do you think? what do you remember? >> we were having a blast. we were having a good time. and then it got so crazy and we were like whoa we got to get out of here alive. and we did thankfully. >> after aten years? >> yeah it was quite a while. it was quite a run. you realize there's more to
8:45 am
life. >> what are you doing now? >> we came back in 2008. timing is everything. our fans had grown up and we can look back and embrace the past and feel young and fresh and challenge ourselves it's been amazing. >> now, you're coming to cbs and donny wahlberg is already here. >> oh i know. >> reading about it when you read this character, you said, i know this guy. i've been practicing for this role my whole life. what do you mean? >> brian galavin who is from a town in boston. it was one of those things i knew this character. it's probably like half of a guy from triple d bar in my hometown of jamaicatown. and lots to say, maybe a little
8:46 am
defensive. all that stuff that comes out. and we get to play it. it's great. >> how does that affect who you are today, and you are the youngest of nine kids? you got beaten up a lot. >> you know i talk about family, i talk about boston i get emotional. i've been blessed and i've been lucky. with the new kids and just a town like boston you know it keeps you grounds but you feel very supported at the same time. >> now, he's got three kids. when we were in the studio he was showing me home videos. i said can you show that. you already have a built-in following already. >> every day when i'm driving to school. there's billboards all over -- we live in l.a. it's kind of coming into focus. my son -- my daddy! da da da! it's just one of those cool moments.
8:47 am
>> you're from boston how cool is it to sing the national anthem in the stadium? >> very cool. very cool. gotten me into a few games over the years. the idea is not to blow it. you do headlines on the end. >> like recently. >> yeah last week the patriots game playing live the jets. it's an honor. you're either aretha franklin or you messed up you know what i mean? somewhere in between is where you want to be. >> everybody says it's a hard hard song is it? >> well you get it low enough. they give you some room. and you don't want to get acrobatic. >> i love learning that you're a marathoners, too. what don't you do? >> what don't i do? that's about it. running around with the kids. my first marathon was 2013 when
8:48 am
the craziness happened. and you went -- yeah been able to certainly enjoy it and come back last year. it was -- you know it's an emotional experience anyway. so now, you know i mean even more. >> you said every time you go to boston, your heart grows a little bigger. >> yeah. >> love that place. >> joey mcintyre good luck with the show. >> yeah watch the show here on cbs. >> it's this thursday night, 9:30 8:30 central. where? >> cbs. they know their ice. as hockey players dressed up to bring cheers to children. that's next.
8:50 am
dove invited women to a makeover with a difference. hi ma'am hi would you like to have a free makeover? yeah, why not? who doesn't love a free makeover? there you go. it's a shower. it's a shower. but it's a shower with new dove body wash, with its new breakthrough formula all it takes is just one shower for softer smoother skin. want to feel? feels really good. real it's awesome. i love it. new dove body wash. softer, smoother skin after just one shower.
8:52 am
♪ let is go let it go ♪ young patients at children's hospital got a an oversized visit. some of the boston bruins got in costumes of "frozen. "elsa, the 6'5" defensiveman put on the signature dress and the long blond hair. and princess anna had a hard time hiding this unlady like arms under the shawl. >> that's great. that does it for us.
8:53 am
hey, how you doin'? it hurts. this is what it can be like to have shingles. a painful blistering rash. if you had chicken pox the shingles virus is already inside you. as you get older your immune system weakens and it loses its ability to keep the shingles virus in check. i just can't stand seeing him like this. he's in pain. one in three people will get shingles in their lifetime. the shingles rash can last up to 30 days. i wish that there was something i could do to help. some people with shingles will have long term nerve pain which can last for a few months to a few years. don't wait until someone you love develops shingles.
8:57 am
8:58 am
8:59 am
9:00 am
467 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
WUSA (CBS) Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on