tv CBS This Morning CBS December 30, 2014 7:00am-9:01am EST
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discover brookside. ♪ > >>good morning. it is tuesday, december 30th 2014. welcome to "cbs this morning." recovery teams have found the wreck age of flight 8501. allen pizzey is indonesia. did the government get it wrong behind the sony hack attack. plus stalkers watching you from your phone or home commuter. >> but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds.>> they've been recovered. the man in charge of the search has also said that a shadow is
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beli tevedo be part of the aircraft. >> search teams make a grim discovery. >> authorities say for certain it's 8501. >> it seems to be a plane door and a life jacket. >> the family members are called to be briefed by indonesian authorities. winter making aic wked return for the holidays. >> vegas gets snowfall. >> can you imagine what it would be like if they get snowflakes. >> those girls willav he to put clothes on. >> the release of an autopsy of a man kdille has sparked protests. an emergency landing due to engine problems. >> it was like a lou ndoise and really shaking. >> new york's congressman mi chael grimm will resign following pleading to evasion. and they used an explosive to destroy an atm, the blast knocked him to the ground. >> all that -- >> more inshovg.
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>> at the a&m bowl, an assistant striking a player. >>al "l that mattered" -- >> and a superhero came for a visit. >> on "cbs this morning" -- >> president obama apologizing to a newlywed couple whose wedding was relocated because of his golf game. >> we were watching you golf. >> that must have been kind of painful. >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota, let's go places. captioning funded by cbs welcome to "cbs this morning." charlie and gayle are off so jeff glor and vinita nair are here. in the past few minutes indonesian officials confirmed that wreckage found in the water off of independent nearby is
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from air flight 8501. searchers recovered debris and dozens of bodies. there is no sign that any of the 162 passengers and crew survived. >> the ceo says how sorry i am. the wreckage was found in the java sea. allen pizzey is surabaya indonesia with news of this emotional scene, good morning. >> reporter: the search for the missing plane, a recovery, rather than a rescue operation. the first of the bodies found by an indonesian search and rescue helicopter confirmed all that was all but obvious. six bodies were seen three were quickly recovered. but thenrs reported more and more bodies flowing in the sea six miles where last in contact with air traffic control. cbs news has deliberately
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blurred the gruesome image. the first picture was not disguised by local television when it went on the news. some went into hysterics. for others the news was too much to bear. many broke down in tears inconsolable now that last hopes have been dashed. in a measure how deeply the country has been hurt by the tragedy, local reporters expressed horror that the tv had been left on. the search plane said at first he and his cught the bodies they saw in the water were waving for help. then the debris floating in the sea. at first it was cautiously thought it was likely from the plane now confirmed. strong winds and waves six feet high. earlier in the day, people representing the family and victims were flown over the wreckage to pray. >> we believe that the process
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for the next of kin. >> reporter: but whatever happened was so sudden, nothing could have saved those on board. none of the bodies found were wearing life jackets. the crew of one search plane reported seeing a shadow on the seabed what they thought could be the rest of the missing airliner. plunging out of control sooner vinita. >> allen with the tragic developments. thank you, allen. well the president of indonesia is holding a news conference about the air disaster right now. these are live pictures. jeff pegues is in washington with how the united states and other countries are helping. jeff, good morning. >> good morning. the head of indonesia's search and rescue operations have are acknowledged that the country may not have the best technology to search underwater and has accepted offers from other countries including britain, ates. the u.s. navy's seven fleets aboard the same team that aided in the search for mh 370.
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the "u.s.s. sampson" began searching, the destroyer could help look for pings emitted from the black boxes. >> the navy has eavesdropping or technology that is second to none. they can pick up any signal that is coming especially in shallow waters. >> reporter: the navy is being asked to assist in search and recovery. >> finding a way to be responsive. >> reporter: for days crews from around the world have been scouring indonesian waters for any sign of airbus 8320. it's unclear how wide the search will go. >> if the aircraft went into a
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deep stall and nose-dived into the ocean, the debris field will be a lot more concentrated. >> according to an aviation source airasia recently began to upgrade its jets to improve the tracking of its fleet. but the airline has not confirmed that information nor has it confirmed that the missing plane was part of that upgrade. this morning, we're learning of another airasia plane in trouble. this time in the philippines. a flight from manila overshot the runway at the international airport. passengers had to use evacuation slides. there's no official word of any injuries but you can imagine how scary that must have been. coming up a closer look at how the weather may have brought down flight 8501. and the storm above the java sea and the extreme altitude. some experts are expressing
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doubt that north are korea was behind the sony hack. federal investigators are not ready to change their opinion. elan quijano joins us for how the sony insiders may have helped in the attacks. >> last week cbs news reported on a silicon valley cybersecurity firm with an alternate theory who is behind the sony pictures hack. that firm has now shared its ideas with the fbi. well the u.s. government claims that north korea bears sole responsibility for the attack. >> reporter: on monday fbi agents spent hours meeting with representatives from norse, a silicon valley cybersecurity firm. the fbi wanted to know who norse thought was behind the cyberattack on sony pictures. >> some of the things we focused on were long-term employees of sony. >> reporter: last week cbs news news spoke with curt stam burgmberger
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stammberger. he said it's an inside job. >> there are north korean fingerprints on this but when we run those to ground they turn out to be decoys. >> reporter: stammberger said it points to a person called lena with guardians of peace hacking group. north claims she worked with sony of los angeles for ten years before leaving the company last may. >> this woman was in precisely the right position and had the deep technical background she would need to locate the specific servers that were compromised. >> reporter: alternate theories as to who was to blame for the attack came just days after it was announced that north korea was responsible. even show so the state department said it had no plans to change its position. >> we are confident that north korea is responsible for this destructive attack and we stand by our conclusion.
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>> that's not enough time to do a thorough investigation. >> reporter: hecker monsegur is a former hacker and cybersecurity expert. he said the government's conclusion about the complicated attack came far too soon. >> north korea would not be able to handle such a massive amount of information floating into it from an external source without raising any red flags. >> now skeptics of the government's north korea theory not only point to the short lent of time that the fbi could draw its conclusion but also pointed to malware used in the attack. they say its use by north korea is not exclusive. and used by locations around the world including united states every day. >> fascinating story. it gets more fascinating by the day, elaine. i know you're have more coverage throughout the day on our digital news network at cbs news.com. protesters are expressing more anger at what they say it
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another police brutality. police shot and killed the unarmed black man in august. john blackstone is in los angeles where tensions haves virginia escalated. >> police say they shot the 25-year-old man after he tried to grab an officer's gun. his family believes the shooting was unprovoked. but they're setting a mode of peaceful protests after similar violence have sparked violence across the country. >> reporter: ezell ford's mother lit a candle for her son on monday. others took to the streets, briefly stopping three-way traffic and taking up what's become a national refraun. >> hands up! don't shoot. i didn't breathe. >> reporter: protesters demanded justice after the alex medical examiner revealed that ford was shot three times, aside the arm
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and on the back in close enough range to leave a mussel imprint. >> if a person is not armed then a gun should not be drawn on him. too much innocent blood is laying in the streets of america. >> reporter: and again police asked for calm reflection. >> an autopsy does not describe that nor impropriety. in this case a legal shooting or not. >> reporter: the two officers say they stopped ford for making suspicious movements including attempting to conceal his hands. during a struggle they say, he tried to grab one officer's weapon. ford's family has filed a $75 million wrongful death suit against lapped and the city of los angeles. >> it clearly looked like an execution shot. and that's exactly what it was. >> reporter: anger of ford's killing comes after the deaths of michael brown, eric garner and tamir rice all with consultation with police.
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los angeles police chief charlie beck says he knows officers across the country are facing intense scrutiny. and the public deserves a thorough investigation. >> we will find out the truth of what happened on that august night. >> the protests have created tension between law enforcement and activists. the deadly ambush of two new york city police officers in an act of vengeance earlier this month have police departments on alert. and the lapd is still searching for one of two suspects who opened fire on officers sunday night. although the motive in that shooting is still unclear. norah. >> all right tom, thank you. new york city mayor bill de blasio will meet with police unions today to try to mend their troubled relationship. de blasio spoke at an nypd grat
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gradation, some booed. >> to stare down the danger, because that's what you will do you will stare down the danger. you will keep the peace. >> officers have expressed safety concerns since the murder of two policemen in their patrol cars. earlier this month. since the attack the new york post reports tickets for crimes in new york city have dropped 94% over the same week last year. overall, down 66%. temperatures are plunging in some parts of the country. in colorado snowplows are working to keep the roads clear. meteorologist danielle niles from cbs station wbzz shows how parts could feel a good new year's eve. >> i felt the chill here. >> absolutely vinita. in fact well below average temperatures for the northern plains down towards the southern plains as bem typical winter chill as we get through the
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mid-atlantic. windchill advisories up this afternoon and tonight again up. 25 to 35 degrees below zero. so it's been cold. and it's going to stay that way. these are the forecast highs for new year's eve. 16 in minneapolis. 27 in topeka kansas. doing fine in florida. 70 in orlando. first day of 2015 looking chilly, 20s and 30s on the map. boston will be in low temperatures for the first day of 2015. there's snow too, in portions of the midwest and new england where it will be the top ten least snowiest. michael grimm pleaded guilty to tax evasion last week. voters reelected grimm in november. he would have been sworn in next tuesday. the republican from new york city's staten island made headlines last january when he threatened a tv reporter.
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he said the break my spirits nor the will of the voters. however, i do not believe i can continue to be 100% effective in the next congress. meanwhile, the number three house republican admits that he spoke to a group of white supremacists in 2002. jan crawford is on capitol hill with a story that's embarrassing one of the leading conservatives in congress. good morning. >> scalise has been a congressman since 2008 and was elected majority w.h.i.p. just six months ago but it was that speech that he gave nearly 13 years ago that is now coming back to haunt him. steve scalise was a state lawmaker when he was asked in 2002 to address a group of euro. founded by ex-ku klux klan leader david duke. on a
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neo-nazi forum after the event a user said scalise criticized a fund as an apparent group based on race. scalise denied knowing what the group stood for when he gave the speech. "washington post" reporter robert costa said that david duke was a well-known figure in louisiana politics. >> this was a major event in louisiana at the time. it was in new orleans. it was a gathering of white supremacists and neo-nazis. scalise says he was not aware of those associations. but it seems like everyone else there was quite nollable about mr. duke and his history. >> reporter: in a statement, scalise's office said he has never been with the abhorrent group in question. the same poster wrote, i suppose if duke does not make the election for whatever reason scalise would be a good alternative. soap, gop colleagues are supporting scalise, but the
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question is for how long. >> house speaker john boehner has a decision to make. he's trying to set the tone for his new congress but he knows if he cuts scalise off it could cost him political capital within the house. >> scalise, obviously, he's well respected among conservatives. and his presence in the leadership gives speaker boehner credibility with that part of the republican party. but this comes as the gop is trying to burnish its image, reach out to african-americans and other minorities. and this obviously does not help. vinita. the search continues for more possible victims of the ferry disaster off the coast of greece. ten people died in the fire. and two albanian sailors were also killed in efforts to rescue the ship. italian officials plan to launch a criminal investigation into the fire's cause. in philadelphia a flaming engine gave passengers a scare aboard a us airways express flight to manchester new
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hampshire. the pilot had to turn around after takeoff. this is what it looked like. one passenger said he heard a loud bang and saw that fire. he said quote, it was like seeing death right there. the 75 passengers aboard did land safely at philadelphia's airport. doctors say former president george h.w. bush is high spirits this morning as his breathe egg has returned to normal. the 90-year-old went to the hospital last week for shortness of breath. the bush family spokesman said the president is now waiting for his doctor's approval to return home. well it is 7:19 ahead on "cbs this morning" -- the round of golf that leaves the commander in chief feeling terrible. we'll show
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region known for violent weather. >> ahead how high-altitude storms can challenge pilots and put passengers in danger. >> the news is back here on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. won a storage locker. found an old guitar. tracked down the previous owner. reunited them. hit the jackpot. the bold new camry. one bold choice leads to another. toyota. let's go places. did you know enamel is your teeth's first line of defense? but daily eating and drinking can leave enamel rough and weak. introducing new colgate
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version 1 million 447 one shows a man lighting an explosive while trying to break into an atm. within seconds it exploded. really honestly that's what you're trying? he ran from the scene barefoot without getting any money out. >> how are they keeping a tally? >> it continues exponentially, it increased. >> gayle if you're watching on vacation, gayle would say that is stupid with two "o"s. >> i love it. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour violent weather is one of the greatest dangers for any pilot. that may explain the crash of 8501. we'll show you how others are involved in accidents and how pilots and airlines make plans to deal with it. plus president obama
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apologizes to a newlywed couple in hawaii. let's show you the headlines from around the globe. "the wall street journal" said fedex and u.p.s. got back on time this holiday. companies sent a 90% delivery rate. last year fedex on-time rate was 90%, u.p.s. was 83%. bloomburg said oil fell to a five-year low. that's based on predictions that the global supply glut will continue to the first half of the year. on monday the bench drop for crude to $50 a barrel. gasbuddy.com says gas is 2 sps$2.26 a gallon. shake shack operates 63
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praunts around the world. in case you're not from new york you've never had had a shake shack. apparently it's a mixture of brinket and short ribs. that's what they say it makes the patty so good. the hill said the 113th congress nearly avoids the least productive and least ceremonial renaming of buildings. they passed 296 laws. that's fewer than other previous pew said bills on substance are down 64% to the lowest level in years. kentucky is suing the maker of oxycontin. it could lead to the first ever jury trial over the pain pills. purdue warn a lawsuit could cost more than $1 billion. and the sydney herald looks at a lucky family who missed the
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doomed flight. they didn't receive messages that the plane would depart early. they were among 26 people who didn't show up for the flight. interesting, family were in two cars. the men were in one car, women in the other car, the men said we're going to miss this flight. oh, well. >> that gives me chill. searchers in the java sea did recover bodies and dozens of wreckage. heading to singapore, it ran into severe storms after taking off in indonesia. don dahler is here with a look at how dangerous the flying can get when weather is bad. >> good morning. flight 8501 is refocusing on whether weather can contribute to other crashes in the past. among them malfunction and other violent weather that pilots can experience at high
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altitudes. >> i think it's fair to say that these investigators will strongly focus on the weather and on the flight crew's response to the weather. >> reporter: indonesian authorities say airasia flight 8501 was passing through a thunderstorm over the java sea when it disappeared sunday. as a result, while flying at roughly 32,000 feet the pilot is asked air traffic control for per his to climb to 38,000 feet due to storm clouds. steven wallace is a pilot and former director of the faa's office of accident investigations. >> modern airliners are equipped to cope with precipitation and icing and turbulence. but most decision making is about weather, particularly weather avoidance. >> reporter: air traffic controllers and pilots around the globe take precautions to avoid those conditions. but sudden and unpredicted weather can crop up in their flight paths. an ntsb study blamed weather as cause
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or a contributing factor in more than 1700 plane crashes between 2003 and 2007. >> a lot of airliners have a radar that is designed to detect weather. and it basically sends an echo back that shows the level of density of precipitation. >> reporter: severe thunderstorms are a normal occurrence over the java sea. the location of 8501's disappearance. they can produce lightning and microbursts that can jostle an aircraft. >> very heavy precipitation can potentially drown out the engines. hail can break through the windshield. we've seen all of those things happen, in prior accidents. >> reporter: ice poses another danger at high altitudes. in 2009 ice accumulation caused malfunction aboard air france flight 447. an airbus a-330 which crashed en route for france from before
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skill. >> the crew did not stall the airplane and it crashed in the ocean. >> wallace said the flight data recorders and cockpit voice recorders of flight 8501 hold the keys to what happened and how that thunderstorm contributed to whatever chain of events followed. >> thank you very much. we'll go back for recovery efforts. and we'll ask peter greenberg about how to find out if an airline is safe to fly. stalkers have a new tool for tracking and monitoring their victims. they're using mobile apps and digital surveillance software better known as spy ware. it can access text messages and calls. stalkers can track the location and turn on a device's camera and microphone. cbs news legal analyst rikki klieman is with us. good morning. >> good morning, norah. >> you can use the gps to track where your kids are, you can also track a cheating spouse.
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but how are these apps being used in terms of victims of domestic violence. >> what we're seeing is a morphing here. what we thought is the nanny cam or elder care or employers looking for employees who might be engaged in theft. and now this whole morphing has come down to two different aspects. one is what we think of as the gps function that is where is your so-called cheating spouse going to be. are they where they say they're going to be. but much more significant now is the real danger for victims of domestic violence. because it's not only finding out where they are, it's actually hacking into through the spy ware to read e-mails, texts, hear voice mails. actually get into a phone call and eavesdrop. and one of the creepiest parts of it from i sit is the ability to turn on this microphone and within 15 feet hear what is actually happening. it's treacherous. >> it is.
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>> how do users install this software without any detection? >> what happens here jeff is this. first of all, we should say it is illegal to manufacture. it is illegal to advertise, it is illegal to sell this type of spy ware in the united states of america. obviously, that's the creation of it. it's also, obviously, illegal to use, because you're there for a stalker, or an eavesdropper. you're wiretapping. so how does it get in? >> right. >> so how it gets in is if the stalker or aggressor, the person who wants to do a bad thing can get ahold of that phone or computer for a very very short time, this software can be installed. and they do it in very devious ways. sometimes, they can use their child. sometimes, they can go as far as using a repairman. the guy comes from the cable company or the electronics. the con-ed guy, there's where it gets installed. but one of the other thing, of
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course, people have become expert at hacking into the computer. so all of these things become fraught with peril. >> reporter: interesting i just wanted to give you this if you look up the domestic hot line in the united states, it says on the top of the first page it gives you a safety alert to tell primarily women that your computer could be monitored and it is impossible to completely clear. so the person who is being stalked to the person who may become a victim has no idea it's on there. >> yeah i was stunned to npr found that 85% of domestic violence shelters said that victims had computers tracking them. >> there was a man named hamid akbar, he pled guilty in november, $5,000 fine. 10 days in jail. therefore, the government is starting. >> and it is illegal, as you
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said. up next president obama forces a mulligan on a couple's wedding plan. >> hi mr. president. >> hello. >> hello. listen congratulations on your wedding, i feel terrible. >> that is next on "cbs this morning." ♪ ubway, we're seriously into veggies. which is why we prepare them fresh, in store. we're all about finding unique veggies. making your sandwich a one of a kind creation. so come on in and get your veggie on. subway. eat fresh.
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chip reid shows us about the bride and the groom. >> reporter: there have been some missed presidential putts this vacation. but there have also been some crowd-pleasing victory, like a par last evening on the 18th hole. whoo! >> reporter: this past weekend, though he flirted with trouble when he decided to play on a scenic course at a military
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base. the problem, a wedding of two army captains, natalie heimel and edward mallue scheduled at the same time. the manager of the golf course without informing the white house of the conflict asked the couple if they would mind relocating with a commanding view of the ocean. fortunately, they said they had no problem with the change and were happy their commander in chief would not be disrupted according to a spokesperson at the base. when president obama was later informed of what had happened he quote, felt bad according to a source familiar with the situation. so catching the couple by surprise, he called them right after they took their vows and apologize apologized. >> hi. >> hi mr. pled. >> hello, listen hey, congratulations on your wedding, i feel terrible. nobody told us. had they mention they had were
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going to have a wedding on the 16th hole we would have skipped the 16th hole. i hope the wedding went okay anyway. >> it did, it was a blessing in disguise. >> reporter: it turns this photo was everything these two army captains had had dreamed of. for "cbs this morning," chip reid. >> apparently the couple got to a better view. and the couple was thought teed off. >> i can't -- as i said on the evening news. golf some people say is a good -- in this case is might have been a wedding. cue the assistant for texas a&m. and the action with the other team on the sidelines. this is awful. we'll show you this video coming up. plus tom hanks opens up on
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♪ what was he thinking? a texas a&m student assistant attacking west virginia players during the liberty bowl. a former linebacker you see elbowed a west virginia player then shoved another one monday after they went out bounds. the head coach condemned the violence. >> i was made aware of the situation at halftime. he did not return to the field. he's already been sent home and, you know that's nothing that we condone. it was nothing about that whole
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situation that's a part of who we are and what we believe in. >> a&m went on to win that game 7.45-3 ah ead, we'll get the latest from indonesia on the airasia plane crash. you're watching "cbs this morning." and that little angel says "weeeeeeeee!" 60% more sheets than charmin. everything you want and the value you love. angel soft. at chili's, fresh is now. and now we've got fresh mex bowls. it's a big bowl of delicious paired with soup or salad. now on our lunch combo menu, starting at six bucks. il chi's -- fresh is happening now. [vet] two yearly physicals down. martha and mildred are good to go. here's your invoice, ladies. a few stops later, and it looks like big ollie is on the mend. it might not seem that glamorous having an old pickup truck for an office... or filling your days looking down the south end of a heifer but...i wouldn't have it any other way. look at that, i had my best month ever.
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now bladder leaks can feel like no big deal. because, hey, pee happens. we come by almost every day to deliver your mail so if you have any packages you want to return you should just give them to us i mean, we're going to be there anyway why don't you just leave it for us to pick up? or you could always get in your car and take it back yourself yeah, us picking it up is probably your easiest option it's kind of a no brainer ok, well, good talk huh, fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. everybody knows that. well, did you know you that former pro football player ickey woods will celebrate almost anything? unh-uh. number 44... whoooo! forty-four, that's me! get some cold cuts... get some cold cuts... get some cold cuts! whooo! gimme some!
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30th 2014 welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead including allen pizzey in indonesia on flight 8501 and the recovery effort. plus peter greenberg looks at how you can find an airline you can trust. but first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. the crew of one search plane reported seeing a shadow on the seabed of what could be the missing airliner. >> indonesian officials confirm that wreckage is from 8501. >> and it was used in the attack they say it's not exclusive. p >>olice say they shot the 25-year-old after they tried to grab an officer's gun. his family believes theot shoing was unprovoked. >> a lot of cold air across the country, in fact well below-average temperatures from the northern plains to the southern plain. >> with congress in 2008 it was that peach that they gave nearly 13 years ago that now comes back to haunt him.
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>> one of the creepiest p arts from where i sit is the ability to turn on this microphone and within 15 feet hear what is actually happening. >> the newlyweds say they have the president after his golf game forced them to change their wedding plans. >> i guess it's fair to say the couple wasn't teed off. >> and the president with the golf game. >> i can't -- >> i'm norah o'donnell with vinita nair and jeff glor. indonesia government has confirmed that flight 8501 crashed in the java sea. searchers pulled dozens of bodies and wreckage out of the water. >> allen pizzey is surabaya indonesia, where many family members heard the terrible news. allen, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, darkness has fallen here and the
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search has been curtailed. the first bodies were more than six miles from the last place the plane reported its position to air traffic control. as the day went on more bodies were found and personal objects were pulled from the sea despite waves of seven feet. the president of indonesia flew over the area and then came to meet relatives. their grief was turned into anguish when the first pictures of the dead were shown on the tv. many people wept inconsolably in people's arms because now they know there's no hope of finding anybody else. there is a bit of hope that this mystery can be solved because one aires cue crew said that they spotted what they called a shadow on the seabed that looked like it could be a large piece of the missing airliner. if that's true and it's in
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shallow enough water, it will make finding the black box easier and make it easier to find the plane and why it plunged out of control not that that's much consolation for those who lost family and loved ones. >> thank you. this is raising concerns about air safety in a part of the world where tragic and deadly accidents have gone hand in hand. peter greenberg is here. air traffic in the asia pacific region has increased by two thirds in the past five years and asian carriers have been involved in four of the five with the most fatealities. >> we've seen explosive growth with airlines starting left and right, ordering huge number of airplanes. and that in itself is not a bad idea. the problem you should do you train pilots sufficiently so you got experienced people in the front of the plane and there is
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a pilot shortage out there. >> if you look at the asian carriers that they've been involved in four of the five crashes with the most fatalities, how do you feel confident flying in asia? >> it's not just asia it's in many parts of the united states. they've actually tracked and listed a ban of airlines that are not allowed to fly in airspace. >> and airspace is an issue? >> there is. indonesia, that country has probably the worst record of what the european union is concerned of airlines that have been banned. in fact, at one point, all but five of the country's 67 airlines were banned from european airspace. that should tell you something. >> you look at this list does the united states have a comparable list. a lot of times we're on an airline, we've all flown internationally, you don't know & your connection?
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>> united states does not keep a list. but the airplane and airline safety programs in the countries they list a number of countries that they think is deficient. indonesia happens to be one-. bangladesh india, also those. >> an what shoulddo? it's about upkeep and as sully sullenberger says no matter how the plane is made there's always the human element. >> post people have not heard about airasia until this week let's face it. but if you're flying within asia, there are a lot of airlines that you might be connected to. it might be a good idea to consult this list to should which have been banned. now, a lot of airlines banned actually got their act together and they're you need to update that list as well. >> let's talk about the wreckage and and they've recovered dozens
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of bodies. do you think we'll pretty quickly of what caused this crash? >> yeah the lesson of flight 370 is you can't find a needle in the haystack if you can't find the haystack. it's in relatively shallow water. remember, the black box gives you the last two hours of recorded conversation in an airplane cockpit. this happens within 48 minutes of takeoff. we're going to find out once they get that black box, the actual chain of events. >> thank you very much. passengers are flying from las vegas to london this morning, one day after a scary emergency landing. look at this video, it shows virgin atlantic plane a bumpy landing at london's gatwick airport. the plane dumped fuel before flying to the airport. all passengers and crew got off safely. and the detroit lions without one of their best defensive players, ndamukong suh
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is appealing his sunday's game in dallas. suh stepped on quarterback aaron rodgers' leg in green bay on sunday after rodgers was already hurt. the referees did not call a penalty. but on monday the league called the play unsafe. suh has been suspended before for totally unnecessary incidents like this. coming up on "cbs this morning" -- gayle king talks with the kennedy center and on tom hanks to learn his secrets on staying cool under pressure. >> you see how charming and witty i am right now? this is purely a self-defense mechanism. this is a measure
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just exercise and eat less. >> serious suggestions only. don't tell me to get a personal trainer. i tried to do that and i really like eating meat pies. >> many people want to lose weight would it all of the with 2015 approaching a recent poll shows shedding pounds is the top resolution. americans spent $2 billion on weight loss pills in 2013 a gain of 6% from a year ago. "consumer reports" reveals its new survey asking users about the safety and effectiveness of supplements. trish is the editor of foods. i want to ask you, diet pills there's some understanding there could be dangerous things in there. and supplements can be totally different and i think we're led to believe that they're natural? >> yeah people do think they're natural. a quarter people in the survey
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felt they were safe because they were natural. but actually they're regulated by the fda more like foods than like drugs. so that means they don't have to be proven safe before they go on the market. and they're assumed to be safe unless they're proven yous. and the burden of proof to prove them unsafe is to take them off the market. >> are they effective? >> they are not effective. >> but those ads they show -- >> they 0 do. >> you get cut, ripped. >> and you were 700 >> you look fabulous in a bikini. >> you know sometimes, on the side of supplement bottles, you see a lot of different claims. and they're allowed to make claims about the way the body functions but not about disease. so they can say something that says burns fat but they can't say rebusses obesity because obesity say disease. there's really no evidence they work. >> we have a government of regulations.
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we regulate everything in this country. are these regulated? >> they're regulated more like foods. >> so the claims that they make are not true? >> they're supposed to be true. and they are supposed to have evidence to back up any claim that they make but again, the burden is on the fda to prove them not to be true, to prove them not to be fake. so there are a lot of supplement manufacturers and there are a lot of claims being made. and the lines abouts regulations are not very clear. >> so you establish simply that the pills do not work. but the question is what are the potential risks of taking them for someone? >> some -- about half the people in the "consumer reports" survey had side effects, it was jitteriness, rapid heart rate. dry mouth for some of the most common. for people taking prescription medications, these pills can interact with prescription drugs and raise drug blood pressure. and some pills are adulterated with banned substances. >> do they list what substances
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are in there? >> they do list the ingredients but if something is a banned drug they're not listed on the ingredients list. >> thank you very much. more depressing news for the new year. we just thought we could take some pills and lose weight. >> someone brought the chocolate in yesterday. and said why are you forcing it? you have two more days to eat it. on project maps ocean reads the way google maps streets. plus one man's journey around the world thanks to the generosity of others. >> can i stay in your house? >> can i spend a night in your house? >> we'll introduce you to the story behind it. one of the most inspectedunexpected places. that's ahead on "cbs this morning." ♪ just brush whiten, and go!
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♪ you can now view within 100,000 image of the great barrier reef in australia through the street view feature on google maps. a stunning display an am bifs effort to document the world's coral reefs. researchers took around the world to see how this could be the first step of saving them for future generations. >> reporter: the florida keys
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are the home to the only living barrier reefs in the continental united states. but life here has changed dramatically, just ask sylvia earl. a world renown oceanographer. >> when you look at a reef you look at a snapshot. what's different about the present time is the speed of change and the fact that humans are the victors of that change. it's like the ocean is too big to fail right? no, it is failing. it's up to us now. >> reporter: earl says in the past 30 years an estimated 30. of coral worldwide has been lost. that coral protects shoreline, sea life and brings in big tourism dollars. and since you can't protect what you can't see, this one precedented project is under way. a team of divers from the catlin survey is documenting the ocean's reefs the same way
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google maps out streets. full 360-degree views. every angle of undersea life will go up online. >> high time is what i say. because we've invested in technologies that enable us to map mars and jupiter and the moon and the universe. we've been missing out on mapping the ocean ocean. >> this is the 21st country that we've done as part of a global survey of coral reefs. >> reporter: the 21st century? >> yes. >> reporter: it's a big survey. >> it's a massive survey. >> reporter: richard devers is leading the catlin team. he took us along into the team's first foray into water. >> it takes a shot every two seconds. we've actually got a very clever second which is a tablet that operates the cameras. also a pulsometer that tells us
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the distance from the seafloor. >> reporter: what does this do that cameras couldn't do before? >> it's really being able to photograph the reef at scale. so traditionally, you'd send in a diver, and they'd go and photograph using a camera and only able to do 100 meters in a day. and it would take them an hour. we can do 2 kilometers, 2360 data and 1,000 shots at the time. >> reporter: and the catlin team has reason for hope. a new federal study said reefs may be able to adapt in warmer temperatures. there are signs that new coral is coming back in the keys. >> real protection is given. and it started here in florida keys. fish need the coral, the coral need the fish. it's a system. >> united nations program
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honored sylvia earl this year as a champion of the earth. he was given the lifetime achievement award for ocean conservation. she's 70 years ago old. it's amazing to see her out there. >> incredible pictures. and ahea tom hanks on the pleasures and perils of modern technology. >> i curse invented this phone thing, i curse him, because it never stops! and wherever you go there it is. but i kind of like the guy who invented the selfie. >> tom
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is there an elk in your bed? with sleep number, now there's an adjustment for that. only at a sleep number store find the lowest prices of the season, with the c3 queen mattress set only $1199.98. plus 24 month special financing on all beds. know better sleep with sleep number. it's the time of year for making lists... at chevrolet, we've made it onto a few lists ourselves. in fact this year, we've been at the top of more awards lists than any other car company. now during the chevy year end event
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and the single lesson that molded his remarkable run in hollywood. plus we take a motorcycle trip around the globe relying on help from people he didn't know. this morning, he travels and to the toyota green room for his destination. >> maybe it's the toyota green room. >> we do have bagels in there. >> free coffee and free continental breakfast. it's time to show the morning headlines. new jersey star ledger said there were dozens of meteor sightings. the philadelphia inquirer said mo'ne davis was named the athlete of the year. this summer, davis was the first girl to win a little league series game. davis is now in the eighth grade and plays for her school's high
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school varsity basketball team. the chicago sun-times said the boy who wrote the santa claus bought a response from president obama. malik brian asked for one gift the charity forwarded it to the white house. the president said please know your security is a priority for me in everything i do as president. if you dare to be bold and creative work hard every day and care for others i'm confident you can achieve anything you imagine, i will be rooting for you. >> the teacher flagged this note and said this one i have to get to the white house. huffing post said netflix will help kids get to bed earlier. the streaming service released a three-minuted animated video called king julian countdown. it allows parents to trick their
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kids into thinking it's hours before the ball drops. this is mean. >> i thought of it. >> like 9:00 so it's midnight. good night. tonight, cbs brings you the kennedy center honors. and tom hanks is among this year's winners adding to this two oscars, four golden globes and six emmys. he sat down with gayle king on how he became one of hollywood's nice guys. >> a lot of people like tom hanks. thomas jeffrey hanks. >> bring it on. ♪ >> reporter: tom hanks has been a leading nan hollywood for more than 30 years. his work has earned him two best actor oscars. yet, we first came to know him on the sitcom cross-dressing as male. >> we've been seeing you -- >> i did it for our future.
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>> our future! we now have the same future as disco. >> people that saw you on good bosom buddies it 4red fromled from one thing to another? >> the bad news is we were opposite of tom selleck and he got his picture on tv guide before the show premiered. we weren't ever on the cover of tv guide -- ever. >> no bitterness there. >> no but you just keep track. >> bosom buddies led to the lead in "splash." >> hi this is the big secret you've been keeping from me? >> it got me into films at the time when there was an awful lot of product being made. because i had been in a movie that did well i got stuff offered to me. i think i said yes to every four out of five scripts that came across my desk because i was in
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movies. and that's what you do you make movies. >> houston, we have a problem. ♪ >> run! >> wilson! ♪ >> my mama always said life was like a box of chocolates. >> where does he sit with you, forrest gump? >> -- you never know what you're going to get. >> it was a magic confluence of so many things that it remains a one of a kind circumstance. >> why are you doing this? ♪ >> i just felt like running. >> i just felt like running. >> i view it as a lot of great mountain ranges in this world. and in the grand tetons there's one peak that's more majestic and more difficult and more unique than the others. and that's what forrest gump is. >> this is the thing. you've had so many icon roles and then there was that classic
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larry crown. >> larry crown. >> i love that man. i ride a scooter to this day because of larry crown. >> you have a wide variety of things. most of them hits but not everything has worked out to your liking. >> i'm sorry. >> you don't go home and beat yourself up? >> no no because, look the understanding has to be that you can be one of the greatest baseball players on the planet earth. you're only going to play in two or three world series. >> there's no crying in baseball! >> there's no crying in baseball -- there's one right there. >> there's no crying in baseball! >> but tom hanks, where's your insecurity? so many actors insecure where is yours? >> do you see how charming and witty i am right now, this is purely a self-defense mechanism to get through this gayle. we're fraught with insecurities and moments of self-doubt that can lead into self-loathing. that's part of the battle. in order to keep ourselves not
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just in check but to explore it and examine it to a point where you can crack the self-consciousness that goes along with being an actor. >> i know the people that know you love you. to say that he works hard he treats everybody with respect and that really is who tom hanks is. >> i will tell you that is because of my training nap is the lesson i learned at the great lakes theater festival in 1977. we were told concretely by the boss, he said here's what your job is actors. your job is to show up on time. and your job is to know the text. and your job is to have an idea of what you're going to do beyond that text. and if you don't do that we're all going to fail. the thing that i learned in the course of all of that is that you did not have to like the people that you were working with. but you had to respect their craft and their artistry. >> you know but i think you have to accept that you are asked one of the nicest one of the most talented. >> and i often wonder did it come from your childhood? bought you moved all over the
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place. >> i loved moving. i enjoyed being the new guy in a new class. >> i hate that. being the new person. >> i had no problem whatsoever. >> you liked being the new kid? >> i was not intimidated being the new kid. by the time i was 10 my dad had been married three times. my mom had been married three times. i lived three different houses different sets of step >> a colorful childhood? >> let's call it a colorful childhood. it was up fun. >> hanks has been married to actress and singer rita wilson for more than 23 years. the couple has three childrens and hanks has two more from a previous marriage. >> you're in hollywood. >> western society.
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we got married for all the right reasons and without any compunction of looking back. >> i get a big kick out of watching you play with the people who admire and respect you. you photobomb pictures -- you really do. you play with the people. i love that you do that. >> well there's a diplomacy involved. and sometimes, it's just easier to grab that phone put it in selfie mode and snap away and keep moving on. sometimes, that's the fastest way in order to expedite your day. >> fair enough. >> there was a period of time where i cursed the man who invented this phone thing. i curse him because it never stops. and wherever you go there it is. but i kind of like the guy who invented the selfie.ll right tom hanks. so when was the last time you worked [ bleep ] -- >> well give me a second it's not like i collect those >> i only need one. >> it wouldn't be [ bleep ] in
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the eye of the beholder? you'd have to ask around. here it is what's the website, what do you got, #gayleking? >> cbsthismorning. >> the time you had an experience with me in which i was a [ bleep ] -- let's find out what that is because i'm not about to broadcast it. and i think the people -- >> i'm teasing you. >> no. we will never put that on. >> no you should. the top ten. >> we will never put that on. >> i say lead with it. >> controversy, we put i on the air. >> we closed with it. >> we closed with it. >> it just shows what a good guy tom hanks really is. the kennedy center honors all of those who pay tribute to tom hanks say he truly is the nice guy he appears to be. >> what a fun conversation. >> what a fun show sting, lily tomlin patricia mcbride, al green.
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they say kindness makes the world go around. well, he made it a reality. he chased his dreams he traveled the world living only on the generosity of strangers. he went to 40 places in nearly in five months with no money or food or a place to stay. in "kindness diaries." >> thanks for having me. >> you're working as a successful broker in london. you gave it up. >> i did. >> why? >> i felt disconnected. i didn't feel any sense of purpose. i didn't want to work behind what i called a slab of work. i wanted to be inspired by people. >> in the book you say were you listening to the inner rebel. what is the inner rebel?
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>> the inner rebel is the part that wants to go out and live freely and not live other people's lives. we have our own dreams. >> the committee spent some of the money working for the past three years why did you decide to do it and do it through the kindness of others? >> i can i said as a kid, i felt disconnected. and i wanted to empower people. and the magic of kindness is what makes the world go around. >> you walk up to somebody and say hi i'm leon can i stay with you tonight? >> sometimes. sometimes. >> the reaction is? >> the reaction is mostly no. sometimes, you find that angel. and that angel wants to help. >> obviously, in the book you had a series of rules, you said you were not allowed to accept money. surely, there were times where you thought money would be the easiest solution here. >> the rules were there, no
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money. a wave of generosity got me across the world. >> what is an example of generosity? >> for example, i met this homeless man called tony who had nothing. he decided -- he let me stay the night on the sidewalk with him. and he was such a wonderful man. he inspired me to realize that true wealth is in our hearts not in our worlds. >> what do you think you learned from this journey? >> you know, truthfully i learned that kindness is what makes the world go around. we all have so many negative things happening. we see the news there's so much kindness out there. >> were all know since we have possibly phones and computers that we think we're more connected and the world is more flat. you actually think that's not? >> i do. i don't have a smartphone.
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i have a 1990 nokia. a small tiny -- >> i love that phone. >> those were indestructible. >> i have tape around it. basically, i feel like connection is what's going around here. connection isn't about tweeting and facebooking and all this kind of stuff. it's the human connection. it's the power of i see you and you see me. that's what human connection all about. >> any favorite spots? >> my favorite spot is bhutan they have great gross national happiness. >> you made pretty big promises basically paying it forward. when did that idea -- when did you realize i want to do so much for people who have done for me. >> i've done before about receiving kindness. this was about receiving and giving. for example, tony i was very fortunate to put him up in an apartment, send him back to school. >> this is the homeness man? >> yes. so he's not homeless anymore. that feels wonderful, for me,
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obviously for him. it's a wonderful thing. >> you talk about the struggle with kindness sometimes, when somebody is truly kind, they shouldn't be writing a book or accepting something back. did you struggle with the idea of a book? >> i did. to begin with i remember i read a book once and it said a true act of kindness is when you don't tell anybody what you're doing. obviously, here i am telling people what i'm doing. i just felt it was something so powerful. and the stories i had the people i met were so inspiring that i wanted to share it. >> really quickly. what's next? >> what's next? more adventures more giving back. >> you already hit 90 countries. the kindness diaries is already on sell now. you're watching "cbs this morning." ♪
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>> on the doctors. the moaning and groaning. could you be embarrassing yourself in bed and veha no >> announcer: what you need to know before hitting the sheets. >>the divorce diet? why uncoupling can leave you unhealthy. >> plus ... >> i was able to lose an additional 15 pounds since i saw you. >> travis heats up the kitchen with the all-new "the doctors diet cookbook". >> oh, yeah, this is great!
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♪ ♪ doctor, doctor gimme the news ♪ ♪ >> hello, everybody. and thank you for tuning in. the question i have is: could you be embarrassing yourself in bed and have no idea you are doing so? [ laughter ] >> i hope not! >> we all worry about it: do you moan and groan in your sleep. it's noatt wh you are thinking.
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