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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  October 30, 2015 2:22am-4:01am EDT

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i don't get it. >> oprah on being ambushed by the man a tabloid claims is he secret son. >> i want to talk to her. >> he's talking and so is she only to "e.t." >> the whole thing is a setup. >> their emotional path. >> and then taylor swift sexually assaulted. r new lawsuit against a man she says groped her. >> and our three big exclusives. >> i'm still always going to be a diva in certain ways. >> on set with mariah, the talking love and kids. >> i think they're causing a little havoc. >> plus, the clooneys adopt -- a new dog. meet their bundle of joy as only we can take you to the top secret set of his project. >> and heidi klum shows off her new transformation. >> i'll be wearing a lot, it just won't be a lot of clothes. >> now in our 35th season this is "entertainment tonight." welcome, everybody. now in our 35th season. we cannot possibly imagine
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kicking off this month long celebration without mary hart. welcome, mary. >> thank you, nancy. it is always so great to be back home with you guys. >> it would not be an entertainment tonight without thwois man right here. > >that's right. and mary, we have so much to talk about. your memories of hosting the show for 29 years. >> and that will be my pleasure. just a few memories, nancy. but you know what "e.t." does best, deliver entertainment news to kevin. let's get on with it. >> let's go. in tonight's top story, oprah winfrey gets set up in a tabloid ambush. >> oprah with her hand out to say hello. a kind touch on the chest. but what oprah didn't know is that stage reunion was a setup after a recent appearance with colbert, a tabloid araged for the confrontation between oprah and the man the tabloid is calling her secret son. good headline just not the truth. i spoke with oprah on the phone this morning. >> he never was my son. he was a child i befriended. i moved the entire family out of the projects. i got his mother a job.
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i tried to put him in two different schools. he refused. and i said i'm now done. i did have a son at 14. that son was a baby who died. and i would have to say ifas i w a son, i'd be looking for me, too. i'd be like, momma, what happened? >> she did go abo and beyond. she tried to help me help myself. >> oprah told me she first met calvin more than 20 years ago, in fact, he was on the set of the tv movie where it happened. and one little boy named calvin was standing on the steps and i said oh, gee calvin, where do you live? and he said that he lived in the building that we were shooting in which was a pretty run down building. i mean i wanted to weep. >> i never had opportunity to
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apologize. >> actually as i left and looking so upset, so i said to somebody on my team, will somebody get calvin's number? so that, you know, we can con -- i can contact him later? i didn't realize the whole thing was a setup. and then when i found out that whole thing was a setup, i was no longer interested in speaking to him. >> does it hurt? >> i wouldn't say hurt. i wouldn't go so far as to be hurt. disappointed. yeah. i was like, wow. whoa. that's what happened. >> i'm sorry that happened you to. i'm glad we can clarify it a little bit. >> yeah. your agenda is to get the truth, not just to make up a story. that's why i wanted to share it with you. >> we appreciate you sharing it with us, oprah. >> first thing you said when you walked in the meeting, i'm going to call oprah and get to the bottom of this. >> get it straight from her. i asked if her experience made her not want to help people anymore? she said it made her more careful. it has changed how she helps other people. that was a good thing, meaning she learned something from it. we know oprah is not going to stop helping peopl >> never.
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let's move on. taylor swift, was she groped? she is saying legal action against a radio deejay who she claimed touched he inappropriately when they posed for pictures together. >> swift is striking back in a counter suit, the singer cl aims she was sexually assaulted before this denver concert at a meet and greet in 2013 by radio deejay david mueller. "e.t." has the court papers and& they're pretty detailed. the lawsuit reads mueller did not brush his hand against miss swift while posing for the photograph, he lifted her skirt and groped her. it goes on to claim the singer was surprised, upset, offended and alarmed. then had to go play a show for 13,000 people. >> i think the lawyers, judge, and any potential jury is going to really want to know why didn't she make a police report at the time this occurred? >> the legal drama da september when mueller filed a suit against swift claiming he was fired from his job based on false allegations he groped her.
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>> here's the issue she is being sued and is using this as a defense or legitimate claim against him. either way, it starts counter balancing the issues before the jury. >> here's the thing. taylor says she wins any money from this lawsuit, she will donate it to charitable organizations that protect women. >> well, we have more big, i mean big news. george and amal have adopted. it's true. the clooneys have added to the family. >> yeah have and she has the cutest floppiest ears you've ever seen. michelle turner has the story. >> she was just here 15, 20 days. she has brown eye that's just won't quit. >> talk about moving on up. you're begging for food outside a los angeles restaura then you're adopted by the most famous couple on the planet. it's a hollywood ending millie and her new mom and dad, george and amal.
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>> what do they love? >> she is a love bug. >> cindy is the board president at the humane society. imagine the shock when she walked through the door. >> they were here for over an hour and ahalf. we go through the adoption process to make sure it's another family match and they bro other dog with them. this is the clooney's third dog. george adopted einstein from a shelter. he's a cocker spaniel mix and george made him famous in this omega shelter. >> they said we have to show you folks you adopted. >> he said this will be viral, certainly. but it's okay. go ahead. >> plenty more of george tonight. >> we're all exclusive behind the scenes with mariah carey. we got that choice assignment. >> mariah directing.
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>> she is doing it all. mariah does have a reputation of being a diva and that is all right with her. >> i'm still always going to be a diva in certain ways. i don't mean that in a bad of the word. i just mean there is a makeup artist there and they don't mind touching me up while i'm directing. >> leave it to her to direct on her own terms in her own movie. >> why not just be yourself and integrate into -- it's a new -- it's a new start for me really. rt> pa of mariah's new start is her relationship with australian billionaire james packer. >> we also saw you and james packer making your red carpet debut. >> i don't think either one of us felt like here we are making a debut. i mean he's not that guy. >> you're still used to the red carp attention and flashes. how did james do with all that? >> it was a lot for him. >> did you try to give tips? >> i mean if, i did that, i would have to h coacinhim stead of posing. i would have looked bad. >> the feedback on you as a director is genuinely like through the roof. >> here's the thing.
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i've bdieen recting, like, so much of my own work for a really long time. ♪ >> "e.t." was on set in 1995 as mariah got the first directing honor for "f >> it's not like h i am director woman. it's just to get the results that i want. >> now she's directing and starring in a christmas melody for hallmark channel and she seems star struck over her co-star in the movie. >> how much did you love lacy? >> she's the best. we're sitting here. we have worn pink on wednesday. you know about this? wednesday i wore pink. >> on wednesdays we wear pink. >> i'm obsessed with it. you have no idea. >> i saw the two of you and your kids running around and climbing all over their mommy. >> yeah, they're causing a little havoc on the set. i'm trying. they're only 4.
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i love when they come to visit me on set but i get a little concerned about what they're going to say because they have no filter and they'll say anything. >> mariah is also hosting a big halloween bash this weekend and we have an exclusive invite inside. we'll have that for you on monday. while we have to wait for her christmas movie, tomorrow we're taking you back to a holiday comedy classic. >> "home alone" 25 years later. >> it's a different lifetime ago. >> the screams. >> stepping on the christmas ornaments. >> the cast then and now. our look back on the set. >> cut, cut, cut. >> tomorrow on ""e.t. >> great stuff. get wind blown and reese gets to land up and her woman of the year honor with caitlyn jenner. >> and nobody does a halloween costume like heidi klum. >> there were a lot of guys running around. right now the miami dolphins take on the patriots on cbs tonight. and here's a little tom brady throwback thursday. >> i think i'd rather be playing that game than watching the halftime show.
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>> tomorrow, remember their first time on e.t. >> what is this guy?
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>> reese goes full glam and heidi gets her halloween on and reese gets totally blown away. up firs she channels her inner troll doll. she is here to catch a flight out of jfk and i our favorite photo of the week. the usually perfect paltrow caught in a gust of wind at the airport yesterday an shielding her face to the paparazzi. her leather leggings and creamy sweater we point but somebody get the girl a
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scrunchy. rumor was that jenner getting the honor. >> we're proud of our cover of reese and listen we have so many talented women of all different types and sizes >> victoria beckham and the u.s. women's soccer team are among the ladies that will be celebrated by amy schumer on carnegie hall. >> and finally, klum's costume. >> for halloween this year, i'm going to be the ultimate male asfanty. >> pretty suhere s doesn't need any help. there but heidi's fright night looks are legendary. it will take nine hours for her to get ready and a lot of prosthetics. >> i have to be casted from head to toe. because there will be a lot of body parts. thand e cast process, you know, took about four hours to do. >> you said my ears were like elephant ears. i didn't know i had big ears. >> she was teaming with a company for the hot ticket halloween party. if you want an invite, be warned. >> you have to have a real outfit.
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otherwise, you won't get in. >> i have to find a costume now. >> that's the re >> totally. so what is heidi's costume? she let us in on the secret. we can't spoil it. >> coming up, drinking buddies george clooney and danny devito together again. >> we have drank wine together. >> i knew it was the last seven lemoncellos that would get me. >> then i'm sitting down wit ry hart, reliving ea30 yrs of amazing "e.t." exclusives. >> you go rehearse and i'll see you later. >> "e.t." seemed to me backstage so nervous and so frail. who moved her the most? and what about the famous legs? that is next. closed captioning provided by --
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right now, our georg clooney exclusive. it's the actor's first u.s. commercial on set with another jokester, danny devito. >> one of us was dressed as a dictator. i don't want to point fingers. >> let's do one more. >> i got that part because of the hat. it fit me. it didn't fit him. >> we will a great time doing a lot of stuff. we have drunk wine together. we had sushi together.
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we've gone to the art gallery. we had a lot of fun on that. anwe always have fun whenever we're together. >> we were doing shots of lemoncello. that's all i can say on the set. >> you can barely remember. >> the drinking buddies had a night in and out 2006 before danny showed up tipsy on "the view." >> danny has been out partyi all night with -- tell them. i'm so jealous. >> george. >> c >> yeah. >> no, i knew it was the last seven lemoncellos that were going to get me. >> the guys are all talking coffee. >> it's coffee. >> make sure you tune in tomorrow because we'll show you the finished product of their coffee commercial. >> as you know, mary hart has come back to help us celebrate our 35th anniversary and i'd like to call this the house that mary built. well, let's take a look back at some of the ground br
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moments of mary's 29 years as host of "entertainment tonight." >> i'm mary hart for "entinerta tmentonig we are on the red carpet. oscar turns 81. hi, everybody, i'm mary h art. >> here we go. the oscars and "e.t." >> you go rehearse and i'll see you later. okay. >> it was 1964 when we first met. ♪ chestnuts roasting on an open fire ♪ >> you're >> this is as much as we talked about. >> meet a handsome dude >> the perfect fairytale happening before our eyes here. >> no one does it better than you. >> the biggest compliment i've heard over and over is, mary, i feel like you're part of my family at dinner time. >> well, i'm still getting teary eyed. >> it's fun to look back on all of those fun interviews, great experiences, great locations. >> does it feel like it was yesterday when you watch it?
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>> a lot of it d >> well not the first couple. >> hello, i'm mary hart. i'm straight out of teaching school. >> michael jackson. what was that experience like? >> it was extraordinary. and he seemed to me bastage so nervous and so frail quiet. i thought how can he turn into michael jackson? >> who would you say out of everybody that you interviewed touched your heart the most? >> it is certainly those people that came us to at the show and me specifically to reveal some heartbreaking news. whether it was it was this woman. >> i want the best -- >> or it was richard prio prior to that was the most difficult interviews on the planet. >> and christopher reeve. >> nobody was more courageous or
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battled more fiercely an believed so strongly that he could overturn that paralysis. >> i would like to walk by my 50th birthday. >>s so is there anybody out of everybody that you inte that you got star struck? >> for me, it was the movie stars i had grown up watching. when i interviewed lucille ball. >> what do you feel is the significance of the emmy? >> the significance of the emmy? it's the epitome. the emmy is the crowning glory. >> are your legs still insured? >> i doubt it. >> back in the '80s, her legs were insured for $1 million each. >> they said we have to be more nude looking. so they built a wooden desk.
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the producers and executive producers put us behind a wooden desk and started getting mail. i never dreamed all these years later people would remember that story. but it lives on. >> what you would say you miss the most? i miss the camaraderie. you know, we went through marriages, births, deaths -- >> speaking of that, going through a birth. it was a special birth we went through, your son a.j. >> i got the best christmas present in the world. meet baby sugarman. he doesn't have a name yet. and he's just so much fun. >> how adorable. >> i can't believe he's almost 24 now. let's talk a little bit about life no you've been very busy. >> life just so full i've continued my work with children's hospital. i'm on a couple of other boards. so life is good. >> but i will say, that's it. i have had the wonderful portunity of making appearances on the sitcoms called "baby daddy". >> who is the tall glass of wow? >> always a pleasure to see you.
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and now i want you to do something for me. we're going to have much more coming up. but i need you to do something that i know you know how to do and that is to introduce the birthdays for me. >> well, of course i will. see if i can still do that. >> i know you can. >> which celebrity was named after the city in which they were born? is it bristol palin, wynona rider or carson daily? the answer is next in the "e.t." birthdays. >> high five on. that. >> than transform into
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the most creepy children in horror movie history. your destination for celebrity news. >> travel consideration provided by. will you give us the answer to tonight's "e.t." birthday? >> i have an answer. which celebrity was named after the city in which they were born? that would be wynona rider who
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today turns 34. she was born in wynona, minnesota. >> how cool is that? we have one more thing before we let you go. because later this month we're going to be handing out the first ever entertainment tonight icon awards to the stars who have captivated "e.t." audiences throughout the ye >> when it comes to "e.t." the is no one who deserve this is honor more than you do. >> oh, my gosh. i'm humbled and very privileged to present to our good friend and someone we love dearly, mary hart, our first ever icon award. >> oh, my gosh. you guys. you did take me by surprise totally! happy anniversary! >> thank you, mary. thank you for being here us with. >> icon. i love it. >> you make it so much more special.
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new mucinex
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nu sis-max liquid gels. dissolves fast to unleash max strength medicine. start the relief. ditch the misery. let's end this. more the most part, hats have drifted out of style. after 150 years in the hat making business, stetson is working to change its image. >> like we got ourselves a lady's man. >> reporter: on the big screen, john wayne embodied the spirit of the american west. >> i like you, too. ♪ >> reporter: but the stetson, synonymous with cowboy culture and country music, is no longer
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a staple. even today's superstars, keith urban and luke bryan perform hatless. that culture shift hit this american icon hard. >> the western lifestyle hat is something we could never, ever do without. >> reporter: before she was named stetson in 2012, she was a key player in all-american labels ralph lauren and calvin klein. this is a wall of iconic hats. >> or versions thereof. >> reporter: now she's locking to remake a fashionable hit of america's classic hat. >> you're basically trying to make the stetson cool again. >> uh-huh. and i don't think it's a lot of work. dress is neither a novelty or a flash in a pan. so there's our opportunity.
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♪ >> reporter: stetson isdi finng that opportunity in places like the festival circuit, where british fans like the vaccines and mumford and son are refining american cool. >> this is the benchmark. oh, cute. >> reporter: born in japan and raised in america, she says she sees stetson with a unique point of view. >> something purely american, which is the american west, the cowboy, the manifest destiny of an anything is impossible. >> reporter: haber dasher sean o tool is seeing an uptoick in sales. >> since 2011, every year has been an upswing. >> reporter: where are we today
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in terms of the status of the hat? >> i think the hat has come back a great deal. i think it still has a long way to go. the vast majority of the population is just getting into it. ♪ images of times square from the '30s and '40s, it's a see of hats. >> reporter: stetson's payday dates back to the turn of the century, when the company had 5,000 employees, the philadelphia factory turning out 2 million hats a year. today, that number is closer to 500,000. most made in garland, texas. but the company is now based on the not so wild west side of manhattan's garment district. where she leads a staff of eight. here, they're marketing the 150-year-old company for a future that also includes emerging markets in europe and asia. >> america is different. it's a one of a kind identity
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and one of a kind legacy that we're re
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a plan to honor the memory of martin luther king jr. is on a collision course with history with the shrine to the american confederacy. some people want to build a statue of dr. king on the mountain top there. >> reporter: stone mountain is a confederate mt. rushmore, etched into its granite face likenesses of robert e. lee, stone wall jackson and jefferson davis. three heroes of the old south stand 90 feet tall and 190 feet wide. timothy pilgrim is with georgia's sons of confederate veterans. >> this memorial honors the 900,000 confederate soldiers that went off to fight to protect their families, their homes, and country. >> reporter: a georgia state
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authority plans to put a tribute to dr. martin luther king on top of stone mountain, a freedom well of racial reconciliation. something dr. king dreamed of in his "i have a dream" speech for this georgia community, among others. >> let freedom ring from stone mountain of georgia. >> reporter: opposition was instant. georgia law mandates this park be maintained as a confederate memorial. >> to put a memorial on top of an existing monument is unlawful, disrespectful, and inappropriate. >> reporter: the confederate crowd found unusual alliyallies. the local naacp was opposed. >> it's a park past of our history and needs to be buried in our history. >> reporter: you don't want to add to it with a bell, you want to take it away.
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>> we want to blast it, we want to paint over it, whatever it takes. that's what we want to do. >> reporter: here's the twist. many surviving members of dr. king's inner circle support installing the bell. one of them is congressman john lewis. >> the mountain belong to the people of the state and to the people of this nation. why not? >> reporter: in his legendary speech, dr. king spoke of, out of the mountain of despair -- >> a stone of hope. >> reporter: stone mountain remains a symbol for both, depending who you talk to. >> the freedom bell proposal needs one more vote by the state authority board which should happen by the end of the year. the governor has approved the idea. meanwhile, gale, a confederate flag group of supporters plans to rally again here next month. >> that's the overnight news for this friday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back in a little while for the morning news and cbs morning.
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more than a hundred people rush for the exits as a jet liner bursts into flames as it's about to take off. also tonight, rubio on the rise. bush on the defensive. and debate moderators under fire. >> how about talking about the substantive issues. [ applause ] in a controversial trial, a prep school graduate hears his sentence for sexually assaulting a 15-year-old freshman. and the house on morris avenue where the eve of all hallows breaks loose. >> is it scary? >> no, it's just really cool. >> this is the "cbs overnight news." >> it was a frightening few minutes that must have seemed like hours for more than a hundred people aboard a boeing 767 jet liner.
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the plane was about to take off from fort lauderdale, florida to venezuela when an engine burst into flames. passengers and crew raced to evacuate. and david begnaud is in ft. lauderdale. >> reporter: these are some of the pictures of dynamic airways flight 405 on fire after the pilot aborted takeoff. this cell phone video captured huge black plumes of smoke as the plane's pilot radioed for help. >> engine's on fire, engine's on fire. >> reporter: just minutes earlier, a pilot on an aircraft taxiing behind the dynamic plane reported a fuel leak to air traffic control. >> dynamic looks like it's leaking fluid out of the left engine. >> reporter: all 101 people on board were evacuated using emergency slides. >> the pilot didn't say anything.
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>> camilla diaz was in seat 1-g. >> i was completely asleep. when i woke up, i was hearing screams and people crying and i didn't know how to react. >> reporter: 17 people, including one child, were injured and taken to the hospital. this passenger stopped to take pictures as he was running from the aircraft. he was frustrated by the crew's response. >> it was pretty nerve-racking to know that the door wasn't opening and to know something was on fire. >> reporter: david magro and his sister were two of the last people to evacuate. >> there was smoke all over the place, so we got out and started running to the grass as far away from the airplane as possible. >> reporter: the airline has not yet responded to our questions about the passenger complaints, only saying everyone evacuated safely. as of tonight, the aircraft is still on the taxiway and firefighters are still monitoring it. after being closed for several hours, the airport has reopened
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using the only other runway that's available. >> dynamic has been flying for about five years. david begnaud, thank you. it was death by firing squad for an awol member of the army, that surveillance blimp that took the wild ride yesterday from maryland to pennsylvania. they couldn't shoot it down, so todd they shot it up. here's chip reid. >> reporter: that sound is state police blasting the blimp with shotguns to make sure it couldn't take off again. the tail came to rest in trees and was removed today along with top secret electronics. but the five-ton body of the blimp is in a ravine so deep, the army says it could take a week to remove it. >> the biggest challenge is just the fact that it's very steep terrain. there's a stream that runs through and it's heavily wooded. >> reporter: this was one of two blimps based in aberdeen, maryland was the army was
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testing a coastal defense radar system. the other blimp has now been grounded indefinitely. in february, after the first blimp went up, we visited aberdeen. we asked captain villa then about the tether, which is only about an inch thick. >> we do not worry about the tether. there's a 1 in a million chance of that breaking. >> reporter: we asked him again today. do you want to revise that, do you regret it? >> no, i mean, that really is what the published chance was. and when you say 1 in a million, there is one. >> reporter: the army has long presented that the blimps present no danger to the public, but the tether dragged along for miles taking out power lines and damaging this greenhouse. >> it ripped the pipe off the front, destroyed benches. but thank god nobody was hurt. >> reporter: ken hunter's grandkids live just down the street from where it landed.
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>> what if it comes down on a house? it could have been serious. how does something like that get away? i would like some answers. >> reporter: so far, though, the army says they do not have an answer to the question of how that blimp got away. and as for getting it out of that deep ravine, the only option might be a heavy lift helicopter. >> chip reid, 1 in a million. chip, thanks. no one is running away with the republican presidential race, but marco rubio left boulder, colorado bolder than ever after last night's debate. here's major garrett. >> reporter: ben carson and donald trump occupied center stage but did not rule the night. attention turned to the open feud between former political allies, jeb bush and marco rubio. bush hit rubio for missing dozens of senate votes while campaigning. >> marco, when you signed up for this, this was a six-year term and you should be showing up for work. >> the only reason you're doing it now is because we're running for the same position. someone has convinced you that attacking me is going to help
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you. >> reporter: the exchange deepened the impression of bush on the decline. something he defined today in new hampshire. >> it's not on life support. we have the most money, we have the greatest organization. we're doing fine. >> reporter: the debate provoked its own debate about the moderators. republicans faulted cnbc for questions like this to trump. >> is this a comic book version of a presidential campaign? > reporter: or this to mike huckabee about trump. >> when you look at him, do you see someone with the moral authority to unite the country. [ crowd booing ] >> reporter: the questions prompted this scolding from texas senator ted cruz. >> the questions that have been asked so far in this debate illustrate why the american people don't trust the media. >> reporter: on cbs this morning, rubio said he expected more questions about economic policy. >> i thought it was a wasted opportunity. that's what made it unfair not just to the candidates but the american people. >> reporter: and carson said he will now ask other gop candidates to lobby for changes
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to future debates. >> the whole format was just craziness. i think one of the sentinel moments is when the audience began to boo the questioners. that tells you a lot. you've got to be really bad for the whole audience to boo you like that. >> reporter: we asked carson if he was threatening to boycott future presidential debates if no changes are made. carson told us he wants to start a dialogue, not engage in posturing. >> major garrett in denver. major, thank you. cbs news will bring you the next democratic debate. that's november 14th from des moines, iowa. john dickerson is the moderator. "cbs overnight news" will be right back.
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a divided republican party turned to a new generation for leadership. 45-year-old paul ryan was sworn in as the speaker of the house. the wisconsin congressman is an expert on the federal budget and was the party's last nominee for vice president. he took the gavel this morning and nancy cordes reports a hammer could come in handy. >> the speaker of the house, congressman and honorable paul ryan. [ applause ] >> thank you. thank you very much. >> reporter: the nation's 54th house speaker started out with some tough talk for the members he now leads. paul ryan said the house is broken, and americans know it. >> they look at washington, and all they see is chaos.
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what a relief to them it would be if we finally got our act together. >> reporter: ryan's family and his former running mate mitt romney watched as he pledged to work with the other side to tackle tax reform, poverty and the debt. >> if you ever pray, let's pray for each other. republicans for democrats, and democrats for republicans. [ applause ] and i don't mean pray for a conversion. [ laughter ] >> reporter: ryan takes the role armed with good will. all but nine republicans voted for him today. ryan's predecessor got a hero's sendoff. armed with tissues, john boehner bid farewell after five years as speaker and 25 in congress.
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>> i leave with no regrets, no burdens. if anything, i leave the way i started. just a regular guy, humbled by the chance to do a big job. >> reporter: boehner also reminded members that real change requires patience. a message to some conservatives who grew frustrated with his incremental approach and who contributed, scott, to his decision to step down. >> nancy cordes on capitol hill. nancy, thank you. we got another sign that the country is facing economic challenges. the government reported a sharp slowdown in the third quarter of this year. growth was just 1.5%, less than half the rate of the previous quarter. today we got a sense of the horror inside the emanual ame church in charleston, south carolina, the night of the massacre in june. nine people were murdered at the historic black church, including the pastor, clemente pinckney. the accused gunman is white and the police logs have just been released.
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mark strassman on what they show. >> reporter: the chilling incident report begins with a text of a 911 call on june 17th at 9:05 p.m. it was from a woman who said she was hiding under a table that a man had shot the pastor and that the gunman was still in the building. she said there were people shot down around her. at 9:07, the woman said the man is reloading. when asked how many shots were fired, she answered, so many. at 9:08, reverend clemente pinckney's wife calls and said she is hiding under the desk in the office with her daughter. she says she can hear people moaning outside the office. she said the gunman entered through the back door and came through the office. at one point she says so many people dead, i think. we later learned that her husband, the reverend, was among those killed. photos show the church's office possibly where mrs. pinckney hid. by the next day, dylann roof was arrested.
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photos show his car and the pillow in the back seat where he told police he had his gun. of the hundreds of the mostly redacted records released, none included transcripts of the 911 calls themselves or the police tapes of roof's interview. >> mark strassman with the late breaking story. mark, thank you. another boat packed with families fleeing war, most from syria, capsized yesterday off greece. 242 were rescued but at least eight drowned, and more than 30 are still missing. the refugees know the dangers and yet they keep coming. and here's barry petersen. >> reporter: shivering, suffering from hypothermia and in shock. but they survive. saved after their overloaded boat from turkey capsized. rescued by the greek coast guard. there is growing desperation as the increasingly harsh winter weather sets in.
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but still the refugees risk the six-mile journey to the closest galtdway to europe. as the overloaded boats struggle and sink, rescuers hunt for survivors. a few refugees had life jackets. that meant a life saved for some, but not for others. this greek fisherman helped in the rescues. >> where is humanity? where is the rulers, the decision makers of this world? what the hell they do? >> reporter: almost 700,000 refugees have arrived in europe this year. more than 3,000 died or are missing at sea. in the midst of the drowning, a tiny miracle last week. a fisherman grabbing a mother and her 18-month-old baby. he thought muhammad hasan was dead, but the boy made a noise
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and the fisherman huredly used some elementary first aid, shaking the child upside down, and it worked. hasan took a breath and became a survivor. to end this is ending the war in syria. until then, hundreds more will make this calculation, is a chance at a new life worth the risk of dying at sea? >> of course, there is no end in sight to that war. barry petersen in our london newsroom. barry, thank you. a prep school graduate has learned his sentence for sexually assaulting a minor. that's coming up. and it's open season for monster waves. "cbs overnight news" will be right back. >> important message for residents age 50 to 85.
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a new hampshire prep school graduate was sentenced today to a year in jail for sexually assaulting a 15-year-old girl, allegedly part of a tradition which upper classman competed for the most sexual conquests. he could have gotten 11 years, and anna werner is at the courthouse. >> reporter: as he waited for the judge to render his decision, owen labrie made the sign of the cross and looked to the heavens. but his prayers for a lighter sentence of probation were not answered. judge larry smuckler gave him a term of one year in jail and told labrie bluntly that he did not believe the sex with the then 15-year-old girl was
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consensual. >> a child such as the victim, is not -- >> reporter: labrie was found guilty of having sex with the young girl in may of 2014. he claimed it was consensual. he contacted her as part of a ritual called the senior salute, where young men about to graduate try to meet up with younger females, sometimes for sex. but the victim, whom we are not identifying, said otherwise. >> i was raped. i was violated in so many ways. >> reporter: today, she told the court in a videotaped statement her life has changed forever. >> now, it's terrible to say i know why people don't come forward. and it kills me to say that. >> reporter: labrie will also
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have to register as a sex offender for life. his attorney, jay carney. >> this is a punishment that he will have to endure for the rest of his life. >> reporter: labrie remains out on bail while his case is on appeal. assuming he does go to jail, scott, his year sentence could be reduced to eight months for good behavior followed by probation. >> anna werner, thanks. china takes a step to get younger. that's next.
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the world's most populated country is trying to start a baby boom. seth doane now on why china is ending its one child per family policy. >> reporter: when we met last year, she told us she worried about her son michael being an only child.
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>> feels lonely. >> reporter: today's announcement means couples can now have two children, reversing a three-decade-old policy designed to limit a booming population. promoted via propaganda posters, the communist government claimed its one child policy prevented 400 million births and lifted many out of poverty. but the policy was unpopular, and enforcement could be draconian, including forced abortions. with only one child, many couples chose to abort female fetuses. today, there are 33 million more men than women. china finally changed its policy as it faces a shortage of workers in an aging population. but we found even with the rule change, the dream of a second child is not universal. have you always wanted to have a second child as much as her? i'm not wedded to the idea her
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husband told us, because it brings so much financial pressure. the cost of supporting and educating one child could still trump having a second. seth doane, cbs news, taipei. >> by the way, china is about the same size as the continental u.s., but it has 1 billion more people. monster wave season started this week in portugal, and the best surfers in the world are hitching an amazing ride. they've had only 60 footers, which are tremendous, but they're hoping for 100 footers. monsters of another kind make this is the scariest time of the year. but at this house, everyone is in good spirits. that story is next.
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finally tonight, have you noticed? halloween is challenging christmas in the home decoration competition. mireya villarreal got a look at the haunts on morris avenue in the shadows of hollywood. >> reporter: what appears to be an amusement park is actually rick poluzzi's front yard. >> i want a lot of spectacles. >> reporter: every night in the ten days leading up to halloween, 4,000 to 6,000 visitors stream into this normally quiet neighborhood to experience halloween is it scary? >> no, it's just really cool. >> reporter: the idea of a
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fright-free halloween began when he took his young daughters to their first haunted house. it didn't go well. they ran out screaming? >> right. >> reporter: not happy? >> no, not at all. >> reporter: a former animation producer for "the simpsons" tv show, decided he could build something better. how much is your allowance for this? >> usually between $10,000 and $12,000 each year. >> reporter: and it also cost him time. he starts putting up pumpkins in july. do you think there's a point where your wife and children will be like, enough? >> yeah, they did that ten years ago. >> reporter: with his daughters w all grown up, he insists every year will be his last. >> isn't that the coolest? >> reporter: but moments like this always pull him back. >> good job. some have introduced their kids to us now, little babies. that makes them feel terribly old. >> reporter: still, he's not ready to give up the ghost any time soon.
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mireya villarreal, cbs news, los angeles. >> and that's the "overnight news" for this friday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us later for the morning news and cbs this morning. from the broadcast center in new york city, i'm scott pelley.
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this is the "cbs overnight news." >> welcome to the "overnight news." there is fresh outrage directed at former subway restaurant spokesman jared fogle. he made millions as the face of the fast food chain, but is now awaiting sent tensing on child sex charges. prosecutors obtained audio recordings of him chatting with a woman in florida chatting about his sexual encounters with women. some of it is hard to listen to. >> reporter: fogle pleaded guilty to child pornography in august and agreed to pay $1.4 million in restitution to 14 victims. these recordings formed part of the evidence collected by investigators but they're only surfacing now. i want to warn you, viewers may find the content disturbing. in the audio recordings being heard publicly for the first
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time, jared fogle discusses his sexual interest in children. >> reporter: the woman talking with fogle is a former radio host who interviewed fogle and became suspicious when she overheard him say he found middle schoolgirls attractive. she told dr. phil mcgraw she began providing secret recordings to the fbi. >> how did you feel when he said those things? >> disgusting. i felt like i was so dirty. my soul was dirty. >> he talks about how to groom a
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family. he talks about how to groom the victim. he talks about all the things he does, the tricks of his trade. he just basically gives you the playbook of an evil monster. >> hi, i'm jared the subway guy. >> reporter: he became a household name as a pitchman for subway. and he used his fame to establish a foundation promoting healthy lifestyles among children. in august, fogle pleaded guilty to one count of distributing and receiving child pornography and one count of crossing state lines to engage in illicit sex with minors. subway cut ties following his arrest. in september, the chain said herman wallren made a complaint about fogle in 2011 but it was mishandled. after amassing five years worth of recordings, herman finally reached her breaking point when fogle mentioned her two young children.
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>> she had to leave her kids, her family, go off somewhere and do this, come back, terribly upset for hours afterwards. and it took a lot of time away from her family. and changed who she was. that was a very painful thing for her. >> reporter: dr. phil is devoting two episodes to the audio recordings. one airing today and another on friday. fogle is facing 5 to 12 years in prison. and up to $500,000 in fines. his attorney declined to comment. subway told cbs this morning that they have not heard the tapes. the company said they felt duped and betrayed by fogle and their sympathies go out the victims. the american cancer society's new guidelines for breast cancer screening has sparked a firestorm of controversy. the society wants women to
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start screening later. and do so less often. three cancer doctors wrote an op-ed in "the new york times" blasting the changes. michelle miller has the latest on the mammogram debates. >> reporter the american cancer society says it came up with the recommendations after reviewing the best medical evidence available and weighing the benefits and harms of mammograms. but more than 200,000 new cases of breast cancer expected this year, the doctors who wrote the editorial say early detection is key. >> if your number one goal is reducing deaths, mammograms starting at age 40 makes sense. >> reporter: as top specialists in the battle against breast cancer, these doctors say they can't back the american cancer society's latest screening guidelines. what don't you agree with? >> the problem with these guidelines is that they're confusing to the very women that should benefit from mammograms.
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>> reporter: they publicly aired their concerns in "the new york times" saying we no longer wish to be involved with the cancer society. the new recommendation suggests women with an average risk start yearly mammograms at age 45 instead of 40. at 55, they can switch to every two years. but they add women can start screening at age 40 if they wish. >> our goal is to empower people to make that informed decision. >> reporter: this doctor chaired the panel that created the new guidelines. >> as a woman ages, the breast tissue tends to get less dense and makes reading easier. >> i've had the privilege of finding early cancers by screening women in their 40s and these guidelines are a setback to protecting the health of these women. >> reporter: critics worry it could lead insurance companies to limit coverage. >> the question is, will we be
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covered to be screened? will insurance companies jump on these guidelines and then say, sorry, no reimbursement? >> the american cancer society continues to be one of the strongest voices for continuing insurance for women age 40 and older. >> reporter: why push it back to 45 from 40 if you left the door open for it to be insured? >> at 45, there is no question how common breast cancer is, the ability of mammograms to save lives. between 40 and 44, breast cancer is less common. >> reporter: in the hundreds of responses the op-ed received online, there was strong reaction on both sides. one reader wrote, what if the one saved woman is you. eight years ago it was me. or your sister or your daughter? still willing to play the odds? another said, personal experiences of the few should not drive medical policies for the majority. >> we desperately need resources for better technologies. >> reporter: dr. david aga said
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the focus should not be on when to get a mammogram but how to better detect breast cancer. >> we want to be told what to do, but there isn't enough data to tell every woman in the country what to do between the ages of 40 and 45. so that decision is between the woman, her family and doctor to make the right decision for them. >> reporter: adding to all the confusion, yet another new study is raising questions about the value of mammograms. the report in "the new england journal of medicine" found despite women getting mammograms for decades, the testing hasn't cut the rate of detecting breast cancer. >> the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. [coughing]
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round three of the republican presidential debates is in the book. it was a raw cause affair. the consensus is, florida senator marco rubio came out on top. rubio sat down for a chat with charlie, gale and norah. but first, major garrett has a look at the gop political slugfest. >> reporter: the rnc chairman reince priebus also said cnbc ought to be ashame. more on that a minute. the debate did tackle big issues. entitlement spending, tax reform and the national debt. but overall the old saying applies. there was more heat than light. it was hard to focus through the noise. but some moments in this debate
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broke through. >> senator, you're not interested in an answer. [ overlapping speakers ] >> reporter: like this exchange between jeb bush and marco rubio over votes that rubio has missed while campaigning. >> literally the senate, what is it like a french workweek, you get three days where you have to show up? you can campaign. or just resign and let someone else take the job. >> reporter: rubio implied bush was a hypocrite war not criticizing other vote-missing senators who have run for president. >> the only reason you're doing it now is because we're running for the same position and someone convinced you attacking me to help you. >> reporter: ben carson and donald trump both took fire from john kasich for policy proposals he called unrealistic. >> you don't make promises like this. why novet gihi a c ickenn every pot while you're coming one these fantasy tax schemes. >> he was such a nice guy and said i'm never going to attack. then his poll numbers tanked, that's why he's on the end. [ applause ]
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and he got nasty. >> reporter: carly fiorina had to defend her tumultuous tenure that included tens of thousands of layoffs. >> yes, i was fired over a disagreement in the board room. there are politics in the board room, as wel. >> reporter: ted cruise detected a pattern in the debate questions. >> this is not a cage match. and if you look at the questions, donald trump, are you a comic book villain? ben carson, can yo mu doath? john kasich, will you insult two people over here? the questions that are being asked shouldn't be trying to get people to tear into each other. >> reporter: and when the issue of government regulation of fantasy football surfaced, new jersey chris christie called time-out. >> we have $19 trillion in debt. we have people out of work. we have isis and al qaeda attacking us. and we're talking about fantasy football? [ applause ] >> reporter: after the debate, carson joined republicans in calling the media biased. >> in terms of the kinds of softball questions that the democrats get, and the kind of tough questions that republicans get, i don't mind tough questions.
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but it just shows that there's a big difference. >> reporter: the post debate consensus, marco rubio and ted cruz did well and jeb bush struggled. donald trump told us he was certain he won. as for the way it kuked -- conducted the debate, cnbc released a statement saying people that want to be president of the united states should be able to answer tough questions. >> thanks, major. florida senator marco rubio is with us from colorado. senator, good morning. >> good morning. >> what do you think you achieved last night? some are saying this may have been a moment for you. >> well, you covered this long enough to know. it's one debate of many. we have another one in 12 or 14 days. so we're looking forward to that. every one of these is an opportunity to introduce ourselves to people that have never heard about us or know little about why we're running for president. >> senator, were you surprised that jeb bush attacked your attendance record? one of your local newspapers is also raising it as an issue. is it a fair question?
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>> look, my campaign is not about attacking anybody else. my campaign is about who i am and what's important for our country and the future of america that's what i am going to continue to focus on and won't change my feelings. i'm not running against them, i'm running for president. >> did you make that attack personal against jeb bush? he was once your mentor. >> again, i have great regard for him. i said that last night on the debate stage. every candidate should run on who they are and what they'll do if they become president and let the republican voters decide who the nominee should be. if there are policy differences, we should discuss those differences. i've never personally attacked anybody in this race and i'm not going to start now. >> well, you called hillary clinton a liar, senator. you called hillary clinton a liar. >> well, no, i said hillary clinton lied about benghazi, there's no doubt about that, charlie. there are e-mails which she was
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talking to her family telling them there was an attack on that consulate due to a terrorist attack by al qaeda elements and going around the country talking to the families of the victims and to the american people and saying no, no, this is because of some video that someone produced. >> senator, you know the cia was changing its own assessment of what happened there during that time zone. >> that's not accurate. it was clear from the very early moments after that attack that it was not a spontaneous uprising. it was a planned attack, well orchestrated by people that brought arments to that attack that you would never see as part of a spontaneous uprising. what was clear is from the early moments oh of that attack, she knew that it was a terrorist attack, as she shared by e-mail with various people. yet she continued to perpetuate the lie -- >> if you're calling her a liar, by saying she perpetuated a lie, why do you think she did that? what was her motive? >> well, that's very clear why, because they were in the middle of a 2012 re-election which
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president obama made the claim al qaeda was being defeated -- >> you're saying hillary clinton lied because she wanted to help barac obama in his re-election campaign? that's a serious charge. >> yes. well, it's the truth. that's not only why she did it, that's why everyone in the administration did it. the narrative of their campaign at the time, charlie, was that al qaeda was on the run and had been defeated. that was the narrative. this countered that narrative. they didn't want that out there. that's why they didn't tell the truth about what happened. and the families of those victims deserve better. the american people deserve better. >> are you denying that the cia was sending different information as they assessed it and providing different information to the leaders of our government, that was part of the reason -- >> without violating any -- >> david petraeus -- >> i don't want to violate anything confidential, but i'll tell you this. it was clear from the earliest moments after that attack that everyone on the ground and everyone closest to that attack knew almost instantly that this was an organized effort, not
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part of a spontaneous uprising. and there was never, ever any evidence that it had anything to do with a video produced by some guy out in california. for them to further that narrative and continue to do so well after it was clear that wasn't the case was unacceptable. the american people deserve better, and the families of those victims of benghazi deserve better. >> at one point, senator, it appeared that the candidates seemed to be debating the moderators more than each other. jeb bush this morning said he didn't think it was a fair debate. what is your assessment of the debate last night? >> i was disappointed, because i thought cnbc is a station where they go into deep conversations on a daily basis about economics. i thought last night was a night to talk about what are your plans to reduce the debt, who should the role of the fed be, what about this trade deal we have? these are major economic issues. instead of taking up those questions and pressing the candidates on specifics, we had some of the other questions you had been asked.
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i thought it was a wasted opportunity and that's what made it unfair, not just to the candidates but the american people. these are issues i was ready to talk about. this is why i'm running for president on these issues i take very seriously. i know the other candidates do too. and we wasted an opportunity last night to do that, because you have to respond to questions such as some of those posed last night about ben carson and some website and whether donald trump has moral authority. wasted opportunity and what i thought was the perfect forum to go into detail about specific and pressing economic policies. up next, the democrats. cbs will be hosting the debate from des moines, iowa november 14th at 9:00 p.m. eastern. the "overnight news" will be right back. and pilled cardigans become pets. but it's not you, it's the laundry. protect your clothes from stretching, fading, and fuzz. ...with downy fabric conditioner... it not only softens and freshens,
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stetson is renowned as the hat that won the west, but that was a long time ago. for the most part, hats have drifted out of style. after 150 years in the hat making business, stetson is working to change its image. jan crawford has the story. >> reporter: on the big screen -- >> looks like we got ourselves a lady's man. >> reporter: john wayne embodied the spirit of the american west. >> i like you, too. ♪ >> reporter: but the stetson, synonymous with cowboy culture and country music, is no longer a staple.
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♪ you just want to sing a little chill song ♪ even today's superstars, keith urban and luke bryan perform hatless. that culture shift hit this american icon hard. >> the western lifestyle hat is something we could never, ever do without. >> reporter: beforshe was named stetson's ceo in 2012, she was a key player in all-american labels ralph lauren and calvin klein. this is a wall of iconic hats. >> or versions thereof. >> reporter: now she's locking to remake a fashionable hit of america's classic hat. >> you're basically trying to make the stetson cool again. >> uh-huh. and i don't think it's a lot of work. i think we're at a place where faess is neither a novelty or a shion flash in a pan. so there's our opportunity. ♪
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>> reporter: stetson is finding that opportunity in places like the festival circuit, e wher british fans like the vaccines and mumford and son are refining american cool. >> this is the benchmark. oh, cute. >> reporter: born in japan and raised in america, she says she sees stetson with a unique point of view. >> something purely american, which is the american west, the cowboy, the manifest destiny of sort of an endless horizon and anything is possible. >> reporter: haberdasher sean o'tool is seeing an uptick in sales. >> since 2011, every year has been an upswing. >> reporter: where are we today in terms of the status of the
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hat? >> i think the hat has come back a great deal. i think it still has a long way to go. the vastmajority of the population is just getting into it. ♪ images of times square from the '30s and '40s, it's a sea of hats. >> reporter: stetson's heyday dates back to the turn of the century, when the company had 5,000 employees, the philadelphia factory turning out 2 million hats a year. today, that number is closer to 500,000. most made in garland, texas. but the company is now based on the not so wild west side of manhattan's garment district. where she leads a staff of eight. here, they're marketing the 150-year-old company for a future that also includes emerging markets in europe and asia. >> america is different. it's a one of a kind identity and one of a kind legacy that
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it's a one of a kind identity and one of a kind legacy that we're representing here.lking th can be awkward and uncomfortable. we think to ourselves, "i never served. how could i understand? they'll talk about it when they're ready." and then we wonder why they don't want to talk. but when their behavior changes, when they withdraw to themselves, increase substance use, or even talk about hurting themselves, it's time to act. because if we don't, our families and relationships will suffer. ask the hard questions. listen to the veterans in your life and show you care. make the call. it matters. when you recognize a veteran is in crisis, call the veterans crisis line at 1-800-273-8255 and press "1".
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♪ [female narrator] even if you're not planning on getting pregnant now, you should know that foods rich in folic acid like white bread and leafy greens
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captioning funded by cbs it's friday, october 30th, 2015. this is the "cbs morning news." terror at takeoff. chaos when a jetliner packed with more than a hundred passengers erupts in flames. a texas shoot-out caught on camera. surveillance video is released of a deadly gun battle between rival biker gangs. tasks with keeping kids safe. a school driver is under arrest after he is seen hitting one of his passengers. justin bieber, why he cut off his concert after just one song.

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