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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  July 21, 2016 2:07am-3:59am EDT

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if you're not hanging with "e.t.," you're not a part of the action. >> be at comicon. >> starting tomorrow. >> it will be a blast. >> i feel like we should take a pow wow or something like that. margot robbie surrounded by sexy shirtless men, and you need to hear this. her beauty tip that every woman should know. later, the incomparable barbra streisand, she talks new music and why she couldn't get enough of cameron mathison. >> thank you, i applaud you. new "toddlers & tiaras." baby beauty queens going to using some very adult cosmetic treatments. >> i wish when i was three years old, someone gave me collagen. closed captioning provided by --
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tomorrow on "e.t.," only ww are teaming up with disney star zendaya. how she's teaming up with so you have 10 years of experience? i do but no phd... i do have a masters in early childhood development you don't mind if i record this, do you? uh...no first kid here's all the numbers, food's in the fridge, oh and lucas likes to pull on jewelry, so you might want to lose the nose ring by their second kid, every mom is an expert, and more likely to choose luvs than first time moms luvs locks away wetness better than huggies snug & dry and you can save up to 150 dollars per year
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live, learn and get luvs margot robbie looking sexy for calvin klein. here's the thing about margot. she's a bona fide superstar, a world class bea and she's still grounded. here's the proof. >> check her out, getting cozy
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on a bed with several shirtless models. dancing her way through a hallway party. there's more than margot than meets the eyes. >> when i was growing up, i wanted to own hotels and be a magician. >>hi i tnk i did gravitate toward entertaining and the business side of things. >> a hotel owning magician. margot's unique childhood dream is one of the many reasons we're digging on the 26-year-old aussie, despite being the voice of calvin klein's euphoria fragrance. she's all about low maintenance make-up. >> i dip a q tip in eye make-up remover and remove the make-up from my lips and i don't need to wear lipstick, because it's just -- i don't know, that seems to work for >> the most beautiful person i know is mymom. i know everyone says that, if you met my mom, you would be like, oh, she is the most wonderful woman in the world.
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i look like my mom. i hope one day i look as good as she does in her 60s. >> aw, that's so sweet. >> that's beautiful. by the way, margot is just one of the many stars we will see this week in san diego at comicon. she will be there with will smith and the stars of suicide squad. >> still ahead, we get a first look at thlde wi new season of "toddlers & tiaras." and why it's unlike anything you have seen on >> see you at the pageant. cameron goes one on one with the incomparable barbra streisand. >> let's set them straight. >> they sit down and talk about her 35th studio album. and the unexpected turn she took. >> yeah, yeah, show us what you can do, girl.
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step front foot. >> that's what i d >
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of toddlers & tiaras. if you thought they were pushing things too far with spray tans and fake teeth for these little kids. well, you ain't seen nothing yet. >> go! >> get ready for grueling workouts. >> you have to have a good body, even when you're five years old. >> kiddie facials. collagen spray. >> i wish when i was three years old, someone would have given me a collagen spray so i didn'' get wrinkles ffom happy eyes all day. >> i have doctor, a chemist and a pharmacist i've been working with for hair, skin and nails. >> she has to amp it up this season. >> judges are going to take into consideration what you look like in a swimsuit. if you have a belly sticking out of your swimsuit, they're going to pick the little girl with the
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a abs, and not the belly sticking out of their swimsuit. >> the show's a spring board for stardom. >> at 6 years old, eden wood got a spin-off, a book deal and recorded a single, cutie petutie. >> yeah, i want a career like her. >> this year, the omega ultimate grand sue premand plenty of prizes. >> $10,000 cash, cruises, cars. most moms just want the bragging rights. >> to win big, you have to spe big. some parents shell out as much as 30 grand. this season it's not just on wardrobe. >> private jets are a luxury. yes, they are expensive. >> guys, see you at the pageant. >> as far as coaching goes, it can go up to $150 an hour. >> is this new punched up pageant show on steroids churning out beauty queens or creating little monsters. >> we have to step it up and do what the other teams are not willing to do. we want to win. >> i wouldn't mind trying that ag
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incorrectly. >> i'm kidding. >> let's talk now about the return of a true superstar. hollywood icon and i'm so jealous of the fact that you sat down with barbra streisand. >> i did. and it was such a thrill for me. barbra streisand has been on top for more than five decades. even with all the success an all the fame, there's still one thing even her biggest fan -- gets wrong. >> what's one thing that barbra streisand must have with her when she's out on tour. >> a person like you that says my name right. >> yes! it's true, i know some people i know -- >> they call me all kinds of strange pronunciations. >> let's set them straight. >> barbra streisand. >> not zand. not a z. that's the word zany. >> i'm just happy i got it right. >> thank i applaud you.
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legend i think i just hit my career high point. miss try is ready to release her 35th album month. but the best part, duets with famous movie stars. ♪ climb every mountain >> you're back at ittagain in a couple weeks, a nine city tour. wow! >> one of the reasons that i'm doing it is because i'd love to share some of the music that i just recorded. i always feel good when i can return to the stage, to the concert stage. >> two of the nights are n hometown crowd.ng to yo that has got to be so special for you. and maybe emotional. >> it's not what you think, by the way. when i made the movie "current el" it was more successful in taiwan than in brooklyn. where are my best audiences? germany. >> really? >> really.
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>> in europe, they're like, wow! she came from brooklyn. i'm like an oddbbll. you're sitting in brooklyn. >> she's from the streets, you know? >> come on, don't they know who they're talking to? >> i have to say this, barbra was so sweet, warm and funny. she doesn't like people fussing with her hair and make-up, that's why she likes directing so she doesn't have to worry about all the primpinn. >> i know what you're talking about barbra. another icon, oprah winfrey has a new show on own. oprah showing eva some love on the red carpet. the newr dama is set on a louisiana sugar cane farm where three estranged siblings have reunited.
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>> this land just needs to be cared for. >> it's nothing short of cinematic. >> eva called me up and said i have this idea for inclusiveness, let's do something that's never been done before. that woman's voice and that point of view is something that i have to have. >> the best part, though, being inducted into oprah's squad. >> everyone knows of her warmth and generosity through the oprah show. i feel like i get my own opr show when i call her. >> no doubt about how special oprah makes others
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watch it at etooline.com. travel consideration provided by -- garry marshall may be gone, but he will never be forgotten. his tv shows, movies will live on forever.
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>> they classics. in fact, i'll never get tired watching "pretty woman." i may have to go home tonight and watch it in his honor. we're going to leave you now with a little more of our set visit. here's garry on the agic of julia roberts and richard gere, and, of course, the magic of good-bye, everybody. quiet. who's is this? 86 that. >> we have julia, we screen tested people, and nobody worked as well as richard. one more thing, we'll pick it up in another camera? >> we loved making scenes that were terrific. they both looked at me and said, aren't you glad we get along? what if we didn't get alongg you'd have a real mess on your hands, garry. no, i'm really glad you get along.
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>> pelley: we end tonight with a kid from the bronx who grew up to be one of the most powerful men in hollywood. garry marshall died yesterday at the age of 81, and anthony mason has his story. >> fonzie, my father's idea of being cool is leaving the top button open on his sports shirt. >> reporter: in many successful sitcoms and films, garry marshall's trademark was always human comedy. >> nano nano! >> i tried once to blow something up. i don't blow things up well. >> gary found ways to make you want to learn to work. >> reporter: director ron howard first encountered marshall when he was a child star on the "andy griffith show." >> gary had been doing the "dick van dyke show" on that same lot. >> reporter: did you know each other? >> i knew who he was. >> reporter: marshall would later cast howard in a sitcom he
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sunday, monday, happy days >> reporter: launched in 1974, "happy days" would run for ten years. >> garry was the best boss i ever had. he could lead a group of people to be their best selves. >> reporter: he did it again with a string of hits, "laverne & shirley," "mork & mindy," dominating prime time for more than a decade. he seemed to hit a nerve in this country. >> yeah. he could have kept going as a dominant figure in television, but he really wanted to make movies. >> reporter: on film, he gave us "pretty woman." >> oh! >> reporter: and "the princess diaries," and always mentored his actors. >> you want to go in and pitch a comedy to a network? in your pitch just curse a lot. it worked. i sold a couple pilots that way as a producer. >> reporter: marshall was an
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actor, too often playing the studio executives he made fun of. >> you know the words i like? i like the words "peppy" and the word "cheap." peppy and cheap. >> if any of us were beginning to have success in the bids, he'd say, just don't ever forget, life is more important than show business. >> reporter: "it's nice to be important," garry marshall once said. "it's more important to be nice." anthony mason, cbs news, hollywood. and that's the overnight news for this thursday. for some of you the news continues and for others, tune back in for full coverage of the convention. from cleveland, the site of the republican national convention, i'm scott pelley.
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this is the net cbs overnight news. volkswagen is bracing for another multibillion dollar hit. they have charged top executives with creating defeat devices to allow hundreds of thousands of so-called clean diesel kaur cars to pass emissions tests. thab are e they've already settled to the tune of $15 billion. >> reporter: the company's legal troubles are far from over. the latest lawsuits site documents and allege this was a lo
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in the u.s. and around the world. >> this was not a corporate decision from my point of view. this was a couple of soft ware engineers -- >> reporter: that's then ceo giving congress what had become the volkswagen emissions scandal party line. some found it hard to believe. >> vw is trying to get the united states to believe this is a couple of rogue engineers. i categorically don't believe. >> reporter: therey we damong t executives named is former ceo that had previously denied wrong doing but resigned in september. >> this was deep, live and long lasting. >> new york attorney general, erick sniderman. >> the idea that this level of fraud coulke
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high levels of these major international corporations for so long is appalling. >> reporter: audi, volkswagen and porsche signs 600,000 vehicles to cheat the emissions. and get a cost benefit analysis over potential penalties for getting caught. >> i'm angrier today than i was a couple days ago and i was pretty pussed a couple days ago. >> reporter: he bought a 2011 od audi equipped with a defeat it vice. >> how do nine people say let's cheat and no one else goes that's a bad idea. >> reporter: volkswagen saying it's regrettable that some have decided to sue for environmental claims now. these latest lawsuits stop short of naming the curren
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knowledge. and because the earlier sett settlement didn't have to do with -- and the potential liability to vw is in the billions of thedollars. chairman roger ailes is about to step down amid charges of sexual harassment. they're apparently negotiating the final details. over 20 years he grew it from a start up operation to the top cable news network. sfwlrks he >> reporter: ales is already under investigation. then yesterday, megyn kelly reportedly told investigators that he had made similar sexual advancement towards her, about 10 years ago when she was starting at fox news.
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news correspondent, megyn kelly tuesday night reporting from the republican national convention but according to sources sited by new york magazine, she has reported to investigators that her boss, roger ailes made unwanted sexual advancements towards her. >> the star stats made his position untenable. where does he go if he's being accused by one of his most prominent women as being a sexual harasser. kelly had nothing but praise for her boss when she spoke to charley rose last year. >> i really care about fox and i really care about roger. he's been nothing but good to me and he's been very loyal and
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>> reporter: kelly's reported accusation is putting increased pressure on fox news' parent corporation to release ailes. former fox news anchor, gretchen carlson filed a suit against aile ail ailes. fox executives appear to be taking the accusations seriously. >> they're in these discussions right now and the real question is how quickly they can get him out and under what terms. >> reporter: 21st century fox released a statement. roger is at work. and any exit deal would likely be a lucrative one for the fox chief. >> you expect to see a rich pay day for leaving under a cloud. 10s of millions of dollars. fo> a private funeral is planned
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marshall. he died tuesday at his home in california. he was 81. he entertained america for more than 50 years starting as a joke writer and moving on to create tv shows and blockbuster movies. charley rose has his story. ♪ a beautiful smile to hide the pain ♪ >> reporter: garry marshall knew how to make a moment. a five-time emmy nominee. ♪ sunday, monday, happy days >> reporter: marshall was a hit maker. he created numerous '70s and '80s television sitcoms. "lavergne and shirley." and "mork and mindy." the unknown robin
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marshall shined in front of the camera too. >> i like wayne newton. >> i said wayne newton? >> i heard you say wayne newton. i like him. that makes me a schmuck. >> filling blank tape is the hardest thing there is. >> why is it so hard do you think? >> because you have no excuses. a guy with a pen has really no excuses. >> reporter: on cbs this morning in 2012, marshall explained how an uncertain ending contributed to the big screen magic of "pretty woman." >> we didn't have an ending and then we finally had a fairy tale ending and i said julia, tell the story about the girl in the tower. just tell it. it will
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>> so what happened after he climbed up the tower and rescued her? >> she rescues him right back. with you ♪ each year kids miss 22 million school days due to illness. but lysol kills 99.9% of cold and flu viruses. come on! ♪ come on. ♪ ♪ p&g. proud sponsor of moms. introducing new k-y for massage and intimacy. every touch, gently intensified.
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the republican national convention in cleveland hasn't attracted the violent protests many had feared but it has attracted several rock and roll bands committed to changing the political process. >> reporter: behind me you see a memorial to the rock and roll in america. donald trump may be the headliner but last night one band came to town with the intention of disrespecting that party. if rifts could start a revolution, then the prophets of rage hope to start right now. >> what we do is we play music.
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meaning. >> reporter: he plays guitar in the band. >> i describe this band as a path of revolutionary musicians who have come together during this crazy, historic political juncture. >> reporter: formed this year it's a collection of rock veterans. three guys from the '90s band, rage against the machine teamed up with be real from cyprus hill and chuck d from the '80s rap group, public enemy. all three ensembles were known for their politically charged lyrics and in-your-face performances. >> it's a reintroduction of a particular style of how words and music can actually move people. >> reporter: the prophets of rage say
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instead endorse a platform of the people, against corporate greed and corruption. >> our system is broken and it cannot be fixed by either of the two major parties. i'm not going to hope that the dem gaug advocating war crimes at the rnc or the centerest democrat is going to fix the country. >> reporter: at this year's republican national convention, they're staging concerts which they hope will encourage action. >> the world's not going to change itself, that's up for you. ♪ stop children what's that sound everybody look what's going down ♪ >> reporter: jason hanley is in charge of education at the rock and roll hall of fame. he says the prophets of rage are part of history repeating itself. >> rock and roll
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side with what was happening. ♪ so many people are dying >> reporter: bob dylan captured the anger of a young generation. 20 years later, rappers like nwa voice the frustration and oppression of urban communities. >> we're still today dealing with those exact same issues. so those lyrics still resonate with us and they still feel painful and that's all right. >> people are feeling what we're speaking of right now. >> reporter: the word rage, especially in the last couple weeks, things have been heated. there have been killings of civilians, killings of police officers. is there ever a line that you won't cross when you're performing your art? >> this is about peaceful protest but it's anger and injustice that sparks people to act and that's what our music's about. >> the presidential
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already providing fodder for political cartoonist from coast to coast. ro here in cleveland. >> reporter: at the cleveland art gallery, spaces, four decades of political cartoons from former syndicated editorial artist, ed fresca are now on display. what makes for a successful political cartoon? >> when i have provoked somebody into thinking. left, right, doesn't matter. >> reporter: the art predates the founding of our country. >> he did the snake bits of the 13 colonies, which if they don't unite, they're not going to survive. sfwlr >> reporter: a descendant of
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adams. the great cartoonists of the past, would this be great material for them? >> i think this is a year made for a political cartoonist. donald trump is just a cartoonist' dream. his hair, his face, the way he speaks. there's a cartoon quality to that. >> they can draw him every day. >> reporter: david horsy is a two-time pulitzer prize winner of the l.a. times. he's wielding his pen all this week in cleveland. >> i've drawn him as a barbarian conquering roam, as a caveman. there are wonderful analogies you can find for his sort of macho, i'm in charge i don't care style. >> reporter: political cartooning isn't just about
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cartooning. i'm providing commentary and the drawing ads a hoeightened reality. when you're looking at hillary clinton, what physical features are good material for political cartoonist? >> you start with the face. she has a very kind of round face, moon face. kind of a small mouth, big eyes. there's sort of a -- i don't know. i'm going to get in trouble with this. but sort of this midwestern mom look to her. >> reporter: the point is to draw blood. >> right here we have nixon with his patented reseeding hairline. >> reporter: richard nixon gave the cartoonists of his era plenty of material. >> i think he was a sneaky looking guy and wasn't too hard to exaggerate. >> the whole position of political cartooning is
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itself is very seldom nice. i mean, you're always finding the weakness and going after that. and that's ultimately the job of a political cartoonist is to intelligently pruvehicovoke wit images and observations about the world. >> reporter: and maybe, just maybe move the masses. can you over humbly say it rarely moves a needle. but abraham lincoln thanks thomas gnash for the election and yulysses grant thanked him also. >> they can taken a issue you don't care about and they can make it seem immediate and visceral. i think this is a period where
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on. i think social media has had a big impact. we're communicating with word and image. >> reporter: in other words, the meme has given users a political say. th b maye the golden age. >> i think it probably will be but probably in ways we can't quite anticipate. ons. i like to watch them clean, but they'll never get me on the mattress! new lysol max cover with 2x wider coverage kills bacteria on big, soft surfaces. discover a new way to lysol that. ii can't believe it's made with real, simple ingredients.ter. i can't believe... we're on a whale. i can't believe my role isn't bigger. real ingredients. unbelievable taste. enjoy i can't believe it's not butter! ...one hair color wants to to help you keep on being you.. nice'n easy. natural-looking color...
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summertime and the living is easy. spaels especially in one of america's most iconic national parks. >> reporter: the rooms atti cunl bay don't have televisions. a luxury resort situated inside a national park. guests enjoy access to pristine beaches, tropical cocktails, and sunset cruz -- cruises. and there's fine dining under the stars. and if you're wondering how did a national park end up with a resort that feels like a place rockefeller would stay? it's because it's the type of place a rockefellerou
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in 1952, lawrence rockefeller landed on this stretch of st. john, the smallest of the u.s. virgin islands. he thought this was one of the most beautiful places he had ever seen. so, he bought it. most of it, at least. it's good to be a rockefeller. his father, john d. rockefeller jr. used some of the family fortune to expand grand titon national park. and so, while developing a luxury resort in the middle of paradise began to get a similar idea. >> he thought there should be a partnership between commerce and conservation and he built the resort with the idea that visitors can have the luxury of leapi sleeping in a bed but can pe
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setting. curin is a ranger at virgin islands national park. the first 5,000 acres were a gift from rockefeller. with assistance from frank stick, rockefeller bought up nearly half the island. at a picnic, he handed over the land to the federal government. with one condition, that he would still be allowed to run caneal bay. >> it would be a resort with a beach. >> reporter: nicolai, the general manager where the setting remains the setting point. rockefeller designed the hotel as one of the first eko resorts. the lighting is low, the buildings are unobtrusive. >> it's protd.
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with sea turtles. and it operates under an exclusive lease passed on by its current owners. but not much has changed since rockefeller was in charge, except maybe the prices. >> the high end is $1800 per night and cottage 7, his old residen residence. >> reporter: the rooms of cottage 7 were rockefeller's preferred accommodations. in a way, it was this hotel that kept the island from becoming a bunch of hotels. sitting on the edge of st. john, you can see st. thomas and the difference is striking. on nearby st. thomas, development runs wild. but thanks to this chance visit by a new york billionaire, today nearly
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national park. it's the virgi
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beer is big business these days. and one of the founding fathers named his brew after one of the founding fathers of the united states, john adams. serena sat down with him over a couple of beers. >> four ingredients go into beer. >> reporter: at the sam adams brewery in boston, massachusetts, kraft beer lovers unlock hops. learn what a mash is. >> it looks like a porage or an oatmeal. >> reporter: and of course sample a variety of brews. >> this is actually brew would kosher salt, which is something i didn't know before but
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a dirafferent layer of flavor t the beer. >> my favorite ones would be stout. >> reporter: today there are more than 4,000 kraft brewers in the united states. when jim cook started in 1984, the american beer landscape looked very different. >> american beer was the laughing stock of the rest of the world because everybody thought it was just watery and fizzy. >> reporter: determined to change that, jim cook quit his corporate job to brew beer. he thought his father, a fifth generation brewer would be pleased. >> i thought i was going to have a father-son moment. that's so great. he looked at me and said jim, you've done some stupid things in your life. this is about the stupidest things. >> reporter: today sam adams has
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and jim cook is a billionaire. a made-in america success story. he writes about in his new book. you get compared to steve jobes. you're the steve jobes of beer. >> i'm just trying to give people a better glass of beer. >> reporter: using his great grandfather's recipe. >> the ingredients were grown north of berauvaria. >> reporter: though now he's the guy to beat in an industry that has exploded. >> they have gotten to 10 or 12% of the market. we can double. that's pretty cool. >> and that's the overnight news for this thursday. for some of you the news continues, for others, check back a little later for the morning ne a
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>> pelley: back for seconds. trump returns to cleveland to see his number two accept the nomination. the fallen officers of baton rouge and the families they left behind. >> the knock on the door came. that is a knock i hope nobody ever has to endure. tur turmoil at the fox news channel. and. "sunday, monday, happy days" ron howard remembers the time he spent with the legendary garry marshall. ev garry was the best boss i've
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>> this is the cbs overnight news. reporting tonight from the republican national convention in cleveland, ohio. here are scott pelley and nora o'donnell. the man who would be a heart beat away from the presidency in a trump administration will introduce himself to america tonight. mike pence, governor of indiana, will accept the nomination for vice president. >> donald trump has already stole the show tonight. just as ted cruz, his former rival was addressing this crowd and telling them to vote their conscience, the crowd booed and he walked in. donald trump. hollywood couldn't have scripted it any better. >> walking in right as cruz is trying to finish his statement, completely stealing the room from cruz. it was
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vanquished. scott walker getting everybody riled up. marco rubio had a statement here. he wasn't here but had a video in which those doubts seem to be dispelled. then as ted cruz was talking, he said vote your conscience, they started booing him, all chanting "endorse trump." he said i appreciate the enthusiasm of the new york delegation and then continuing to boo him. as he was leaving the stage, the thruster of the response was boos and at that moment, donald trump comes down and walks into the vip box. >> donald trump's 32-year-old son and vice president of the trump organization has taken the podium. let's listen in. >> for a man i love so, so, so, so much. that's my father. 13
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family down and told us the time had come. he could no longer sit idly by and watch our country, the country that had given our family so much success, so much opportunity crumble before our very eyes. he confirmed to us that he was prepared to announce his candidacy for president of the united states. he made sure to acknowledge that ours would not be an easy path; that we should prepare ourselves for what was to come. that we would quickly learn who our true friends were. without hesitation, we each committed our unwavering support. but this time none of us could have predicted what lay ahead. the records he would break, the stadiums he would fill. the movement he would start. >> and so, ladies and geme
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it's my honor to introduce to you, the next vites president of the united states, governor mike pence. >> i'm new to this campaign. and honestly, i never thought i'd be standing here. i thought i'd be spending this evening with all my friends from the great state of indiana. now if you know anything about hoosiers, you know we love to suit up and compete. we play to win. that's why i joined this campaign in a heart beat. you have nominated a man for president who never quits. who never backs down. a fighter, a winner, until now he's had to do it all by himself against all odds but this week, with this united party, he's got back up and on november 8th, i know we will elect donald trump to be
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united states of america. [ applause ] you know, donald trump gets it. he's the genuine article. he's a doer in a game usually reserved for talkers and when donald trump does his talk, he doesn't tip toe around the thousand new rules of political correctness. he's his own man. distinctly american. and where else would an independent spirit like his find a following than in the land of the free and the home of the brave? [ applause ] you know, while donald trump was taking my measure as a possible running mate, i did some observing myself. i've seen the way he deals with people who work for him at every level. and i've seen the way they feel about wor
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now, i'll grant you he can be a little rough with politicians on the stage and i'll bet we see that again. [ applause ] but i've seen this good man up close. his utter lack of pretense. his respect for the people who work for him. and his devotion to his family. and if you still doubt what i'm saying, remember, as we say back home, you can't fake good kids. how about his amazing children? aren't they something? if you want a president who will protect this nation, confront radical islamic terrorism and rid the world of isis, if you want a
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restore law and order to this country and give law enforcement the support and resources they deserve, if you want a president who will cut taxes, grow our economy and squeeze every nickel out of the federal bureaucracy. if you want a president who will build strong borders and enforce our laws, and if you want a president who will upend the status quo in washington d.c. and appoint justices to the supreme court who will uphold the constitution, we have but one choice and that man is ready. this team is ready. our party is ready. and when we elect donald trump, the 45th president of the united states, together we will make america
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in friday sdae-- obama tweea warning to stay safe as it heats up. >> from minnesota to california, record high heat is expected to linger for days. national weather service meteorologist mark jackson says it's creating a heat dome effect. >> if you picture a greenhouse, sun lite comes in to the greenhouse and inside, surfaces are warm enough but that glass does not allow that to leave the grou
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e it's literally a trapping effect. >> reporter: temperatures were 2.4 degrees higher than in the late 19th century. around the world, spain, france and germany have been sweltering for days. baghdad hit 123 degrees yesterday, forcing the government to declare a holiday to keep people indoors. >> even if we were to completely stop all carbon emissions, we would still have a very serious situation. >> reporter: hotter temperatures are causing bigger problems. this season fires are more intense, drought conditions are growing and the arctic sea ice is melting sooner. it covers 40% less than it did in the 1970s. this week families are looking for any way to stay cool this summer. >> my daughter
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put any clothes on, just her swim suits. >> we're shattering high temperature records. >> reporter: already this summer there have been several deaths related to the heat. that's why 16 states have issued heat advisories. >> maria, thank you. a woman in south florida could be the first person to be infected with zika virus by a mosquito bite in the continental united states. health officials have been predicting that zika would affect mosquitos in the u.s. after spreading from south america. the woman from miami dade county had not travelled outside the united states. zika can cause brain defects to children born to women with the virus. baton rouge, louisiana is preparing to
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killed last sunday. >> every time my husband left the house, i prayed the whole 16 days. god, keep him safe. protect all the guys he's with and bring him back home. >> reporter: her husband, matthew was a rookie cop with the baton rouge police department. he had wurked 16 days straight after protests erupted over the alton sterling killing. >> things were getting chaotic and i said i need to see your face. just send me a picture, please. that's the picture he sent to me. >> reporter: sunday morning she heard the first reports about the ambush killings. >> i knew in my gut that something wasn't right. something just wasn't -- i just knew. i had a feeling. >> reporter: shortly after the shooting, there was a knock at the door. >> that is the hardest thing i
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my 3-year-old is watching me. and she's holding my face and telling me not to cry. >> good morning my love, i love you. >> reporter: tonia got that text message from her husband brad the morning of the shooting. he was a 24 year veteran. she was were aorried about her husband given the tensions. you were worried his badge and gun. >> would get him killed. >> reporter: father of four died a hero. >> he hid behind a dumpster to call for back up and he saw the officer that had been hit trying to crawl and he crawled back to him and in the process he was shot. and that he went down fighting. he returned gun fire the entire time, several times after he was hit. >> he kept shooting. >> he kept shooting, even when he was on the ground on his
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>> reporter: i know your daughter said something unforgettable. >> she said mommy don't cry, daddy's in a better place. >> reporter: he was supposed to leave the convenience store an hour before the shooting, but he stayed late because his wife was bringing the family vehicle to get the oil changed. they were supposed to leave for vacation the next day. >> david, thank you very much. today a federal appeals court ruled that texas' strict voter id law discriminates against minorities and the poor and must be reworked. this is a big win for the obama administration which led the fight against the texas law. today turkey's president declared a three-month state of emergency. last friday a coup attempt failed. and video captured
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following witness reports. >> reporter: now these officers are being paraded and humiliated on turkish television. the attempt to seize power by members of turkey's armed forces was bloody. leaving many dead, including civilians. they've suspended over 21,000 staff from the education ministry, including school teachers. demanded resignations from over 1500 university deans and suspended around 8,000 police officers along with nearly 3,000 judges and prosecutors. this the scale of the crack dune has many turks worried that they averted a coup only to see their fragile democracy crushed. to the cheers of his
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president erdogan said he's ready to restore the death penalty. president erdogan is an islamic conser conser conserve, and even before locking up journalists, his rivals and those who dare to speak out against him on social media. turkey wants the u.s. to expedite fethullah gulen, the moderate islamic cleric it blames for the coup. the u.s. says it needs to see the evidence first. we've learned tonight that the government is also shutting down over 500 schools. and the back lash probabliany it over yet. one of the most important allies in the middle east appears to be fighting a war against itself. >> holly, thank you. as
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have been killed in a u.s. coalition air strike in syria. the pentagon is investigating the bombing. the strike was in support rebels who are trying to retake the town from isis. coming up next, the head of fox news faces allegations of sexual harassment. ssment.
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fox news may be the house that roger ailes built but he may soon be evicted. gretchen carlson claims she was fired for refusing his sexualed a vancements. fox news parent company, 21st century fox launched an internal review that is ongoing. investigators have been interviewing employees including megyn kelly. while she has declined to comment, kelly is working faithfully with investigators.
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jim is a memedia critic with th york times. >> right now we're in the final stages of a contract, basically a separation sgler. >> reporter: before entering cable news, he was a guru for presidents like richard nixon and george bush. under ailes fox news became number one in the cable news market. >> in my view the loss of roger ailes is something that will effect our political culture and i believe that in a major way. >> there has been a lot of sp k speculation. scott. >> thank you. coming up next, the risk of
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go.
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>> pelley: the parents of a two- year-old boy killed by an alligator at disney world said today they will not sue disney. there were no signs warning about the gator in the water. a spokeswoman for the family said she could not say whether a financial settlement had been reached. police have been warning folks about the risks of playing "pokemon go" on their phones, and here's why: monday in baltimore an s.u.v. slammed into a patrol car. nobody was hurt, but the driver told the cops, "that's what i get for playing this dumb game." some whale watchers in australia missed the big moment by paying too close attention to the starboard side because on the port side a giant humpback whale was jumping out of the water, but by the time they turned around, it was gone. and we'll be right back. k.
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have played some characters you could call controlling. but the truth is: there's so much in life we can't control. here's something we can: colorectal cancer. it's the second leading cancer killer in the u.s., but it is almost entirely preventable! most colon cancers start as polyps, and screening finds polyps, so they can be removed before they turn into cancer. if you're over 50, get screened. screening saves lives.
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[male commentator] come on, get outta here! hi. i'm kurt suzuki, catcher for the oakland a's. this is my wife renee and these are our friends who are among the over 26 million americans who suffer from kidney disease. make a difference in their lives and join us in the fight against the kidney disease fsgs and nephrotic syndrome. this is my sister tricia. you may not know it by looking at her, but she has suffered from fsgs since she was eight years old. let's put on our rally caps and make a difference. 1, 2, 3.
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>> pelley: we end tonight with a kid from the bronx who grew up to be one of the most powerful men in hollywood. garry marshall died yesterday at the age of 81, and anthony mason has his story. >> fonzie, my father's idea of being cool is leaving the top button open on his sports shirt. >> reporter: in many successful sitcoms and films, garry marshall's trademark was always human comedy. >> nano nano! >> i tried once to blow something up. i don't blow things up well. >> garry found ways to make you want to learn to work. >> reporter: director ron howard first encountered marshall when he was a child star on the "andy griffith show." >> gary had been doing the "dick van dyke show" on that same lot. >> reporter: did you know each other? >> i knew who he was. >> reporter: marshall would later cast howard in a sitcom he created set in the95
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sunday, monday, happy days >> reporter: launched in 1974, "happy days" would run for ten years. >> garry was the best boss i ever had. he could lead a group of people to be their best selves. >> reporter: he did it again with a string of hits, "laverne & shirley," "mork & mindy," dominating prime time for more than a decade. he seemed to hit a nerve in this country. >> yeah. he could have kept going as a dominant figure in television, but he really wanted to make movies. >> reporter: on film, he gave us "pretty woman." >> oh! >> reporter: and "the princess diaries," and always mentored his actors. >> you want to go in and pitch a comedy to a network? in your pitch just curse a lot. it worked. i sold a couple pilots that way as a producer. >> reporter: marshall was an actor, too often playing the studio exe
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of. >> you know the words i like? i like the words "peppy" and the word "cheap." peppy and cheap. >> if any of us were beginning to have success in the bis, he'd say, just don't ever forget, life is more important than show business. >> reporter: "it's nice to be important," garry marshall once said. "it's more important to be nice." anthony mason, cbs news, hollywood. and that's the overnight news for this thursday. for some of you the news continues and for others, tune back a little bit later for the morning news and of course full coverager of the republican national convention with charley, nora, and gale. from cleveland, the site of the republican national convention, i'm scott pelley.
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this is the cbs overnight news. welcome to the overnight news. volkswagen is bracing for another multibillion dollar hit. over the ongoing emissions scandal. three states have filed lawsuits charging top executives with creating defeat devices to allow hundreds of thousands of so-called clean emissions cars to pass emissions tests. they've already settled to the tune of $15 billion. >> reporter: this is one of the effected vehicles the company may have to buy back. the latest lawsuits site internal volkswagen documents and allege this was a long running, well kno
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skirt laws in the u.s. and around the world. >> this was not a corporate decision from my point of view. this was a couple of soft ware engineers -- >> reporter: that's then ceo michael horn giving congress what had become the volkswagen emissions scandal party line pp some found it hard to believe. >> vw is trying to get the united states to believe this is a couple of rogue engineers. i categorically reject that. >> reporter: among the top executives named is former ceo that had previoudesly nied wrong doing but resigned in september. >> this cover up was deep, wide and long lasting. >> new york attorney general, erick sniderman. >> the idea that this level of fraud could take place and involve so many people at such
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international corporations for so long is appalling. >> reporter: audi, volkswagen and porsche signs 600,000 vehicles in the u.s. with software designed to cheat emissions standards. and get a cost benefit analysis over potential penalties for getting caught. >> i'm angrier today than i was a couple days ago and i was pretty pussed a couple days ago. >> reporter: he bought a 2011 audi equipped with a defeat it vice. >> how do nine people say let's cheat and no one else goes that's a bad idea. >> reporter: in a statement, volkswagen said the allegations are essentially not new. adding that it's regrettable that some states have decided to sue for environmental claims now pp these latest lawsuits stop short of naming the current ceo to knowledge. d
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with penalties, these lawsuits can move forward. in mayor with -- and the potential liability to vw is in the billions of dollars. chairman roger ailes is about to step down amid charges of sexual harassment. ailes and fox are reportedly negotiating the final details of his exit. over 20 years he grew it from a start up operation to the top cable news network. >> reporter: ales is already under investigation. by former anchor, gretchen carlson. then yesterday, megyn kelly reportedly told investigators that he had made similar sexual advancement towards her, about 10 years ago when she was starting at fox news. it was business as usual for fox
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tuesday night reporting from the republican national convention but according to sources sited by new york magazine, she has reported to investigators that her boss, roger ailes made unwanted sexual advancements towards her about 10 years ago and she described her harassment in detail. >> the star stats made his position untenable. where does he go if he's being accused by one of his most prominent employees, prominent women as being a sexual harasser. sser. kelly had nothing but praise for her boss when she spoke to charley rose last year. >> i really care about fox and i really care about roger. he's been nothing but good to me and he's been very loyal and he's had my back.
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accusation is putting increased pressure on fox news' parent corporation to release ailes. an internal investigation was launched after former fox news anchor, gretchen carlson filed a sexual lawsuit against ailes. fox executives appear to be taking the accusations against ailes seriously. >> they're in these discussions right now and the real question is how quickly they can get him out and under what terms. >> reporter: 21st century fox issued a statement. roger is at work. and any exit deal would likely be a lucrative one for the fox chief. >> you expect to see a rich pay day for leaving under a cloud. 10s of millions of dollars. a private funeral is planned for hollywood icon, garry marshall.
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producer died tuesday at his home in california. he was 81. he entertained america for more than 50 years starting as a joke writer and moving on to create tv shows and blockbuster movies. charley rose has his story. ♪ a beautiful smile to hide the pain ♪ >> reporter: garry marshall knew how to make a moment. >> princess of genovia. a five-time emmy nominee. ♪ sunday, monday, happy days >> reporter: marshall was a hit maker. he created numerous '70s and '80s television sitcoms. "laverne and shirley." and "mork and mindy." launched the career of an unknown robin williams.
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the bronx, shined in front of the camera too. >> i like wayne newton. >> i said wayne newton? >> i heard you say wayne newton. i like him. that makes me a schmuck. >> on my pbs program in 1995 i ask him about the key to his success. >> filling blank tape is the hardest thing there is. >> why is it so hard do you think? >> because you have no excuses. a guy with a pen has really no excuses. >> reporter: on cbs this morning in 2012, marshall explained how an uncertain ending contributed to the big screen magic of "pretty woman." >> we didn't have an ending and i kept thinking what could it be and then we finally had a fairy tale ending. and i said julia, tell the story about the lit
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tower. just tell it. it will be great for the ending. >> so what happened after he climbed up the tower and rescued her? >> she rescues him right back. every touch, gently intensified. a little touch is all it takes. k-y touch.
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♪ the republican national convention in cleveland hasn't attracted the violent protests many had feared but it has attracted several rock and roll bands determined to sway the political process. >> reporter: behind me you see a memorial to the rock and roll in america. donald trump may be the headliner but last night one band came to town with the intention of disrupting that party. if rifts could start a revolution, then the prophets of rage hope to start right now. >> what we do is we play music. we play it loud and with meaning.
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>> i describe this band as a path of revolutionary musicians who have come together during this crazy, historic political juncture. >> reporter: formed this year it's a collection of rock veterans. three guys from the '90s band, rage against the machine teamed up with be real from cyprus hill and chuck d from the '80s rap group, public enemy. ♪ all three ensembles were known for their politically charged lyrics and in-your-face performances. >> it's a reintroduction of a particular style of how words and music can actually move people. >> reporter: the prophets of rage say they're of no party and instead endorse a platform of the people, against corpe
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greed and political corruption. >> our system is broken and it cannot be fixed by either of the two major parties. i'm not going to hope that the racist, misogynist demigod advocating war crimes at the rnc or the centerest democrat is going to fix the country. >> reporter: at this year's republican national convention, they're staging concerts which they hope will encourage action. >> the world's not going to change itself, that's up for you. ♪ stop children what's that sound everybody look what's going down ♪ >> reporter: jason hanley is in charge of education at the rock and roll hall of fame. he says the prophets of rage are part of a musical history that's repeating itself. >> rock and roll grew up side by side with what was happening.
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>> reporter: in the 1960s, bob dylan captured the anger of a young generation. 20 years later, rappers like nwa voice the frustration and oppression of urban communities. >> we're still today dealing with those exact same issues. so those lyrics still resonate with us and they still feel painful and that's all right. >> people are feeling what we're speaking of right now. >> reporter: the word rage, especially in the last couple weeks, things have been heated. there have been killings of civilians, killings of police officers. is there ever a line that you won't cross when you're performing your art? >> this is about peaceful protest but it's anger and injustice that sparks people to act and that's what our music's about. >> the presidential campaign
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already providing fodder for political cartoonist from coast to coast. mo rocca is in cleveland with ow satire come together on the campaign trail. >> reporter: at the cleveland art gallery, spaces, four decades of political cartoons from former syndicated editorial artist, ed fresca are now on display. what makes for a successful political cartoon? >> when i have provoked somebody into thinking. left, right, doesn't matter. >> reporter: american political art predates the founding of this country. >> benjamin franklin did that snake bits of the 13 colonies, which if they don't unite, they're not going to
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>> reporter: a descendant of john adams and john quincy adams. the great cartoonists of the past, would this be great material for them? >> i think this is a year made for a political cartoonist. donald trump is just a cartoonist' dream. his hair, his face, the way he speaks. there's a cartoon quality to that. >> they can draw him every day. >> reporter: david horsy is a two-time pulitzer prize winner editorial cartoonist with the l.a. times. he's wielding his pen all this week in cleveland. >> i've drawn him as a barbarian conquering rome, i've drawn him as a caveman. there are wonderful analogies you can find for his sort of macho, i'm in charge i don't care style. >> reporter: political cartooning isn't just about cartooning. charactericturing an individual. i'm providing commentary and the
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drawing ads a heightened reality. >> his politics are liberal, even though. when you're looking at hillary clinton, what physical features are good material for political cartoonist? >> you start with the face. she has a very kind of round face, moon face. kind of a small mouth, big eyes. there's sort of a -- i don't know. i'm going to get in trouble with this. but sort of this midwestern mom look to her. >> reporter: it may sound a bit harsh but the point is to dre blood. >> right here we have nixon with his patented reseeding hairline. >> reporter: richard nixon gave the cartoonists of his era plenty of material. >> i think he was a sneaky looking guy and wasn't too hard to exaggerate. >> the whole tradition of political cartooning has been to poke fun at the powerful and
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nice. i mean, you're always finding the weakness and going after that. and that's ultimately the job of a political cartoonist is to intelligently provoke with images and observations about the world. >> reporter: and maybe, just maybe move the masses. >> reporter: can you overly humbly say it rarely moves the needle. but abraham lincoln thanks thomas gnash for the election 1864. and ulysses grant thanked him also. sg >> i don't think i've changed minds but i've marshalled forces. >> they can taken a issue you don't care about and they can make it seem immediate and visceral. >> where are they on the scale of effectiveness right now? >> i think thisa
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where no one quite knows what's going on. i think social media has had a big impact. we're communicating with word and image. >> reporter: in other words, the meme has given users a political say. this may be the golden age. >> i think it probably will be but probably in ways we can't quite anticipate. takbbq trophies:hese best cracked pepper sauce... most ribs eaten while calf roping... >>yep, greatness deserves recognition. you got any trophies, cowboy? ♪ whoomp there it is uh, yeah... well, uh, well there's this one. >>best insurance mobile app? yeah, two years in a row. >>well i'll be... does that thing just follow you around? like a little puppy! the award-winning geico app. download it today. that's you could wearstrong, dudthem a second day.n...keeps
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summertime and the living is easy. especially in one of america's most iconic national parks. conor knight has the story of caneel bay at the u.s. virgin islands. >> reporter: the rooms at caneel bay don't have telephones or televisions. a luxury resort situated inside a national park. guests enjoy access to pristine beaches, tropical cocktails, and sunset cruises. at night there's fine dining under coral chandali eechandali under the stars. and if you're wondering how did a national park end up with a resort that feels like a place rockefeller would stay? it's because it's the type of place a rockefeller would build.
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landed on this stretch of st. john, the smallest of the u.s. virgin islands. he thought this was one of the most beautiful places he had ever seen. so, he bought it. most of it, at least. it's good to be a rockefeller. his father, john d. rockefeller jr. used some of the family fortune to purchase land to expand grand titon national park and create acadia national park. and so, while developing a luxury resort in the middle of paradise began to get a similar idea. >> he thought there should be a partnership between commerce and conservation and he built the resort with the idea that visitors can have the luxury of sleeping in a bed but can expece
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in a natural setting. curin is a ranger at virgin islands national park. the first 5,000 acres were a gift from rockefeller. with assistance from frank stick, rockefeller bought up nearly half the island. at a picnic on december 1st, 1956, he handed the land over that federal government. with one condition, that he would still be allowed to run caneel bay. >> it would be a resort with a beach. >> reporter: nicolai, the general manager where the setting remains the setting -- selling point. rockefeller designed the hotel as one of the first eco resorts. the lighting is low, the buildings are unobtrusive. >> it's protected. >> reporter: the water is filled with sea turtles.
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the department of the interior, it operate said under an exclusive lease passed on by to its current owners. but not much has changed since rockefeller was in charge, except maybe the prices. >> you can stay from $300 on. the high end is $1800 per night and his own residence. >> reporter: the rooms of cottage 7 were rockefeller's preferred accommodations. in a way, it was this hotel that kept the island from becoming a bunch of hotels. sitting on the edge of st. john, you can look across and sea st. thomas and the difference is striking. on nearby st. thomas, development runs wild. but thanks to this chance visit by a new york billionaire, today nearly 2/3 of st. john is a national park.
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it's the virgin island that remained virgin.
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captioning funded by cbs it's thursday, july 21st, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." a rival revenge. ted cruz takes the stage at the republic national convention and refuses to endorse donald trump. instead, telling delegates -- >> stand and speak and vote your conscience. >> this morning, we are getting trump's response to the most shocking moment of the night. mike pence officially accepts the nomination for vice president, delivering a speech that was equal part praise for trump and criticism of clin

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