tv CBS Overnight News CBS November 7, 2016 3:05am-4:00am EST
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oprah gave away so much to her audiences every year. wile those favorite things episodes are long gone, that list is not. >> we got a peek at the best goodies for 2016 with o magazines editor at large and lady o's bff gayle king. >> isn't that like a field of -- >> less salt in it. es>> ls salt. >> oprah proved, it's her favorite things just in time for the holidays. >> i just am done with gifts. i think the most special gift is something that from a space that people know your heart was in it. >> this is a yes. >> okay. >> yes. >> say yes. >> 101 tasteful gift ideas hand picked by oprah with help from her friend gayle king. the rest includes everything from stocking stuffers to luxury items. >> so the range is from $16 up to $1,500, which gives you a knockout brand-new tv, state of the art tv. >> then there's everything in
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make sure i get this bread and that bread. >> if it's christmas, you get these english muffins from oprah on the list. that means she really thinks you're a really good friend. >> the first time she tasted them, by the time she left the shoot, he had had ordered nine ordered. >> i wasn't kidding when i said oprah liked bread. >> there's jumbo size red lipstick that will set you back about >> she was rocking out in the red shoes. it helps when you're listening to beyonce while you're doing the photo shoot. i love the adult coloring books. oprah was one of those kids that was great at coloring. wouldn't you expect she colored within the line? she still does. >> for the person on your list who really wants to live like the media mogul, there's always the oprah cookbook. >> i was at her house in california. we said, why don't we pick something out of the book? and we did.
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salad along with some great tasting fish. >> all her favorite things are in december's o magazine, but what's the strangest gift oprah's ever been given? >> i received a painting as a gift where i was both cross eyed and my nose was on the wrong side of my face. i thought that was the strangest one. >> a lot of good stuff. that is one thing you can actually get for free. it's oprah's game. >> that's right. you can download it as an app. it's kind of like candy crush. but when you get some inspirational quotes that are hand picked by the lady herself. >> that's right. now, to another talk show host, jerry springer this fall marked a milestone. it's been 25 years since springer cemented his place in pop culture by showcasing some of the craziest parts of humanity. honestly, people still can't get enough of it. >> anybody can be a talk show host. you do three things to be a talk
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did what? come on out. we'll be right back. if you can do those three lines, you've got a career. >> the secret to his success? make it look easy. we spent a lot of time with springer during his 25 years on air. the host hasn't changed much, but his show sure has. listen to jerry describe it in his first "e.t." interview in 1994. >> our talk show tends to deal more with news subjects or political subjects because of my background. >> forget ti daddy fights when we went behind the scenes with him in 1998. he evolved into the kind of ringleader that made him a pop culture icon. >> the day i figured out, wow, we're on to something, there were two cultural moments that impacted me. and i think one was being on the simpsons.
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baby was fathered by a drooling space octopus? >> it made me angry, jerry. >> the other was being on the cover of inrollg stone. that was the first time i noticed, oh, my gosh, people are really ninoticg it. >> none of that goes to his head. that's his second secret. admit the stupidity. >> our show is a circus, period. it has no redeeming social value. >> the show is 25. springer, he's almost 73. but don't mention retirement. stay young. >> i just do it because it's fun to do, and i'm not that good at golf. i mean i think i'd go crazy. i'm always afraid not to be working. it's psychological, i'm sure. if i ever had nightmares about something, it's about not having a job, which is crazy, i .know >> 25 years. >> yeah. i'll see you at the 50th. >> 25 years from now, i think i won't be talkative. but if you just yell loudly,
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say something. i know what i'm going to put on my tombstone. i won't be right back. >> now, at his high point in 1998, the springer show actually had more viewers than the oprah winfrey show. that was also the year of his infamous banned episode, i married a horse. still to come, remembering robin williams, ai rare new interview with his mork & mindy co-star. >> anybody that knew robin -- the emotional all-star tribute reuniting "laverne & shirley" 34 years later. >> i just burst out crying. >> that's aahead. but first in the "entertainment tonight" birthdays, which oscar winning act aes was voted class clown in high school. ? is it sally field, my hygienist said the most random thing. she said i should think of my teeth like an apple. it could be great on the outside not so great on the inside. her advice?
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my brother gave me a life. he gave me a life, and i appreciate it. i try not to let him down. >> penny honors gar ri through comedy and a special odd couple special that brings back many stars who owe their fame to him. garry brought the original odd couple to tv. he gave penny her big break playing jack klugman's secretary. >> hello, son. >> i can only imagine how honored you all are to be doing this tribute episode. >> he was always around pitching jokes at every table read. he helped design the sets. we just listened to everything he said. >> sorry for your loss. >> thank you. >> he's in there? >> in the episode after oscar's dad passes away, he and felix go on a road trip to scatter his ashes. along the way, they meet many tv icons.
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oh, your dad was the sweetest guy. gave me my first job. babysitting you. >> cindy told me she was shocked when she learned in july that garry was gone. >> penny called me, and she said, garry's sick. i think he's dying. and i didn't believe her. i thought it was a joke. then he passed the next -- that night he passed. someone brought me this picture of penny, me, and garry and henry, and i just burst out crying because it was like not here. >> hello, mr. snazy. >> his loss also devastated the show's felix unger, thomas lennon. >> if you go back to tell the childhood version of myself that the creator of happy days and "laverne & shirley" would be my friend -- it's okay. it's fine. >> i completely understand.
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you and i to get together to scatter his ashes. >> really? >> garry's wife and son appear in this bar scene. scott interviewed his aunt penny. >> what do you think garry would think of all this? >> he's come in and rewrite it. >> forever garry, right? i also talked to happy days stars marion ross and don most, and also anson williams, who played they also guest star on this special episode of the odd couple. now, another tv show garry marshall produced was mork & mindy starring robin williams. now robin has of course passed on as well. his co-star pam dawber. >> i remember both of these special guys with her. she during our interview was moved to tears. >> i think it's anybody that
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>> it's emotional for pam to talk about robin. they both shot to stardom together on the sitcom about the alien from planet ork who moves in with an earth ling. >> mork, what are you doing? >> shortly before robin's suicide, they had a reunion on his show "the crazy one." >> what do you robin? >> well, i hadn't seen robin for 20 years, and i did that episode because i wanted to be with robin. i wanted to see robin. that was a gift. that was such a gift. >> can i get you boys a couple of ice cold beers? >> absolutely not. >> garry's passing is the reason she returns to the sitcom stage in the odd couple episode. >> when they called me, i was like i am in. i don't care what it is. i'm in. how could you not be in? >> yeah.
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lives. >> he had made her a prime-time star. later she would go on to head her own show, my sister sam. but then in the late 80s after her marriage to mark harmon, she walk add way from fame for family. >> i've been married going on 30 years. i don't think two people can work all the time in show business and stay married. i did everything you can do in this business, and then i had children. i wanted to dr school. i wanted to be there for their birthdays and bring cupcakes and doughnuts and do the school festivals and all that, and i did. and my husband was working all the time. >> and he still is. >> he still is. i think he was a brunette when he started. >> you guys were our -- >> you were. you were our it couple, and you stayed together. >> i know. >> when you're married, that's
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plastering your kids on magazines, i'm not for that. my kids don't care about what i did. they care about what they're doing. their father is already iconic enough for two boys. i'm just a mom. >> can i just tell you how much fun i had talking to pam? she's so sweet, nice and normal. >> slow down. in hollywood? >> i know. it doesn't happen. i also want to tell you how much she lit up mindy. she said garry came and showed her some videotape of robin. where is this man? i need to meet him. i'm all in.
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travel considerations provided by -- look at all those stars with birthdays this weekend. kevin jonas is 29. emma stone celebrating turning 28. ethan hawke is 46. take a final look at your choices. which oscar-winning actress was voted class clown in high school? that is sally field, who is celebrating turning 70 this weekend. happy birthday. monday on "e.t."
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and justin. we're partying with hollywood's biggest stars. and our scott hamilton exclusive. his new cancer battle. >> my brain tumor came back. >> that's monday. we are almost out of time this weekend, but for all the late breaking hollywood news, just go to our website etonline.com. >> check out alicia keys. >> it's off the new album, here, which came out friday. the black and white video showcases alicia's beauty without a stitch o individuality. >> enjoy that and the rest of your makeup-free weekend.
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this past friday would have been the 100th birthday of walter cronkite. to night we look back at one of the many highlight from his career, coverage of the 1952 presidential election broke new ground in broadcast journalism. as jamie yuckas shows us it wasn't always easy for tv pioneers. the first national broadcast of a presidential election. the 1952 race between dwight
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anchor chair. >> general eisenhower leading at this moment. >> reporter: the first time the network use a computer to predict the outcome of an election. >> this is not a joke or trick. >> newsman struggled to explain the univac, an enormous computer housed miles away in philadelphia. >> on the right of the uni something witch looks look a typewriter. the way univac talks. >> not always on cue. can you say something, univac? anything to say to the television audience? a very impolite machine, i must say? do you have a prediction, univac. >> reporter: the team struggled with the early version of a hand-free microphone. >> i will put on this gadget. >> for reporter dug edward it led to an on-air mishap.
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hiccups, the newscast was hicc of the ps, the newscast was a triumph for cbs news and univac. >> he can remember 15 million digits. >> reporter: as the election swept eisenhower to victory. cronkite helped steer the nation into the start of the compute ever age. that's the "overnight news" for this monday. for some of you, the news continues. for others, check back with us a little later for the morning news and cbs this morning.
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this is the cbs "overnight news." welcome to the "overnight news," i'm elaine quijano. it is almost over, the most contentious presidential election in recent memory comes to a head tomorrow when voters decide to whether hillary clinton or donald trump will be the 45th president oe but, in the 11th hour, fbi director james comey threw another wild card into the race. comey sent a letter to congress saying the bureau concluded its review of the latest batch of hillary clinton related e-mails. and no charges will be brought against the former secretary of state. nancy cordes traveling with the clinton campaign. clinton on her way from philadelphia to cleveland when news of comey's letter broke, campaign aide could be seen
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our conclusion from this summer when he recommended against prosecuting clinton. communications director, jennifer palmieri. >> we are glad to see, that he has found that we were confident that he would, he found the conclusions he really reached in july. and we're glad this matter is resolved. >> hillary clinton began her sunday like many americans at church. ? secretary you are going to stand ? ? oh, yeah ? >> she told the african-american congregation at mount airy church that their civil rights are on the ballot. >> everything you care about, everything i care about and i have worked for is at stake. >> minority turnout its critical
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supporters. power couple beyonce and jay-z. basketball superstar, lebron james, and, new jersey senator, cory booker. >> we have got to remember that when we stand together, when we work together, we win together. >> reporter: president obama was dispatched to florida today where black churches marked the final day of early voting with tradition known as souls to the polls. the clinton camp feels confident in nevada after a surge of voters in las vegas prompted officials to extend early voting for several hours. michigan on thhe head back there on monday. and it was her husband's sole stop today. >> i believe hillary will carry michigan if we turn out. a clinton aide says her reaction to the comey letter was understated and she hasn't mentioned it here in cleveland. they believe the word will get out whether clinton talks about it or not in the closing days. elaine. >> nancy cordes, thank you. donald trump was making his final push for votes sunday.
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here is major garrett. >> you have to understand, it's a rigged system. and she is protected. >> the before an enthusiastic minnesota crowd, donald trump alluded to fbi director james comey's decision not to charge hillary clinton in the latest round of her e-mail scandal but said it did not put the controversy to rest. >> hillary clinton will be under investigation for a long, long time. for her many crimes against our nation, our pe democracy. likely concluding in a criminal trial. >> reporter: earlier in iowa, thousands gathered for a noon rally in republican sioux city. >> we are doing great in iowa. we are doing great in ohio. i think we are going to win pennsylvania. that was trump in tampa saturday morning. today, five more stops. but all has not been calm.
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>> we have one of the guys from the hillary clinton campaign. was attacked by trump supporters. some one nearby shouted gun and the secret service whisked trump offstage. there was no gun. the protester was later released. trump came back to finish. >> nobody said it was going to be easy for us. >> trump's closing argument. >> we are going to drain the swamp. washington upside down. >> real change begins with immediately repealing and replacing obamacare. a disaster. >> reporter: the promised demise of obamacare is now nearly as popular as trump's long standing promise to build a wall on the southern border. elaine the message ring with an oddly advantageous rank here in minnesota. where the democratic governor, mark dayton is frequently quoted
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care act is no longer affordable. >> major garrett. thank you. this election is being watched around the world. no foreign country is keeping closer tabs than russia. elizabeth palmer reports from moscow. u.s. russia relations have been deteriorating over the past couple years, so the kremlin and of course, russian citizens have a big interest in which candidate wins the white house and sets foreign policy. ? ? >> reporter: a kremlin-backed rally to celebrate russian unity day, drew huge crowds in moscow. asked the marchers which u.s. candidate would be better for their country and they're almost unanimous. >> trump. >> trump. >> translator: i'm for trump because he's for russia. >> we are patriots said another. and her friend adds, yes, we are for trump.
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russian state media have pumped out the kremlin lane. that clinton is bad. trump is a straight shooter. and any way the u.s. election is fixed. on russia's most watched news program, rudolph giuliani is featured with tales of vote rigging. and then the anchor compares what he calls, ancient u.s. voting technology with soviet era vending machines. >> state television is direct extension of the kremlin. >> reporter: the editor and chief of the moscow times. what does the kremlin want to put in russian's heads? >> there is no real democracy in the were. it doesn't work. >> reporter: because democracy threatens president vladamir putin. just look at the anti-putin demonstrations demanding democracy in 2011. after vote rigging allegations in russia's parliamentary elections. and when then-secretary of state hillary clinton said she had
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meddling. so for putin to hear a u.s. candidate imply america's democracy is a sham, is sweet revenge. >> this will be the opportunity to show that, hey, they have, they do the same thing. there is no difference. >> we are no worse than they are? >> yes, exactly. >> a message these marchers understand perfectly. democracy doesn't work even in america. so, join the crowd. supporting president putin. >> reporter: from the kremlin's point of view the very best outcome on tuesday would be a messy, ak -- acrimony us finish and contested result. >> the cbs "overnight news" will
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how badly the american public wants this election to be over. 82% of registered voters told us they feel disgusted about the presidential race. only 13% say they feel excited. so, how it martha tischner has a look. >> reporter: looking back, this should have told us what we were in for. >> we need a leader that wrote the art of the deal. >> reporter: no one had ever entered a presidential race quite the way donald trump did in june 2015. you couldn't look away. >> they're bringing drugs. they're bringing crime. they're rapists.
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>> reporter: trump the billionaire turned reality tv show celebrity was just about the last person hillary clinton expected to be going to the wire against. >> i mean, really, can weep just stop for a minute and reflect on the absurdity of donald trump finding fault with miss universe. >> reporter: in what has become a campaign so ugly. >> i will tell you at the time. i will keep you in suspense. >> you can't polish this turd. >> reporter: americans just want it to be over. >> i will totally accept the results of this great and historic -- >> so with the end in sight, maybe -- >> if i win -- >> reporter: what better time to step back and kid exactly what it is we have been witnessing. >> lock her up! >> reporter: for the last year and a half. >> i will be the youngest woman president in the history of the united states.
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outsiders and insiders. between elites and the people in the heartland. >> reporter: douglas brinkley, noted presidential hiss historian. >> pitchfork mob anger going out there. >> reporter: like a battle of the titans. donald trump. >> i will fight harder for you than any one ever has before. >> reporter: and hillary clinton. >> incomes rising for hard working people. >> reporter: have gone at each other across a ideological chasm. >> i want to build the wall the we need the wall. >> i dent want to rip families apart. >> we have some bad hombres here. we will get them out. >> i don't want to see the deportation force that donald talked abud in action.
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problems when they see them. >> it is also very shortsighted and dangerous to be engaging in the kind of demagogic rhetoric donald has about muslims. >> 2016 about which is the worst of two evils. the lack of enthusiasm for hillary clinton and donald trump is profound. >> imagine. >> reporter: polls show trump and clinton are the most unpopular presidential candidates in polling history. in a campaign about negatives, clinton versus trump, comes down to trust versus temperamen >> i will release my tax returns against my lawyers' wishes when he releases her 33,000 e-mails that have been deleted. >> nobody really knows what all these e-mails add up to in the end except whenever it is raised hillary clinton gets deeply defensive. and it gave a taint on her that she is a candidate running with the fbi in pursuit of her. people hate donald trump because he is prejudiced. he says bigoted remarks, he often speaks from a bully pulpit of ignorance. he degrade women. >> february has more respect for women than i do. nobody.
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because she is a beautiful latina. >> reporter: how many times have you heard there has never been a campaign like this one? well. >> when you have an unprecedented situation where you have one candidate. donald trump claiming the other candidate should be in jail. one part of the election we haven't seen before. >> reporter: joseph cumm. ing has written -- >> i would look to say about this election. really a 19th century election. >> 100. >> thomas jefferson hired john calendar of accusing him of being -- john adams and his people for their part were already spreading rumors thomas jefferson was sleeping with slaves in monticello which in fact he was and use one of my favorite slurs in american election campaigns by saying you can't vote for thomas jefferson because he is dead. and how can you vote for a dead man. >> afraid the election is going to be rigged. >> reporter: as for donald trump's claim the election is rigged before it actually
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haven't seen before in american elections. >> there was even a time when he didn't get an emmy for his tv program three years in a rehe started tweeting the emmys were rigged. >> should have gotten it. >> reporter: the first clinton/trump debate was the most watched in tv history with 84 million viewers. >> donald supported the invasion of iraq. >> wrong. >> absolutely proved over and over. >> wrong. >> donald trump never misses a chance to launch a full-throated attack on the media. >> they're not reporting it, you are not reporting it katie. >> reporter: nbc correspondent katie turr, a frequent punching bag, even requiring secret service protection.
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unfairly? >> the media is simply an extension of hillary clinton's campaign. >> the most distinctive thing about trump's coverage how much there is of it. >> george mason university professor robert lichter. his studies of media bias are often cited by conservatives. >> trump is outrageous. he is unpredictable. >> stay on point. donald. stay on point. all the definitions of what makes some one news worthy. no side tracks, donald. nice and easy. nice and easy. >> reporter: analysis of nearly 20,000 articles on the web sites of major media outlets shows stories about trump vastly out numbering stories about clinton. a harvard university survey
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getting mostly bad press. but trump's is more negative. which trump actually turns to his advantage. >> donald trump isn't complaining abut media bias because he believes it is happening he complains about it because it refs up his troops. >> has donald trump done a better job of using the media than hillary clinton in the campaign. >> donald trump has clearly manage to use the media better than hillary clinton. >> except? >> when you are a star they let you do it. >> reporter: the access hollywood bus video didn't roll right off donald t. neither did this. >> such a nasty woman. >> for outraged voters these were defining moments in his race against hillary clinton. >> and nasty women vote! >> reporter: among clinton the supporters, it seems sexism is the elephant in the room. >> i have been called a lot of things. >> reporter: the constant in the
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could be elected the first woman president of the united states. >> we are going to drain the swamp. >> or the next president could be donald trump. the unlikely populist, speaking for voters losing their grip on the american dream. who ever wins, especially if it is close, a lot of people will go away mad. >> i don't see this getting healed very quickly. the battle wound of 2016 are going to be deep. it will take a while for people to decompress and put this national nightmare of 2016 hind us. what? is he gone?? finally, i thought he'd never leave... tv character: why are you texting my man at 2 a.m.? no... if you want someone to leave you alone, you pretend like you're sleeping. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. it's what you do. tv character: taking selfies in the kitchen
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moscow has been accused of trying to influence the presidential election. but russia isn't the only foreign nation with a stake in tomorrow's vote. seth doane reports. >> reporter: it may be be america's election, but the word is watching. >> clinton -- >> trump -- >> hillary clinton/donald trump so close in the polls. >> reporter: the presidential campaign is headline news in neighboring mexico. where that wall and who will pay for it is a regular part of the discourse. russia has figured prominent ly with allegations of hacking and trying to influence the election. some leaders have started to publicly court candidates. israel's prime minister ept k
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both. while north korea's state media indicated that country would lean trump. >> are people here paying more attention to this election than year's past. >> yes, i think so. >> sarah is the vp of news at italy's sky tg 24. >> i think in this case, with donald trump, as a candidate, it is a huge story. it is a huge story. >> she says they're dedicating more and more air time to the campaign. it's good tv. >> we cat candidates that are so different, more opposed. >> it's not just the person -- personalities but the rise of populism and not just in the united states. >> i think that the reason, a part of society in u.s., but also here in europe, that, that is not voting for something or
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for. but simply voting against, against the establishment. >> take brexit, the uk vote to leave the european union. or iceland's anti-establishment, party which tripled its parliamentary seats in recent electing. in britain sky news is promoting its coverage with a spoof. ? that's right it's me ? ? ? that pits the candidates against each other in a boxing ring. ? ? >> in real life, this match has gotten ugly. secretary of state john kerry acknowledged it has the made it tricky to push word leaders to promote democracy. >> there are moments when it is downright embarrassing. >> reporter: at a rally in iran, the president asked iranians -- is this the kind of democracy
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in china, where the ruling communist party often speaks through state media, the election revealed, the defects of democracy. adding the selection of the u.s. leader has become a shouting match of insults. still, cbs news found chinese watching the presidential debate at a beijing coffee shop, live at 9:00 a.m. debates aired at 3:00 a.m. local time in italy. anyway. >> we have ten time the usual audience that we have during the night. yeah. >> people are tuning in? >> yes. >> reporter: people in each country are paying attention to the issues that will affect them most. in iran, may be the future of the nuclear deal. in mexico, use of immigration and trade. here in italy, parallels have been drawn between donald trump and the scandal plagued billionaire businessman former
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captioning funded by cbs it's monday, november 7th, 2016. just one day until the president presidential election. this is the "cbs morning news." the fbi clears hillary clinton again, while clinton kept quiet on the subject, donald trump couldn't hold back. >> hillary clinton is the most corrupt person ever to seek the office of the presidency of the united states. and with one day to go, both candidates are barnstorming the battleground states as they make their final pitches to voters.
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