tv CBS Overnight News CBS January 10, 2018 2:07am-3:57am EST
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cheering section, and performing arts group. south korea even wants the two countries to march together in the opening ceremonies. the south is also hoping to resume reunions of families separated during the korean war. the talks went on for nearly four hours. with both kim jong-un and south korean president able to listen. but the biggester to of all, the north's nuclear arsenal was not discussed. however the two side did decide to reopen a military hot line used to avoid accidental conflicts. john delaurie is an expert on north korean affairs. does the north participating in the olympics really matter? >> in and of itself the olympics is not going to solve anything. but if the olympics is a starting point, then it can really open up the channel between north and south. and that's the goal here is to make the olympics, the steppingstone to something else. >> reporter: the north koreans are showing no willingness to put th
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negotiating table. but, at the end of the talks, the north korean representative did say that a >> i'm alex trebek. if you're age 50 to 85, i have an important message about security. write down the number on your screen, so you can call when i finish. the lock i want to talk to you about isn't the one on your door. this is a lock for your life insurance, a rate lock, that guarantees your rate can never go up at any time, for any reason. but be careful. many policies you see do not have one, but you can get a lifetime rate lock through the colonial penn program. call this number to learn more. this plan was designed with a rate lock for people on a fixed income who want affordable life insurance that's simple to get. coverage options for just $9.95 a month, less than 35 cents a day. act now and your rate will be locked in for life.
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the weekend launch of a top secret u.s. satellite by space x ended in failure. details on this from national security correspondent david martin at the pentagon. >> mission liftoff. >> the launch was a success. >> we have had successful liftoff of falcon nine carrying zuma. >> the top secret spy satellite it was carrying died. the u.s. official told cbs news the satellite code name zuma failed to achieve its intended orbit and crashed into the indian ocean. a total loss. it was launched sunday night atop a falcon nine rocket made by space x whose founder
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musk said he is out to revolutionize space technology. the rocket's first stage returned to earth so it could be used again. the second stage carried the sat light toward what was supposed to be a low earth orbit. from which you could carry out its intelligence mission. space x released a statement saying, after review of all data to date, falcon nine did everything correctly on sunday night. but the maker of the zuma satellite remained silent. saying it could not comment on a classified mission. it appears the satellite failed to separate from the rocket's second stage. an airline pilot took the picture of what is believed off to be the second stage over africa, as it descended towards earth. presumably taking the satellite with it. the spiral effect is created by venting fuel. zuma's mission remains a secret. we don't know the intelligence value of what was lost or how much money it cost
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>> david martin. thank you very much. president trump said today it would be a lot of fun to run for re-electtion against oprah winfrey. he said he would beat her. but he said he knows oprah winfrey very well and doesn't think she would run. gale king knows oprah even better they are friend. we put the" to gale today on cbs this morning. >> is she considering it? >> no, i absolutely don't think her position has changed. i don't. you know i was up to talking to her very late last night. i do think this, guys, i do think she is intrigued by the idea. i do think that. i also know after years of watching "the oprah show" you always have the right to change your mind. i don't think at this point she is actually considering it. >> if some body were to potentially run for president what do you thin thark time line would be? >> i don't think there is such a thing as a time line. not trying to be cute here or mysterious. i do think it is a very intriguing thing she had never kidded. people said, yeah, she wrote that speech as a launching p
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that is absolutely not true. >> and more on cbs this morning, now, familiar face is coming to the show. cbs news announced today that john dickerson will join gail king and norah o'donnell tomorrow as the new co-host. we wish john well as he will now face the nation every week day morning. the massive equifax data breach revealed personal information of 145 million americans. the government promised action. what's happened? anna werner has an update on this. >> there was somebody out there with my information. and, pretending to be me. katey vanfleet's nightmare began with single notification for a credit card sunny never applied for. >> thank you for your recent card application with old navy visa. >> then. >> home depot. two from macy's. kohl's. and i got a, a bill for a hotel stay in las vegas.
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criminals using her stolen personal information opened 15 fraudulent accounts. she spent months straightening it out. >> i started to feel like a broken record. you know, i had to ex-palestiniexplain my story over and over. among thousand suing equifax, crooks received bank accounts. car loans, fake driver's licenses and changed victim's home addresses. vanfleet's lawyer, katherine flemming says of data brokers like equifax. >> the last thing they care about is privacy of our information. they don't care about guarding that. they're in the business of selling that. the more organizations, individuals that they sell our data too, the more money they can make. >> that's something legislators vowed to do last fall. >> equifax deserved to be shamed. >> equifax did a terrible job. >> the result. congress has failed to act. to do anything. >> democratic congresswoman jan
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shikowski introduce a bill that would notify consumers sooner and protect them after a breach. >> what happened to all those proposals? >> i would say mainly the reason is, is that corporations, credit reporting agencies, are uninterested, well let me put it another way. they oppose the idea of having more regulation that would protect the data. >> at least one republican senator, john thune told us if congress is going to make fixes they shouldn't rush into something just for the sake of appearances they should make sure the fixes are actually going to work. meanwhile, equifax told us it is making data security improvements and accountability measures. jeff. >> anna werner in washington, d.c. thank you. now to some other stories we are following. president trump's one time chief strategist out of a job again. steve bannon stepped down as executive chairman of breitbart news. bannon taking heat since he was quoted criticizing the preside
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>> in arizona, joe arpaio, former sheriff pardoned by president trump plans to run for u.s. senate. he is 85. he was sheriff for 24 years. and until losing at the polls in 2016. >> as an iranian tanker continues to burn in the east china sea, strong winds, high waves, toxic gasses are keeping rescue boats away. one body has been found. 31 crew members are missing. ♪ ♪ >> jules woodson was 17 years old when she was sexually assaulted on a ride home from church. >> i didn't understand what was happening. >> snowed in in switzerland. with one way out. >> and fires end zone. touchdown! >> when alabama put in a freshman quarterback from hawaii, it was aloha, national championship. >> thank god he put me in
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in ten see, the pastor of a mega church is apologizing for a sixable assault on a teenager, decades ago. that is not the end of the story. here is jericka duncan. >> i'm going to sit. >> memphis pastor andy savage made a confession this past sunday. >> as a college student on staff, in texas, more than 20 years ago i regretfully had a sexual incident with a female high school senior in the church. >> the admission got cheers of support from the congregation. >> it breaks my heart. >> jules woodson was 17 years told when she says she was sexually assaulted by savage on a ride home from church. at the time, safe rage was a 22-year-old youth minister. she recently went public about her story on a christian blog. >> i did it because i was scared and i
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i didn't understand what was happening. >> woodson says back in 1998 she notified a pastor who told her to keep quiet. she says savage left the church weeks later. in the weak of the me too movement, woodson felt the need to speak up and sent savage an e-mail last month. he didn't respond until yesterday. and she says he apologized. >> we are for miss woodson. >> chris connelly, the lead pastor of the memphis church where savage ministered, parade for savage and woodson. >> it saddens us that miss woodson has not been on the same road to healing. >> the apology doesn't change the fact that what happened to me was -- against the law. and that it was wrong. >> woodson says the night of the incident savage got down on his knees and apologized but told her to keep it a secret and take it to her grave.
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from the church only stating there will be additional information from andy and the church soon. jeff. >> jericka, thank you very much. >> coming up. toyota recall pros. jack and jill went up the hill to fetch a pail of water. all because of a burst water pipe in their house that ruined the hardwood floors in their kitchen. luckily the geico insurance agency had helped them with homeowners insurance and the inside of their house was repaired and floors replaced. jack and jill no longer have to fetch water. they now fetch sugar-free vanilla lattes with almond milk. call geico and see how affordable homeowners insurance can be.
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jimmy's gotten used to his whole yup, he's gone noseblind. odors. he thinks it smells fine, but his mom smells this... luckily there's febreze fabric refresher for all the things you can't wash. it finds odors trapped in fabrics and washes them away as it dries. and try pluggable febreze to continuously eliminate odors for up to 45 days of freshness. pluggable febreze and fabric refresher. two more ways to breathe happy.
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heavy snow in the swiss alps left tourists stranded at a ski resort. today some lined up to fly out. officials insist there is no danger. with roads closed and no trains, the organized an air lift for any sone who wanted to leave. toyota is recalling 600,000 vehicles with defective takata airbag inflaters, and covers more than a dozen toyota and lexus models 2009 to 2013. the list at cbs news.com. japanese astronaut has a different transportation problem. he has grown 3 1/2 inches since getting to the international space station last month. without gravity can expand. he is a frayed he won't fit in his seat for the ride home.
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overtime win over georgia. mark strassmann on the hero from hawaii. >> reporter: america's new household name is a mouthful. the true freshman turned fortunes from lackluster to blockbuster he threw three touchdown passes including this one in the end zone. >> touchdown, alabama wins! >> alabama coach nick saban won his sixth college crown. >> was that a good game or what? >> making the gutsy call to switch quarterbacks in the second half. he had never expected to play. >> found out when we were in the locker room. coach brought the quarterbacks together. he made the statement, you are going to start out the second half. >> he began playing football in hawaii when he was 8. as a teenager he sha
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hawaii's football records at st. louis high. and became a highly prized recruit. his quarterback mentor was marcus mariota, the hawaiian who won the heisman trophy three years ago. when tua assigned to play in tuscaloosa last year his family moved with hem from hawaii. >> i don't know how coach found he in hawaii from alabama. so he has given a taste of aloha to alabama. ♪ my lonely days are over >> people are very nice. people are very religious. and, you know, there is football too. so, i mean, how much better could it get? >> americans learned last night what his coach already knew. his name is worth remembering. mark strassmann. cbs news, atlanta. that is the "overnight news" for wednesday.
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welcome to the "overnight news." i'm jericka duncan. rescue teams are going house to house in the hills outside los angeles where torrential rains have unleashed a series of deadly mudslides. roads have been washed away. some towns are completely cut off. and canine teams are pawing through the remains of destroyed homes. searching for survivors. carter evans is there. >> reporter: as crews continue to dig out here the search for victims is still under way. and it will likely continue into the night. not everyone has been accounted for yet. but, dozens were saved. one by one, firefighters rescued victims from the muck and debris. they carried out this t
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sunny had been trapped in her flooded home for hours. survivors were driven to higher ground. >> this is the worst i have ever seen, we thought the fire was terrible. and this is absolutely devastation. >> in december the thomas fire burned more than a quarter million acres here. when the rains began, those barren hillsides exacerbated the problem. homes and streets in the exclusive community were buried under feet of mud and debris. >> oh s my god. it is 100% covered in mud. >> it made for a nightmare morning commute across southern california. as cars and trucks on several major roads got stuck in the mud. >> this is the normally busy, 101 free way. at one point today. up to 30 miles of it were shut down. and the roadway was covered in debris and mud three feet deep. >> driving down the road, 60 miles an hour. the mudslide comes out of nowhere. out of the bushes here. and, it, it comes
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four seconds. hits my car. pushes me over. three to four feet. almost against the railing. >> mudslides also wreaked havoc in the los angeles area. cars were swept down a canyon in burbank where authorities were concerned a 100-year-old catch basin would unleash more debris. sean johnson lives nearby. packing my bags. street was completely flooded. >> farther north, fast moving mud flow literally, shook damian franco out of bed. sounded like thunder. >> it wasn't thunder. >> just the big boulders rolling down the creek. immigration reform has jumped to the top of the agenda on capitol hill. republicans in the house judiciary committee will put forward a bill today, to get negotiations rolling. but some democrats are skeptical. major garrett reports.
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>> should be a bipartisan bill. this should bea bill of love. truly. we can do that. >> speaking of republican and democrat lawmakers he called for bipartisan legislation. in an unusual move. cameras were allowed to film for nearly an hour. >> we are all going to have to give a little. i will be the first one willing to. >> republicans zeroed in on four priorities, border security, ending visa lottery. limiting immigration based on family ties and daca, obama era program ended by mr. trump that provided legal status to undocumented immigrants, brought to the u.s. as children. >> california democratic senator dianne feinstein tempted the president with a bill that would only deal with daca. >> what about a clean, daca bill now, with a commitment that we go into a comprehensive immigration reform. >> for a moment, mr. trump appeared willing. >> we're going to come up with daca, do daca and start immediately on the phase two comprehensive.
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mccarthy, mindful of conservative opposition redirected the president. >> mr. president, you need to be clear, i think what senator feinstein is asking here. when we talk just daca, we don't want to be back here two years later. you have to have security as the secretary would tell you. >> i think that's what she is saying. >> i think she is saying something different. >> mr. president. >> i think you are saying daca without security. >> mr. trump seemed to be in a mood to make a deal. pressing the lawmakers to go further. >> if we do this properly, daca, you are not so far away from comprehensive immigration reform i you want to take it that further step. i will take the heat, i don't care. >> he did renew calls for a border wall. >> i would love not to build the ball. you need the wall. >> we are prepared to work with the president on border security which means many things to many people. >> reporter: approving daca will ex-pose the president to charges he sold out his political base. that's why the white house is trying to drive a hard bargain on other immigra i
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take the heat. congress is about to find out if that's true. north korea agreed to send a team to the upcoming olympics in south korea. it's the first progress in new talks between the two countries that could soon involve military matters. ben tracy reports from seoul. >> just before 10:00, five north koreans walked across the border into the south and shook hands with their south korean counterparts. a scene unthinkable just weeks ago. the delegation from the north, turned on the charm. calling the south koreans their brethren, and offering what they billed as their first present of the year. >> the north is sending its athletes to the winter olympics next month. north korea will also send a cheering section, and performing arts group.
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countries to march together in the opening ceremonies. the south is also hoping to resume reunions of families separated during the korean war. the talks went on for nearly four hours. with both kim jong-un and south korean president able to listen. but the biggester to of all, the north's nuclear arsenal was not discussed. however the two side did decide to reopen a military hot line used to avoid accidental conflicts. john delaurie is an expert on north korean affairs. does the north participating in the olympics really matter? >> in and of itself the olympics is not going to solve anything. but if the olympics is a starting point, then it can really open up the channel between north and south. and that's the goal here is to make the olympics, the steppingstone to something else. >> reporter: the north koreans there are more questions than answers about the failure of a top secret satellite launched over the weekend. david martin reports. >> ignition. liftoff. >> reporter: the launch was a success.
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>> the launch was a success. >> we have had successful liftoff of falcon nine carrying zuma. >> the top secret spy satellite it was carrying died. the u.s. official told cbs news the satellite code name zuma failed to achieve its intended orbit and crashed into the indian ocean. a total loss. it was launched sunday night atop a falcon nine rocket made by space x whose founder elon musk said he is out to revolutionize space technology. the rocket's first stage returned to earth so it could be used again. the second stage carried the sat light toward what was supposed to be a low earth orbit. from which you could carry out its intelligence mission. space x released a statement saying, after review of all data to date, falcon nine did everything correctly on sunday night. but the maker of the zuma satellite remained silent. saying it could not comment on a classified mission. it appears the satellite failed to separate from the rocket's second stage. an airline pilot took the picture of what is believed off
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americans on average drink about 40 gallons of bottled water a year. and most never give it a second thought. well there is a new trend in water, natural and untreated. it's called, raw water. tony dokoupil is in harrison maine at the source of one brand of raw water called, tourmaline. >> i'm not far from the original source of the largest bottle water brand in america. while the number of bottles out of that spring house is tiny by comparison, tourmaline spring is hoping raw, unfiltered, untreated water is both safe and the next big thing in a
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in this marketing the campaign the quest for raw water is cast in sacred light. >> assertive energy and peacefulness entered my being. >> as we saw in the san francisco, co-op, the pitch is working. empty shelves are common where the brand's live water sells for $16 a bottle. >> ordering. >> the company says their spring water is free of industrial toxins and rich in healthy microbes not processed. despite exotic footage. live water sources from the same monitored spring that feeds the municipal tap. officials at centers for disease control. walter is filtered for a reason. and untreated water may in crude bacteria, viruses and parasites. >> if you are not filtering it or disinfecting it, then-up are creating a risk for yourself or anybody you give the water to of diseases and illnesses that can come from the water. >> where are you taking me now? >> 25
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maine, tourmaline, a source of so-called raw water. >> so we are looking at a, what here? >> bed rock, high altitude, high elevation, natural spring. >> brian poland and partner, seth, say their water its the purest you will ever taste in part because of its age. >> how old do you think the water is that we are looking at. >> the hydrogeologist come up here said it at least 10,000 years old. at least. is older walter better water. >> yes. >> how pure was the earth 10,000 years ago. man has contributed to all contaminants. look in the old days you could drink out of every lake, river stream on the planet. can't does that anymore. >> what do you say to somebody watching, they're laughing. water is water. drink it when it is thirsty. >> water is not water. water is not water. >> we are finding this out. >> the spring is
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make sure it meets standard of the community water system. >> this water is really, really important because of what is not in it. not, not because of whit is in it. it is so, so, incredibly naturally pure. it has to be a healing tonic. it has the to be. because we are water creatures. >> i have customers that swear by it. they haven't attracted enough believers to turn a profit. the source provides 35 million gallons of water per year. but only one half of one percent actually end up in the bottles. the rest, flows right down the drain. at a cost in lost revenue of $4 per second. we decided to see if it was worth the cost. >> any medical interactions we should be aware of. i know cpr in case you drop. tasty, very good. the best. >> mother nature doesn't lie. >> we turn now from the science of water to the
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mark phillips is at a research kitchen in london where he got a taste of the future. the promotional video for the combined food lab sound like a game show. and it is. and you imagine he might have thought. >> four spoons, four colored flavor balls. and oxford university sigh kol g psychology professor makes you think which color will provide which taste. no right answers, but you would be surprised at the number of people who give the same answer. >> that's what i am saying. salty. bitter. sweet. sour. doubting me already. >> the proof is in the tasting. >> it is sour. it tastes like what you would
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green, green -- tangy things to taste like. and this should be the sweet one. >> sweetness. >> mm. >> right. it turns out three quarters of people associate the same colors with the same tastes. and line the spoons up in the same way. >> so why is that useful? it is if you are frying to get people to eat less sugar. and the sugar and some of drinks. >> make it red. >> yeah. >> and if you have passed the spoon test, with the, yes, flying colors. try the jellybean test. with a nose clamp. the gel gee bean. what do you get? >> sweeter side. >> the game is to taste the bean with the nose clamp on. >> suddenly you get.
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>> retro-nasal smell. when you swallow. a pulse of rich air comes out. where most of the taste reside. >> the taste buds, on my tongue were telling me. was, what you called taste. >> taste. >> when i took the clip off. and got the whole -- hoo-h all. the thing. that's flavor. >> yeah. what people call taste. >> ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. >> and that matters for example, with airplane food. the dry cabin air and low pressure mean surprise, surprise you don't get the full flavor. which is why, 20 to 30% more salt and sugar can be added to produce the same taste as on the ground. appreciating the effect environment can have on taste, and even experimenting with bringing that environment to the table, is why airlines and food producers, pay for the kind of research done here.
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what if you are frying to get people to eat sustainable food. in this case, something which has been swarming our coastlines, but which you probably would never have thought of putting on your plate. >> what you have here its a plate with jelly dish. a dish enhanced by adding a seaside sound track. >> so, headphones. jelly fish. >> chef joseph youset does a mean marinated jelly fish. cue the music. it may not be at top of everyone's list. but dress it up with a table top projection of ocean waves. and, add ocean sounds through the headphones. and -- all this helps with kind of getting them into that place. where there dpiexcited about frg something new and different. >> good enough without the music. the point as we move forward in what we eat. presentation counts. perhaps like never before.
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scotsman set up his business. just jut sigh the northern city of new castle. it was the bad weather. he decided there was money to be made, manufacturing and selling clothing, to protect people from the stormy seas, and all of the wind and rain. heavy cotton clothing, made waterproof. by slathering it with oily wax. who would wear such a thing today? >> just expecting a phone call through here. out. >> actress helen mirren in the queen for one. not to mention the real queen. plus, a roster of her royal relatives. >> i'll do my best. >> and, 007. >> and, he looked great in it of course. because he is daniel craig and james bond. >> what happened to sales? >> through the roof. >> helen barber is the fifth generation barber involved with the family owned company.
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in 2016, sales topped 264 million dollars. >> that's my daughter. >> yeah. >> dame margaret barber, helen any mother took over the company in 1968, when her husband died suddenly at 29. >> then you see how wonderfully colors. >> but as trendy and fashion forward as the barber brand has become, old coats, the more, lived in, the better. are the most the prized. >> the queen -- for example when she sent her long jacket back to us. we said, you know we would look to present you with a new one, ma'am. and her secretary said the queen would accept the offer. she would look her old one back, reproofed. >> reproofed. rewaks rewaxed, refurished at the barber factory.
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every year or get so bad that they have to. >> when they can part with them. because they love them. you know they sort of keep them, for generations. >> is this typically how they come in? >> yeah, yeah. it is. >> some are a lot worse than this. >> how many come in a year to be repaired? >> about, 14,000 into here. and about 25 worldwide. >> 25,000. >> yes. >> i can snow you the oldest one. what we call uncle harry's jacket. >> it dates from 1910. >> if the looks like uncle harry met wit a mishap. >> part of a 300 garment archive, overseen by ian bergen head the men's division. >> telltale sign, used for horse riding. the lining starts halfway down. the horse travels up the cotton lining. stop the lining before if the hits the horse. the cape. >> speaking of horses. look at this. om
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use them as a resource. and so many details on the garments. people like buying garments they feel have a link to a historic past. think steve mcqueen, motorcycle jacket. >> he wore a jacket. we have a license agreement with chad mcqueen. steve's son. reproduce old pieces, jackets. similar to what his dad would have worn. >> i see sketches over here do. you just tinker with what you have done or do you come up with something really new. >> think it is a balance isn't it. in the uk. an expression, stick to your knitting. we stay close to what we are as a brand. we update it from modern consumer. >> designers, get really enthusiastic about this. >> they borrow the look. from jackets, with some history. >> well they seem to hang on to your barber jackets. for some reason people dent throw them away. >> but, at barber it is assumed that a worn jacket,
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britain's queen elizabeth revealing secrets about the day sunny was crowned nearly 65 years ago. part of a special airing on the smithsonian channel this sunday. charlie d'agata is outside westminster abbey in london where the coronation took place all those years ago. >> well, westminster abbey really hasn't changed much since queen elizabeth was crowned here, but she has changed. and soap has t has the monarchy. the documentary shows the the queen and what she felt about the day in a way we haven't seen before. >> imagine if you can a young
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off to imagine. for the first time, the queen is sharing the feelings herself. >> i suppose there is a beginning of one's life really is -- as a sovereign. [ cheers and applause ] while a journey in a gold coach may have looked like something out of a fairy tale apparently it was a bumpy ride. >> horrible. it sprung on lever. not very comfortable. >> reporter: just one of the candid secrets unveiled in the coronation where the majesty regales viewers with fond memories of the day sunny was crowned nearly 65 years ago. >> i have seen one coronation and been -- recipient in the other. >> it is a side of queen we rarely see. says royal correspondent, roy anika. >> i think we often forget the queen is a human like the rest of us. because we so rarely hear from her in a personal way. this was a very young woman, like a lot of young women. taking on a role look nothing else no one experienced. >> such fun for the
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>> what they're meant to do. >> it comes as the royals ride a wave of popularity. what with the success of the crown on netflix. baby number three on the way for william and kate this spring. and of course the star-studded wedding between the ever-popular prince harry, and american meghan markle. >> there is so much enthusiasm and spotlight on the monarchy at the moment. they seem to be having a sort of burgeoning renaissance in popularity. not just in the uk around the world. >> the anniversary of the coronation this summer is just one cause for celebration in what has become, a very busy year. for the royal family. and the champagne will be flowing. that's the "overnight news" for this wednesday. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us a little later for the morning news, and of course, cbs this morning. from the broadcast centern
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a new disaster in southern california. after the fires, deadly mudslide chase thousand from their homes. also tonight the president opens an immigration meeting to the cameras. >> should be a bill of love. >> what about running against oprah winfrey. >> oprah would be a lot of fun. >> a top secret u.s. spy satellite crashes into the ocean. >> the two koreas make history. can they make peace. >> a new recall to replace potentially deadly airbags. ♪ remember all those times that we said ♪
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>> the second stringer who turned the tide. >> fired to the end zone. touchdown. into national champions again. >> i don't know how the coach found me all the way in hawaii. ♪ ♪ >> announcer: this is the cbs "overnight news." the southern california wildfires have led to a new natural disaster. they destroyed the trees and shrubs that form a natural barrier against mudslide. the death toll in santa barbara county reached double digits is rapidly moving rivers of mud swept homes off foundations. more than 20,000 have been told to evacuate. carter evans is on the scene. >> reporter: as crews continue off to dig out here, the search for victims is still under way. it will likely continue into the night. not everyone has been accounted for yet. but dozens were saved. one by one, firefighters rescued victims from the muck and
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debris. they carried out this teenage girl on a stretcher. she had been trapped in her flooded home for hours. survivors were driven to hype higher ground. >> this is the worst i have seen. we thought the fire was terrible. this is devastation. >> reporter: in december, the thomas fire burned a quarter million acres here. when the rains began the barren hillside exacerbated the problem. homes and streets in the exclusive monticeto community were buried under feet of mud and debris. >> oh, my god, 100% covered in mud. >> it made for a nightmare morning commute across southern california as cars and trucks on several major roads got stuck in the mud. >> this is the normally busy, 101 freeway. at one point today up to 30 miles of it were shut down. some of the roadway was covered in debris and mud up to 3 feet deep. >> driving down the road. 60 miles an hour. and, the mudslide comes out of nowhere out of the bushes here. and it comes out three, four second. and hits my car. pushes me over. three to four feet. almost against the railing.
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los angeles area, cars were swept down a canyon in burbank where authorities were concerned a 100-year-old catch basin would unleash more debris. sthaun johnson lives nearby. >> i was packing my bags. took awful five minutes. the time i got the notice, done packing my bag. the street was flooded. >> farther north, a fast moving mud flow shook him out of bed. >> the house was shaking like an earthquake. >> it wasn't thunder. >> just the big boulders rolling down the creek. >> reporter: this small creek is a raging river. see where it ran across the road here and piled up all of this debris, if you look back, see a mercedes stuck in the tree branchs. this storm is forecast to clear tomorrow. but, jeff, it could take weeks to clean up the mess it left behind. >> wow, carter evans in, thank you very much. >> president trump invited congressional republicans and democrats to the white house and held a long open meeting about
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here is chief white house correspondent major garrett. >> should be a bipartisan bill. this should bea bill of love. truly. we can do that. >> speaking of republican and democrat lawmakers he called for bipartisan legislation. in an unusual move. cameras were allowed to film for nearly an hour. >> we are all going to have to give a little. i will be the first one willing to. >> republicans zeroed in on four priorities, border security, ending visa lottery. limiting immigration based on family ties and daca, obama era program ended by mr. trump that provided legal status to undocumented immigrants, brought to the u.s. as children. >> california democratic senator dianne feinstein tempted the president with a bill that would only deal with daca. >> what about a clean, daca bill now, with a commitment that we go into a comprehensive immigration reform. >> for a moment, mr. trump appeared willing.
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>> we're going to come up with daca, do daca and start immediately on the phase two comprehensive. >> house majority leader, kevin mccarthy, mindful of conservative opposition redirected the president. >> mr. president, you need to be clear, i think what senator feinstein is asking here. when we talk just daca, we don't want to be back here two years later. you have to have security as the secretary would tell you. >> i think that's what she is saying. >> i think she is saying something different. >> mr. president. >> i think you are saying daca without security. >> mr. trump seemed to be in a mood to make a deal. pressing the lawmakers to go further. >> if we do this properly, daca, you are not so far away from comprehensive immigration reform i you want to take it that further step. i will take the heat, i don't care. >> he did renew calls for a border wall. >> i would love not to build the
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you need the wall. >> we are prepared to work with the president on border security which means many things to many people. >> reporter: approving daca will ex-pose the president to charges he sold out his political base. that's why the white house is trying to drive a hard bargain on other immigration issues. the president said today, he can take the heat. congress is about to find out if that's true. jeff. >> major garrett. thank you very much. >> it was an extraordinary scene along the border of north and south korea. as leaders of the two one trees met for the first time in more than two years. ben tracy is in seoul. just before 10:00, five north koreans walked across the border into the south and shook hands with their south korean counterparts. a scene unthinkable just weeks ago. >> the delegation from the north turned on the charm. calling the south koreans their brethren and offering what they billed as their first present of the year. >> the north is sending its athletes to the winter olympics next month.
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north korea will also send a cheering section, and performing arts group. south korea even wants the two countries to march together in the opening ceremonies. the south is also hoping to resume reunions of families separated during the korean war. the talks went on for nearly four hours. with both kim jong-un and south korean president able to listen. but the biggester to of all, the north's nuclear arsenal was not discussed. however the two side did decide to reopen a military hot line used to avoid accidental conflicts. john delaurie is an expert on north korean affairs. does the north participating in the olympics really matter? >> in and of itself the olympics is not going to solve anything. but if the olympics is a starting point, then it can really open up the channel between north and south. and that's the goal here is to make the olympics, the steppingstone to something else. >> reporter: the north koreans are showing no willingness to put their nuclear weapons on the negotiating table.
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the north korean representative did say that all of the weapons >> i'm alex trebek. if you're age 50 to 85, i have an important message about security. write down the number on your screen, so you can call when i finish. the lock i want to talk to you about isn't the one on your door. this is a lock for your life insurance, a rate lock, that guarantees your rate can never go up at any time, for any reason. but be careful. many policies you see do not have one, but you can get a lifetime rate lock through the colonial penn program. call this number to learn more. this plan was designed with a rate lock for people on a fixed income who want affordable life insurance that's simple to get. coverage options for just $9.95 a month, less than 35 cents a day. act now and your rate will be locked in for life.
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the weekend launch of a top secret u.s. satellite by space x ended in failure. details on this from national security correspondent david martin at the pentagon. >> mission liftoff. >> the launch was a success. >> we have had successful liftoff of falcon nine carrying zuma. >> the top secret spy satellite it was carrying died. the u.s. official told cbs news the satellite code name zuma failed to achieve its intended orbit and crashed into the indian ocean. a total loss. it was launched sunday night atop a falcon nine rocket made by space x whose founder elon musk said he is out to
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the rocket's first stage returned to earth so it could be used again. the second stage carried the sat light toward what was supposed to be a low earth orbit. from which you could carry out its intelligence mission. space x released a statement saying, after review of all data to date, falcon nine did everything correctly on sunday night. but the maker of the zuma satellite remained silent. saying it could not comment on a classified mission. it appears the satellite failed to separate from the rocket's second stage. an airline pilot took the picture of what is believed off to be the second stage over africa, as it descended towards earth. presumably taking the satellite with it. the spiral effect is created by venting fuel. zuma's mission remains a secret. we don't know the intelligence value of what was lo o
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>> david martin. thank you very much. president trump said today it would be a lot of fun to run for re-election against oprah winfrey. he said he would beat her. but he said he knows oprah winfrey very well and doesn't think she would run. gale king knows oprah even better they are friend. we put the" to gale today on cbs this morning. >> is she considering it? >> no, i absolutely don't think her position has changed. i don't. you know i was up to talking to her very late last night. i do think this, guys, i do think she is intrigued by the idea. i do think that. i also know after years of watching "the oprah show" you always have the right to change your mind. i don't think at this point she is actually considering it. >> if some body were to potentially run for president what do you think their time line might be? >> i don't think there is such a thing as a time line. not trying to be cute here or mysterious. i do think it is a very intriguing thing she had never considered. people said, yeah, she wrote that speech as a launching pad
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>> and more on cbs this morning, now, familiar face is coming to the show. cbs news announced today that john dickerson will join gail king and norah o'donnell tomorrow as the new co-host. we wish john well as he will now face the nation every week day morning. the massive equifax data breach last year exposed personal information of 145 million americans. the government promised action. what's happened? anna werner has an update on this. >> there was somebody out there with my information. and, pretending to be me. katey vanfleet's nightmare began with single notification for a credit card sunny never applied for. >> thank you for your recent card application with old navy visa. >> then. >> home depot. two from macy's. kohl's.
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and i got a, a bill for a hotel stay in las vegas. >> reporter: within two months criminals using her stolen personal information opened 15 fraudulent accounts. she spent months straightening it out. >> i started to feel like a broken record. you know, i had to explain my story over and over. among thousand suing equifax, crooks received bank accounts. car loans, fake driver's licenses and changed victim's home addresses. vanfleet's lawyer, katherine flemming says of data brokers like equifax. >> the last thing they care about is privacy of our information. they don't care about guarding that. they're in the business of selling that. the more organizations, individuals that they sell our data too, the more money they can make. >> that's something legislators vowed to do last fall. >> equifax deserved to be shamed. >> equifax did a terrible job. >> the result. congress has failed to act. to do anything. >> democratic congresswoman jan
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shikowski introduce a bill that would notify consumers sooner and protect them after a breach. >> what happened to all those proposals? >> i would say mainly the reason is, is that corporations, credit reporting agencies, are uninterested, well let me put it another way. they oppose the idea of having more regulation that would protect the data. >> at least one republican senator, john thune told us if congress is going to make fixes they shouldn't rush into something just for the sake of appearances they should make sure the fixes are actually going to work. meanwhile, equifax told us it is making data security improvements and accountability measures. jeff. >> anna werner in washington, d.c. thank you. now to some other stories we are following. president trump's one time chief strategist out of a job again. steve bannon stepped down as executive chairman of breitbart news. bannon taking heat since he was quoted criticizing the president
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and his family in a new book. >> in arizona, joe arpaio, former sheriff pardoned by president trump plans to run for u.s. senate. he is 85. he was sheriff for 24 years. and until losing at the polls in 2016. >> as an iranian tanker continues to burn in the east china sea, strong winds, high waves, toxic gasses are keeping rescue boats away. one body has been found. 31 crew members are missing. ♪ ♪ >> jules woodson was 17 years old when she was sexually assaulted on a ride home from church. >> i didn't understand what was happening. >> snowed in in switzerland. with one way out. >> and fires end zone. touchdown! >> when alabama put in a freshman quarterback from hawaii, it was aloha, national championship.
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in ten see, the pastor of a mega church is apologizing for a sixable assault on a teenager, decades ago. that is not the end of the story. here is jericka duncan. >> i'm going to sit. >> memphis pastor andy savage made a confession this past sunday. >> as a college student on staff, in texas, more than 20 years ago i regretfully had a sexual incident with a female high school senior in the church. >> the admission got cheers of support from the congregation. >> it breaks my heart. >> jules woodson was 17 years told when she says she was sexually assaulted by savage on a ride home from church. at the time, safe rage was a 22-year-old youth minister. she recently went public about her story on a christian blog. >> i did it because i was scared and i was in shock. i didn't understand what was happening. >> woodson says back in 1998 she notified a pastor who told her to keep quiet. she says se
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weeks later. in the weak of the me too movement, woodson felt the need to speak up and sent savage an e-mail last month. he didn't respond until yesterday. and she says he apologized. >> we are for miss woodson. >> chris connelly, the lead pastor of the memphis church where savage ministered, parade for savage and woodson. >> it saddens us that miss woodson has not been on the same road to healing. >> the apology doesn't change the fact that what happened to me was -- against the law. and that it was wrong. >> woodson says the night of the incident savage got down on his knees and apologized but told her to keep it a secret and take it to her grave. tonight we received a statement from the church only stating there will be additional information from andy and the church soon. jeff.
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>> jericka, thank you very much. >> coming up. toyota recall pros. some air fresheners are so overwhelming, they can send you... ...and your family running. introducing febreze one for fabric and air. no aerosols. no dyes. no heavy perfumes. it cleans away odors for a pure light freshness... so you can spray and stay. febreze one, breathe happy.
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heavy snow in the swiss alps left tourists stranded at a ski resort. today some lined up to fly out. officials insist there is no danger. with roads closed and no trains, the organized an air lift for any sone who wanted to leave. toyota is recalling 600,000 vehicles with defective takata airbag inflaters, and covers more than a dozen toyota and lexus models 2009 to 2013. the list at cbs news.com. japanese astronaut has a different transportation problem. he has grown 3 1/2 inches since getting to the international space station last month. without gravity can expand. he is a frayed he won't fit in
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mark strassmann on the hero from hawaii. >> reporter: america's new household name is a mouthful. >> turning fortunes from lackluster to blockbuster. he threw three touchdowns including this one in overtime. coach nick saban won his sixth college crown. by making the gutsy call to switch quarterbacks in the second half. he had never expected to play. >> found out in the locker room. brought the quarterbacks together. he made the statement that, you are going to start out second half. >> reporter: he began playing football in hawaii when he was 8. as a teenager he
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hawaii's football records at st. louis high and became a highly prized recruit. his quarterback mentor was marcus mariotta. when tua signed to play in tuscaloosa last year his family moved with him to hawaii. >> don't know how coach found be in hawaii from alabama. >> he has given a taste of aloha to alabama. ♪ my lonely days are over people are nice, religious and football too. how much better could it get. >> america learned what the coach already knew. his name its worth remembering. mark strassmann. cbs news, atlanta. that is the "overnight news" for this wednesday. for some of you the news continues.
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welcome to the "overnight news." i'm jericka duncan. rescue teams are going house to house in the hills outside los angeles where torrential rains have unleashed a series of deadly mudslides. roads have been washed away. some towns are completely cut off. and canine teams are pawing through the remains of destroyed homes. searching for survivors. carter evans is there. >> reporter: as crews continue to dig out here the search for victims is still under way. and it will likely continue into the night. not everyone has been accounted for yet. but, dozens were saved. one by one, firefighters rescued
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debris. they carried out this teenage girl on a stretcher. sunny had been trapped in her flooded home for hours. survivors were driven to higher ground. >> this is the worst i have ever seen, we thought the fire was terrible. and this is absolutely devastation. >> in december the thomas fire burned more than a quarter million acres here. when the rains began, those barren hillsides exacerbated the problem. homes and streets in the exclusive community were buried under feet of mud and debris. >> oh s my god. it is 100% covered in mud. >> it made for a nightmare morning commute across southern california. as cars and trucks on several major roads got stuck in the mud. >> this is the normally busy, 101 free way. at one point today. up to 30 miles of it were shut down. and the roadway was covered in debris and mud three feet deep. >> driving down the road, 60
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miles an hour. the mudslide comes out of nowhere. out of the bushes here. and, it, it comes out, three, four seconds. hits my car. pushes me over. three to four feet. almost against the railing. >> mudslides also wreaked havoc in the los angeles area. cars were swept down a canyon in burbank where authorities were concerned a 100-year-old catch basin would unleash more debris. sean johnson lives nearby. packing my bags. street was completely flooded. >> farther north, fast moving mud flow literally, shook damian franco out of bed. sounded like thunder. >> it wasn't thunder. >> just the big boulders rolling down the creek. immigration reform has jumped to the top of the agenda on capitol hill. republicans in the house judiciary committee will put forward a bill today, to get negotiations rolling. but some democrats are skeptical. major garrett reports. >> should be a bipartisan bill.
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truly. we can do that. >> speaking of republican and democrat lawmakers he called for bipartisan legislation. in an unusual move. cameras were allowed to film for nearly an hour. >> we are all going to have to give a little. i will be the first one willing to. >> republicans zeroed in on four priorities, border security, ending visa lottery. limiting immigration based on family ties and daca, obama era program ended by mr. trump that provided legal status to undocumented immigrants, brought to the u.s. as children. >> california democratic senator dianne feinstein tempted the president with a bill that would only deal with daca. >> what about a clean, daca bill now, with a commitment that we go into a comprehensive immigration reform. >> for a moment, mr. trump appeared willing. >> we're going to come up with daca, do daca and start immediately on the phase two
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>> house majority leader, kevin mccarthy, mindful of conservative opposition redirected the president. >> mr. president, you need to be clear, i think what senator feinstein is asking here. when we talk just daca, we don't want to be back here two years later. you have to have security as the secretary would tell you. >> i think that's what she is saying. >> i think she is saying something different. >> mr. president. >> i think you are saying daca without security. >> mr. trump seemed to be in a mood to make a deal. pressing the lawmakers to go further. >> if we do this properly, daca, you are not so far away from comprehensive immigration reform i you want to take it that further step. i will take the heat, i don't care. >> he did renew calls for a border wall. >> i would love not to build the ball. you need the wall. >> we are prepared to work with the president on border security which means many things to many people. >> reporter: approving daca will ex-pose the president to charges
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he sold out his political base. that's why the white house is trying to drive a hard bargain on other immigration issues. the president said today, he can take the heat. congress is about to find out if that's true. north korea agreed to send a team to the upcoming olympics in south korea. it's the first progress in new talks between the two countries that could soon involve military matters. ben tracy reports from seoul. >> just before 10:00, five north koreans walked across the border into the south and shook hands with their south korean counterparts. a scene unthinkable just weeks ago. the delegation from the north, turned on the charm. calling the south koreans their brethren, and offering what they billed as their first present of the year. >> the north is sending its athletes to the winter olympics next month. north korea will also send a cheering section, and performing arts group. south korea even wants the two
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the opening ceremonies. the south is also hoping to resume reunions of families separated during the korean war. the talks went on for nearly four hours. with both kim jong-un and south korean president able to listen. but the biggester to of all, the north's nuclear arsenal was not discussed. however the two side did decide to reopen a military hot line used to avoid accidental conflicts. john delaurie is an expert on north korean affairs. does the north participating in the olympics really matter? >> in and of itself the olympics is not going to solve anything. but if the olympics is a starting point, then it can really open up the channel between north and south. and that's the goal here is to make the olympics, the steppingstone to something else. >> reporter: the north koreans
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than answers about the failure of a top secret satellite launched over the weekend. david martin reports. >> ignition. liftoff. >> reporter: the launch was a success. >> the launch was a success. >> we have had successful liftoff of falcon nine carrying zuma. >> the top secret spy satellite it was carrying died. the u.s. official told cbs news the satellite code name zuma failed to achieve its intended orbit and crashed into the indian ocean. a total loss. it was launched sunday night atop a falcon nine rocket made by space x whose founder elon musk said he is out to revolutionize space technology. the rocket's first stage returned to earth so it could be used again. the second stage carried the sat light toward what was supposed to be a low earth orbit. from which you could carry out its intelligence mission.
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saying, after review of all data to date, falcon nine did everything correctly on sunday night. but the maker of the zuma satellite remained silent. saying it could not comment on a classified mission. it appears the satellite failed to separate from the rocket's second stage. an airline pilot took the picture of what is believed off to be the second stage over africa, as it descended towards earth. presumably taking the satellite with it.
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americans on average drink about 40 gallons of bottled water a year. and most never give it a second thought. well there is a new trend in water, natural and untreated. it's called, raw water. tony dokoupil is in harrison maine at the source of one brand of raw water called, tourmaline. >> i'm not far from the original source of the largest bottle water brand in america. while the number of bottles out of that spring house is tiny by comparison, tourmaline spring is hoping raw, unfiltered, untreated water is both safe and the next big thing in a bottle. in this marketing the campaign the quest for raw water is cast in sacred light. >> assertive energy and peacefulness entered my being.
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>> as we saw in the san francisco, co-op, the pitch is working. empty shelves are common where the brand's live water sells for $16 a bottle. >> ordering. >> the company says their spring water is free of industrial toxins and rich in healthy microbes not processed. despite exotic footage. live water sources from the same monitored spring that feeds the municipal tap. officials at centers for disease control. walter is filtered for a reason. and untreated water may in crude bacteria, viruses and parasites. >> if you are not filtering it or disinfecting it, then-up are creating a risk for yourself or anybody you give the water to of diseases and illnesses that can come from the water. >> where are you taking me now? >> 2500 miles east in harrison, maine, tourmaline, a source of so-called raw water.
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here? >> bed rock, high altitude, high elevation, natural spring. >> brian poland and partner, seth, say their water its the purest you will ever taste in part because of its age. >> how old do you think the water is that we are looking at. >> the hydrogeologist come up here said it at least 10,000 years old. at least. is older walter better water. >> yes. >> how pure was the earth 10,000 years ago. man has contributed to all contaminants. look in the old days you could drink out of every lake, river stream on the planet. can't does that anymore. >> what do you say to somebody watching, they're laughing. water is water. drink it when it is thirsty. >> water is not water. water is not water. >> we are finding this out. >> the spring is tested regularly for contaminants to make sure it meets standard of the community water system. >> this water is really, really important because of what is not in it. not, not because of whit is in it. it is so, so, incredibly naturally pure. it has to be a healing tonic. it has the to be.
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by it. they haven't attracted enough believers to turn a profit. the source provides 35 million gallons of water per year. but only one half of one percent actually end up in the bottles. the rest, flows right down the drain. at a cost in lost revenue of $4 per second. we decided to see if it was worth the cost. >> any medical interactions we should be aware of. i know cpr in case you drop. tasty, very good. the best. >> mother nature doesn't lie. >> we turn now from the science of water to the science of food. mark phillips is at a research kitchen in london where he got a taste of the future. pr
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combined food lab sound like a game show. and it is. and you imagine he might have thought. >> four spoons, four colored flavor balls. and oxford university sigh kol psychology professor makes you think which color will provide which taste. no right answers, but you would be surprised at the number of people who give the same answer. >> that's what i am saying. salty. bitter. sweet. sour. doubting me already. >> the proof is in the tasting. >> it is sour. it tastes like what you would expect. green, green -- tangy things to taste like. and this should be the sweet one. >> sweetness. >> mm. >> right. it turns out three quarters of people associate the same colors
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and line the spoons up in the same way. >> so why is that useful? it is if you are frying to get people to eat less sugar. and the sugar and some of drinks. >> make it red. >> yeah. >> and if you have passed the spoon test, with the, yes, flying colors. try the jellybean test. with a nose clamp. the gel gee bean. what do you get? >> sweeter side. >> the game is to taste the bean with the nose clamp on.
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>> suddenly you get. >> and then off. >> lemony. >> retro-nasal smell. when you swallow. a pulse of rich air comes out. where most of the taste reside. >> the taste buds, on my tongue were telling me. was, what you called taste. >> taste. >> when i took the clip off. and got the whole -- hoo-h all. the thing. that's flavor. >> yeah. what people call taste. >> ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking. >> and that matters for example, with airplane food. the dry cabin air and low pressure mean surprise, surprise you don't get the full flavor. which is why, 20 to 30% more salt and sugar can be added to produce the same taste as on the ground. appreciating the effect environment can have on taste, and even experimenting with bringing that environment to the table, is why airlines and food producers, pay for the kind of
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research done here. what if you are frying to get people to eat sustainable food. in this case, something which has been swarming our coastlines, but which you probably would never have thought of putting on your plate. >> what you have here its a plate with jelly dish. a dish enhanced by adding a seaside sound track. >> so, headphones. jelly fish. >> chef joseph youset does a mean marinated jelly fish. cue the music. it may not be at top of everyone's list. but dress it up with a table top projection of ocean waves. and, add ocean sounds through the headphones. and -- all this helps with kind of getting them into that place. where there excited about frying something new and different. >> good enough without the music. the point as we move forward in what we eat. presentation counts. perhaps like never before. i'm p
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mary had a little lamb whose fleece was white as snow. but after an electrical fire from faulty wiring, mary's vintage clothing and designer shoe collection were ruined. luckily, the geico insurance agency had recently helped mary with renters insurance, and she got a totally fab replacement wardrobe at bloomingdale's. mary was inspired to start her own fashion line, exclusively for little lambs. visit geico.com and see how affordable renters insurance can be. because no mattergineer what life brings,rgent? visit geico.com our commitment to clean remains the same. now with 10x the cleaning power. tide, america's #1 detergent
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sceneic view that made the scotsman set up his business. just jut sigh the northern city of new castle. it was the bad weather. he decided there was money to be made, manufacturing and selling clothing, to protect people from the stormy seas, and all of the wind and rain. heavy cotton clothing, made waterproof. by slathering it with oily wax. who would wear such a thing today? >> just expecting a phone call through here. out. >> actress helen mirren in the queen for one. not to mention the real queen. plus, a roster of her royal relatives. >> i'll do my best. >> and, 007. >> and, he looked great in it of course. because he is daniel craig and james bond. >> what happened to sales? >> through the roof. >> helen barber is the fifth generation barber involved with the family owned company.
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in 2016, sales topped 264 million dollars. >> that's my daughter. >> yeah. >> dame margaret barber, helen any mother took over the company in 1968, when her husband died suddenly at 29. >> then you see how wonderfully colors. >> but as trendy and fashion forward as the barber brand has become, old coats, the more, lived in, the better. are the most the prized. >> the queen -- for example when she sent her long jacket back to us. we said, you know we would look to present you with a new one, ma'am. and her secretary said the queen wouldn't be very pleased the offer. she would like her old one back, reproofed. >> reproofed. rewaxed, refurished at the barber factory. >> do people send their coats in every year or get so bad that they have to.
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>> when they can part with them. because they love them. you know they sort of keep them, for generations. >> is this typically how they come in? >> yeah, yeah. it is. >> some are a lot worse than this. >> how many come in a year to be repaired? >> about, 14,000 into here. and about 25 worldwide. >> 25,000. >> yes. >> i can snow you the oldest one. what we call uncle harry's jacket. >> it dates from 1910. >> if the looks like uncle harry met wit a mishap. >> part of a 300 garment archive, overseen by ian bergen head the men's division. >> telltale sign, used for horse riding. the lining starts halfway down. the horse travels up the cotton lining. stop the lining before if the hits the horse. the cape.
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>> speaking of horss. look at this. from 1911. use them as a resource. and so many details on the garments. people like buying garments they feel have a link to a historic past. think steve mcqueen, motorcycle jacket. >> he wore a jacket. we have a license agreement with chad mcqueen. steve's son. reproduce old pieces, jackets. similar to what his dad would have worn. >> i see sketches over here do. you just tinker with what you have done or do you come up with something really new. >> think it is a balance isn't it. in the uk. an expression, stick to your knitting. we stay close to what we are as a brand. we update it from modern consumer. >> designers, get really enthusiastic about this. >> they borrow the look. from jackets, with some history. >> well they seem to hang on to your barber jackets. for some reason people dent throw them away. >> but, at barber it is assumed that a worn jacket, like mine, means a well lived life. the cbs overnight news will be right back.
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ople take action against housing discrimination? my friends were told they might be more comfortable in another neighborhood. my co-worker was pressured by her landlord to pay her rent with sexual favors. my neighbor was told she needs to get rid of her dog, even though he's an assistance animal. they all reported these forms of housing discrimination. when you don't report them, landlords and owners are allowed to keep breaking the law. housing discrimination is illegal. if you think you've been a victim, report it. like we did. narrator: if you suspect that you've been discriminated against because of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, familial status or disability, report it to hud or your local fair housing center. visit hud.gov/fairhousing or call the hud hotline at 1-800-669-9777.
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a promise that hit the beaches of normandy. a covenant that split the skies over berlin. a vow that captured iwo jima. a promise was made. a solemn oath that liberated seoul. a sacred trust that defended khe sanh. a pact that dug in in da nang. a contract that weathered tet. a promise was made. a pledge that stormed the desert in iraq. a bond that patrolled door-to-door in fallujah. an iou that braved ieds in kandahar. a promise was made. to america's veterans. a promise we all must keep. dav fights for all veterans and their families so they get the health care, financial benefits and support they earned. if your'e a veteran who needs help, or you'd like to help us keep the promise,
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captioning funded by cbs it's wednesday, january 10th, 2018. this is the "cbs morning news." heavy rains slam southern california, triggering deadly mudslides, leaving more than a dozen dead. >> the fire was bad enough, but never did we think we were going to go through the mud. the daca program will go on as president trump and lawmakers try to come to an agreement on immigration and border security. a federal judge temporarily revives the program that protects young immigrants. >> that is
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