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>> all right. first, though, big news today. the trial of the accused underwear bomber begins this morning with earnest with opens statements at the federal courthouse in droit. umar farouk abdulmutallab is charged with trying to blow up a flight on christmas day 2009 with a bomb hidden in his underwear. >> the defendant is acting as his own attorney. cnn's deb feyerick in live in detroit, where you were the night this all developed and christmas day 2009. deb, what is the situation? >> reporter: well, ali, christine and carol, we can tell you that he is facing eight charges today. it carries a maximum sentence of life in prison. the charges against him, attempted murder, attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction and also conspiracy toy commit terrorism. the nigerian grat witt student turned accused suits bomber is acteding as his own attorney and umar farouk abdulmutallab shown he is defind. during jury selection he invoked his meant, jihad mentor, recently killed in an air strike in yemen. anwar is alive saying "the mujahadin will wipe out the u.s." >> when he got on the plane and came to the united states, there were only two things that were going to happen. he was either going to be dead or he was going to serve life in prison in the united states. >> reporter: defense lawyer ed mcmahon is not on this case but handled similar ones. >> the idea of giving one last speech or one last moment in the sun before he goes off to prison for the rest of his life probably sounds appealing to him. >> reporter: accused of trying to detonate explosives hidden in his underwear and blast a hole in the side ftd plane. authorities say he chose a window seen near the fuel tank and waited for the plane to be in its descent to cause maximum damage. >> it doesn't take a lot. >> reporter: among those likely to testify, dutch passenger jasper sheringa. >> without hesitation, jumped over the seats and jumped to the suspect, because i was thinking, like, he's trying to blow up the plane. >> reporter: also on the christmas day time, patricia keaton bringing home their two now adopted children. >> we heard screams, smelled the smoke and we knew our situation was dire. >> reporter: authorities were stunned how easy it was for abdulmutallab to pass seemingly undetected through multiple airports, including ghana, nigeria and amsterdam where he boarded the u.s.-bound delta-northwest flight. officials believe the device was made by the same yemeni bombmaker responsible for bomb-filled printer cartridges sent to the u.s. last year, and also a similar device used in the attempted assassination of saudi's head of counterterrorism. and it was this particular incident that really brought to attention al qaeda and the arabian peninsula. first time they staged or attempted to stage an attack outside of their region. abdulmutallab is representing himself and has been a little quiet. he has standby counsel, a pinch hitter who will be called in to do the heavy lifting. they're looking forward to hearing what he has to say and how abdulmutallab plans to defend himself. >> i was going to ask you about that. this guy representing himself. there's bound to be more o outbourses. how much will the judge stand? >> reporter: it's interesting. the 20th hijacker case, the times square bomber case. what happens in these situations the judge has to keep a very tight leash on what happens in the courtroom. again it is a legal proceeding, and should something go awry, there could be an attempt for a mistrial. so the judge really has to keep a very tight control over the courtroom, but it does give the defendant an opportunity to at least speak. at least to be be heard, and for many of these defendants, that is critical for them. so firing their counsel, representing themselves, having somebody step in, it's that scene repeatedly, actually. >> thank you. the incredible shrinking nba season. the league officially cancelled the first two weeks of the regular season. commissioner david stern making the announcement last night after players and owners were unable to reach a new labor deal and end a lockout. >> we spent two days here. i think it's fair to say that we established the positions of the parties with complete certainty of where each stood, and we remaine, really, very, very far apart on virtually all issues. >> reporter: virtually all issues, he says. stern says the two sides remain deadlocked over salaries and revenue sharing and, by the way, no new talks are scheduled. the jobs bill takes center stage today. republicans plan to filibuster it, and even if the $447 billion measure passes the senate, republican leaders in the house have already pronounced the bill dead on arrival. >> hmm. tense moments at the occupy wall street protest in boston overnight. [ chanting ] police moving in after they warned activists they were in an offlimits area. several arrested. others planning to march nationwide. in new york, planning to march to the homes of millionaires and billionaires including the home of jpmorgan chase and rupert murdoch. targeted for what they call a willingness to hoard wealth as the expense of the 99%. new york's mayor, michael bloomberg, a billionaire, by the way, says he won't force them from their home base in hyde park as long as they follow the rules. >> the bottom line is, people want to express themselves, and as long as they obey the laws we'll allow them to. >> yesterday conway west and russell simmons visited the park. and the unmanned drones are controlled from an air base in nevada. the problem has not grounded any drones worldwide and they're still trying to figure out how that virus was installed. public health officials in california say that apple co-founder steve jobs died of respiratory failure brought on by a pancreatic tumor. he died wednesday at his home in paper oh alto. his life will be celebrated on october 19th. >> announced on, really, the new apple, the last day he was alive. it already appears to be a monster hit. >> unbelievable. >> as all of his creations have been. more than a million people ordered it with the first 24 hours beating the previous record of 600,000 new iphones. it hits stores friday. >> unbelievable. >> saying, it's not a 5. >> don't you wonder if steve jobs' death fueled sales? >> maybe. the last iphone developed under steve jobs? or at least while he was alive. >> a lot of experts say they have six to ten years of steve jobs' creations in the pipeline. think of that. >> just saying. >> ahead on "american morning," an armed robbery at a gas station in houston. wait until you see this. how a store clerk turned the tables on the gunman and they turned tail and ran. paradise interrupted. hurricane jova. packing 120 mile-an-hour winds. a live report just ahead. and hank williams jr. out with a new song that slams fox news, espn and the united socialist states of america, after he was sacked from monday night football. it's 9 mine advertise the hour. capital one's new cash rewards card gives you a 50% annual bonus! so you earn 50% more cash. according to research, everybody likes more cash. well, almost everybody... ♪ would you like 50% more cash? no! but it's more money. 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[ male announcer ] new bengay cold therapy. the same technology used by physical therapists. go to bengay.com for a $3 coupon. i tell you what i can spend. i do my best to make it work. i'm back on the road safely. and i saved you money on brakes. that's personal pricing. welcome back. >> my favorite story. >> is it? this is ali velshi's favorite story. dropped from monday night football. no, not ali velshi. talking about hank williams jr., for comparing president obama to hitler. now he's venting in a new song calmed "keep the change" just released on the web. here a little clip. ♪ this country sure the hell will go down the drain we know what we need ♪ we know who to blame ♪ ♪ united states socialist states of america, how do you like that name ♪ ♪ i'll keep the usa and y'all can keep the shame ♪ >> boy, he has an amazing voice and a catchy little tune there. >> i'll keep the usa. you can keep the change. >> yeah. >> he calmed out espn and fox news accusing him of twisting his words around. >> he said they put him through a gotcha moment. i think he'll be on "the view" today. >> worth watching the interview again, because nobody was really pushing him. he kind of just said it on his own. just kept -- of course, my favorite part was the other part, where he called -- they're the three stooges. the enemy. they said who. he said obama and biden, and i was waiting for the -- >> he for the the third stooge. >> not that you're calling them stooges, just that we needed three. >> carol -- picking the wrong gas station to rob saturday morning in houston. look at this surveillance video. two men wearing masked entered the store, 6:30 a.m. about to jump over the counter while the other one fires the clerk, hitting him in the leg. thieves don't know there was another clerk in the store who also had a gun. he opened fire, hitting one of the suspects twice. both robbers ran. the one who wasn't wounded didn't get far and now is in police custody. the clerk who was shot is going to be just fine. >> did you see how he just turned tail and ran. he got out of there. >> yeah. there you go. >> whoa. i'm out. i'm done. >> this robberies over. >> good-bye. >> releasing a southwest -- chicago's midway airport. it happened back in april. officials say the flight from denver landed in the rain, onniously, moving too fast and ended up in the mud. the ntsb is still investigating that incident. no one onboard the plane was hurt. severe storm warnings up along mexico's pick coast as hurricane jova approaches. the category 3 storm packing 120 mile-per-hour winds and is expected to make landfall sometime today. >> did you just decide it's jova? >> it is jova. isn't it? >> i thought it was "jova." >> it's like spanish. the j is -- >> all right. there you go. >> let's ask raphael romo live in mexico. he's nodding his head. >> there's going to be a lot of rain, right? looking for the potential of mudslides along the coast of mex ke mexico is significant? >> reporter: good morning. i have a tendency to saying jova. many spanish speakers would do. we're here in a place many americans know well. a small american community here. just north of here there's a destination that americans know very well, puerto vallarta and hurricane hove jova or jova is expected to make landfall overnight. i don't know how much you can see behind me. the sea is very calm, but mexican officials telling us preparations are well under way. they have sent about 300 soldiers to this area to assist the communities and opened about 100 shelters, packed with food, cots and supplies for people who may need it, and they have been through a situation like this. this will be the third time, 2002 there was hurricane cana, 2007 henriette and both caused plenty of sdrudestruction. right now a category 3. officials are hoping and praying in the next 12 hours or so, this hurricane will be downgraded to a category 2 or less, but, again, this kind of thing is very difficult to predict, ali and christine. >> all right. thanks raphael romo. jacqui jeras is -- >> who? "hackui heras" is in the extreme weather center. >> right. >> i keep asking the question. jacqui, this is a major storm. we're making light of the storm. mudslides, a lot of rain. this is walloping them? >> and a lot of wind with it, too, actually. there could be a lot of power outages and damp and treed uprooted, too. kind of an unusual storm. normally when we see hurricanes they'll often parallel the coast, but this one is coming right at them. the concern is that this is going to move in causing a lot of damage. now, the mountains are going to weaken it quite a bit quickly, after it makes landfall. you mentioned that mudslide threat. it enhances the rainfall, because that moisture gets pushed up and that brings down heavier rain. something we'll watch tonight. landfall likely late tonight and really quick, a little eye candy. a cool satellite image as this thing was at almost its peak yesterday afternoon from three different satellites. you can see that eye, which was very, very well-defined at the time. all right. back here at home right now across the southeastern u.s., our big weather story today. a lot of rain. a lot of cloudiness and a lot of travel headaches as a result from atlanta up towards charlotte into raleigh. even headed into d.c. we think late today. rainfall will be heavy at times. especially into the appalachians. a good couple of inches. a lot of standing water on all of the roadways. pretty nice across the nation's midsection. maybe light showers towards the great lakes and our pacific storm continues to be on the move for one more ugly day for you folks. great pictures from england. dramatic photos of a cliff crumbling. the famous cornwall cliffs, and there have been a lot of storms here. oh, look at all that. estimated to be like 100,000 tons of rock. just amazing. look at all that, poof, up into the answer sever the atmosphere. >> an incredible shot. >> beautiful and disturbing at the same time. >> wow. thanks, jacqui. now's your chance to "talk back" on one of the big stories today. the question for this morning, are you sold on the president's jobs bill? one, two, three, all together now -- >> let's put construction workers on the job. let's put teachers in the classroom. let's give small businesses a tax break. let's help our veterans. pass this bill. let's meet our responsibilities. >> oh, the president said that, what, a gazillion times in eight different cities and today the senate will take him up on it, at least we think so. the democratic controlled senate will vote whether to debate the jobs bill. whatever. seriously. if you need a refresher course, the president's jobs bill extends unemployment cuts, the payroll tax, provides more money to hire more teachers and construction workers, and tax the millionaires to pay for it all. the republicans had their own mantra. >> what this weekend showed without doubt is that democrats would rather talk about partisan legislation that won't pass than actually passing legislation we know will create jobs. >> because of that tax increase on millionaires. but you already knew that. what we want to know today is if you're buying what the president is selling. so the "talk back" question today -- are you sold on the president's jobs bill? facebook.com/americanmorning. facebook.com/americanmorning. i'll read your responses later this hour. still to come this morning, the president wants to make it illegal for businesses to specify that the jobless need not apply, but is this really the right way to help the unemployed? it's 21 minutes after the hour. ♪ [ sighs ] [ bird chirps ] [ bird squawks ] ♪ [ bird screeching ] ♪ [ elevator bell dings ] [ sighs ] how mad is she? she kicked me out. but i took the best stuff. i'll get the wrench. ♪ [ male announcer ] kohler's tresham collection. life. with a twist. ♪ welcome back. "minding your business" this morning. 25 minutes after the hour. people were feeling a brit more bullish, right now u.s. stock futures are down after the dow surged 330 points or nearly 3% yesterday pushing stocks higher was a less gloomy view of the economy, and hopes that europe is beginning to get a handlen ots debt crisis. today the senate is expected to pass a bill that would slap tariffs on chinese exports if beijing continues to keep its currency undervalued. supporters say the measure will make american businesses more competitive, but the bill's future remains uncertain. house speaker john boehner has said he won't take up the bill. the banks are bracing this morning for the government's proposal, designed about risky trading. the volcker rule. if implemented would cut revenue for wall street brokers up to 25%. cities have low unemployment and little debt, also the best credit. which cities has the best score? wausau, wisconsin, 79. the south has the worst. harlington, texas, the only city with an average score below 700. and it's the end of the road for a soccer mom staple telling automotive news the company is discontinuing the dodge grand care vin. the minivan replaced by a single crossover in 2013. chrysler will, however, still sell its town & country minivan. at long last, facebook finally released the ipad app, in the works since october of last year. rumored to have been delayed because of the a rift between facebook and apple. 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[ male announcer ] supply chain solutions. fedex. solutions that matter. it's now 29 minutes past the hour. top stories this morning, opening statements set for today in the trial of the accused underwear bomber. umar farouk abdulmutallab charged with trying to blowup a passenger plane way bomb sewn into his underwear. he is acting as his own attorney. and cancels the first two weeks of the nba regular season. nba commissioner david stern says the two sides remain far apart. tonight the senate is expected to vote on the president's $447 billion jobs bill. the hotly contested measure includes extensions of the current payroll jobs tax cut and a new tax credit for businesses. including a 5.6% surtax on people urning more than $1 million a year, something republicans oppose. all right. one provision included in the president's jobs bill that's getting quite a bit of attention, and it has to do with discrimination against the unemployed. >> reporter: unemployed? don't bother applying for this job. that's what some recruiters have been telling job applicants, and now the white house is moving to make it illegal. president obama's jobs bill would make it "an unlawful employment practice if a business with 15 or more employees rejects an applicant because of the individual's status of unemployed" and ban and exclude unemployed workers from working. >> it's bad for the economy. a tremendous waste of human capital to tell people because they lost a job they're not eligible to get a new one. >> reporter: business groups are critical saying employers will always hire the best person for the job, regardless whether they have one now or not. that means frivolous lawsuits looking to blame someone for their unemployment. >> we are concerned it would chill the hiring practice of small businesses, because they would be worried that they would get sued if they fail to hire a person who had been unemployed for a long period of time. >> reporter: roughly 14 million americans are out of work now and the average unemployment lasts more than 40 week. some minorities are hit harder. the national unemployment rate stands at 9.1%. >> if there are groups of americans disproportionately hit by long-term unemployment, there undeniably are, yes, it's going to be more difficult for those people to get a job. >> some states are taking action themselves. new jersey passed a bill outlawing this. illinois, michigan, all have introduced bills as well, but the point here is, if you're already out of work and have some industries routinely saying, if you're out of work, we don't want you to apply, that doesn't do much to help the structural em ploiployment issu. others are saying, current skills and a roll low dex to use to help our business. out of work six months. you might not be the best candidate. >> i was thinking you get to the interview and they ask you. >> what should i do if out of work six months? i say, if it says on requirements, you must have a job, apply for the job anyway. get in there and explain why you have filled your last six months. with this professional work, this contract work, fill that gap on the resume with interesting things and go with the job, anyway. that's what i say. >> hard to -- can't advertise, doesn't mean they'll do anything about the hiring. >> they could screen you, quietly screen you out. right up there with, you must pass a drug screen and background check, it says, you must have a job. if you are looking for a job and just burned out at work, cnn money devoted an entire section to it, the 20 best jobs for fast growth. part of their special report on the best jobs in america. at number five, jobs for the best growth. at number five, a marketing specialist. median pay, $52,200. four, civil engineer, median pay, $74,400. and number three, financial adviser. median pay about $93,000. >> because we're all scared about our money. >> exactly right. >> two, physical therapist. the health care business is booming. median pay $75,900, and number one, software developer, median pay, $82,000. one of christine's favorites. >> it's true. people say should i have my kid learn a chinese language, hindy? what should the language be? i sade, code. >> growth means the largest number of jobs created over the course ever the next decade or so. very important. check out the all-new cnnmoney.com for more on their week-long special "the best jobs in america." back to politics. shall we? jon huntsman is not taking kindly to the baptist minister who referred to the mormon faith as a cult. huntsman, speaking at an event in new hampshire when reporters asked him about the reverend jeffress' comments. the former governor did not hold back. >> on friday told the values voters summit here in washington mormonism is a cult. what do you want to say to this pastor? >> well, it's unfortunate that one person is driving the narrative during a time when we have 15 million unemployed, we have two wars abroad, an uncertain position in the world, we have failing schools, we have the most important election of my lifetime in the 2012 election cycle. the fact that, you know, some moron can stand up and make a comment like that, you know, first of all, it's outrageous. second of all, the fact we are spending so much time discussing it makes it even worse. you give a major foreign policy speech today as i did, and the questions that come after the foreign policy speech are more focused on religion as opposed to our place in the world. this does not help the american people come to terms with the choices that they have in the 2012 election cycle, and as far as i'm concerned stick to the big issues that really matter and leave religion out of the table. last i looked that wasn't a requirement for the presidency. >> mitt romney, the or mormon in the field has not directly responded to reverend jeffress' cult comment. joe plumber, running for congress. who could forget? the 2008 presidential race. seems like yesterday and so long ago. real name, samuel joseph worzal bakr. running for ohio's ninth congressional district. he became a household name threes ago when he went face-to-face with candidate barack obama challenging his tax plan. john mccain seized on that and referred to joe the plumber repeatedly during the presidential debates. coming up next, cnn is going in-depth. too many of our children are terrorized at school. ahead, a man on a nationwide crusade to turn the tables on bullying. plus, these runners, get them a set of directions. why the results from one city the 5k -- so embarrassing -- the results are in kay ogs because of of this. it's 36 minutes past the hour. hey, did you ever finish last month's invoices? sadly, no. oh. but i did pick up your dry cleaning and had your shoes shined. well, i made you a reservation at the sushi place around the corner. well, in that case, i better get back to these invoices... which i'll do right after making your favorite pancakes. you know what? i'm going to tidy up your side of the office. i can't hear you because i'm also making you a smoothie. [ male announcer ] marriott hotels & resorts knows it's better for xerox to automate their global invoice process so they can focus on serving their customers. with xerox, you're ready for real business. so they can focus on serving their customers. come on in. (camera flashes) leanne...leanne! how do you feel about your new focus? oh my god, i love it. (laughs) what would you say to a friend who might be skeptical about ford? just that they make a quality vehicle. does the sound system stand out for you? yes. and when do you use it? um, i use it all the time. i love listening to jazz in the car. you know the only thing that stinks is you can't have a martini. (laughs) morning." it's 39 minutes past the hour. after a three-day break for the columbus bay candidate, the michael jackson death trial resumes today. they'll pick up where they left friday, playing dr. conrad murray statement played to police, made in the two days after michael jackson died. the physician heard himself describing hour michael jackson pleading with him for milk. and the doctor described that is the drug for propofol. the tape will be played out in court today. an iranian actress sentenced to jail and 90 lashes for a film critical of the government, calmed "my tehran for sale" filmed in the capital but banned in country. the australian moviemakers are awe palmed by the sentence. 160,000 children will skip school because they're afraid of getting bullied when they get there. think about that. too frightened to go to class. our next guest is determined to change those statistics. in-depth with travis brown better known as mr. mojo to the kids. a nationwide no bullying tour. he joins us live from indianapolis. good morning, travis. >> good morning. mojo up, mojo up, mojo up! >> what does that mean? what do you mean when you're telling kids to get their mojo up? what is your message to the students? >> the highest level of positiving in, positive excitement and energy. we actually charge them with the battle cry of, mojo up. that simply just mean, take a stand. about leader. stand up or speak up for fellow classmates. >> talking about the kids who may be witnessing a bullying event or might see on the playground where one child is being -- hate to say it -- culled from the herd and picked on maybe some of the bullying, the more aggressive kids. you're asking the other kids to stand up. >> absolutely. we know there are bullies. there's also the bulleed. a lot of our message is geared towards the bystanders thp those watching it or seeing it. statistically, almost 50% of students see, hear or watch it every single day. what we're really trying to do, get those students to just speak up or speak out, to do something to help their classmates out. we know if just one will do it, the rest join, and makes it so much easier on everybody else. >> kids and parents are watching right now. how do you get the kids to step in? some are afraid of being bullied themselves and some just trying to keep their head down and learn, and they're really shutting that out. >> part of our message is really just inspiring students to realize that they can really help. i mean, just something as simple as saying, hey, don't talk to her that way. or don't laugh at them right there. that's not cool. we do know that that creates a lot of fear, and a lot of students are really scared in this situation, but we want them to understand, when they come together, work together as groups, all it takes is one student to step up, and now they're saving a life. they're saving somebody from maybe turning to drugs or alcohol or even in some situations suicide. >> it's interesting these schools are really getting serious about this. you know, at my kids' school, the big program is rewarding the peacemaker. who is the peacemaker? and holding up the peacemaker as really the hero of the school. a new peacemaker every week. really focusing on the positive, but it has to be a schoolwide top to bottom, multilayered approach to combat bullying. you can come in, inspire the kids on one weekday, but the schools really have a to have, and research has shown, they have to have a comprehensive strategy to fight bullying. can't just address it and walk away. >> we call those the mojo makers, the shot callers, the impact players. you're right. legislation is doing great things putting things in place, but it really comes down to the village approach. part of my message on this tour is educate our educators, or parents, and our students, because we know that it's going to take everybody to do that. one of the things we've developed, a in bullying tool kit. witness i leave your school, they have all the tools necessary to operate this program every single week throughout the rest of the school, and it gives the kids the tools to be empowered to make a difference every single day, and i think that's part of what the statistics have proven that it takes to make a real dent in this issue of bullying. >> we've done so much research on this ip depth this week, travis. teachers have to have control of their classrooms. adequate supervision of the playground. you can't lump bullies together. sometimes they can get more aggressive if you do that. some research from johns hopkins shows some of the peer-to-peer mediation doesn't work. we're finding out a lot more about this than we ever knew before. i know that you've been, gone to so many schools. every school might be a little different. even a call from jamie foxx' daughter, to come to her school in l.a. >> a cool experience. anytime you have somebody like jamie foxx, a celebrity willing 20 be a part of that, really it was his daughter caryn, she decided after doing a survey it was so important to make an impact. she went on youtube, reached out to me, brought me out there and we did an awesome program for her. awesome for her mom and dad to be there to support her. doesn't matter if you're famous, where you're from, doesn't matter where you live. so many elements to bullying. it's not just vphysical. it's verbal and cyber. so cool to see it happen at an awesome level. >> you bring up cybering. you can have as much control as you want, if kids are stalking and bullying online, that's another thing kids and students, parents have to be really serious about. mr. mojo, travis brown, nice to meet you. thanks for all your work in bullying. nice to see you. all this week, anderson cooper, bringing more attention to bullying, the crisis. and watch "bullying: it stops here." nearly 1,000 runners turned out for a 5k race in wichita race. braved rain and hills, the only problem, their times did not count, because the person leading the runners took a wrong turn and everyone followed. >> apparently some people went too far, and some people got turned around early. >> my first chance to get out there and really say, this is what i've done. set a benchmark. now i don't have that. >> you train so hard for these races. you take a wrong turn. there was prize money at the end, too. the race organizers said we're not giving out any prize money, because it wouldn't be fair. we're going to give it out next year. still -- frustrating. >> some made the right turn, some made the wrong turn? >> exactly. >> yet another reason i will not run a 5k. so much evidence -- >> carol's been trying to get me to run all summer. the shoes are still in the box. >> i'm going to come to your house. >> i have nothing to run in, because i'm not even going that far. >> there are barefoot runners now. >> i've got the equipment. the thing stopping me from running. i got wide feet. hard to find shoes that fit. now that i can run in my bare feet. there must be people who can run for you. top stories straight ahead, including the race to contain an environmental disaster at sea. it's 47 minutes after the hour. this is my trailer where i spend most of my time. when you're traveling and going to be there ang while while, it's so important. my guitaguitar's always made me at home. i always have something to tinker with. i have a program call sleep cycle, and it wakes you up with a 30-minute window, based on how much movement you have on your bed, determining whether you're in a deep sleep. so you don't wake up groggy. for me, so many times you get into remote locations. when you don't have internet, it's great to get away. especially doing "the walking dead" and you just slice add zombie in half. those are my tips for traveling, or if you're fighting zombies. capital one's new cash rewards card gives you a 50% annual bonus! so you earn 50% more cash. according to research, everybody likes more cash. well, almost everybody... ♪ would you like 50% more cash? 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[ giggles ] [ woman on radio, indistinct ] ♪ bum-bum ♪ bum-bum, bum-bum, bum-bum ♪ ♪ ai, ai, ai ♪ bum-bum ♪ bum-bum, bum-bum ♪ [ ice rattles rhythmically ] ♪ [ imitates guitar noise ] from honda. consumers er wanchai ferry orange chicken... over p.f. chang's home menu orange chicken women men and uh pandas... elbows mmm [ male announcer ] wanchai ferry, try it yourself. 50 after the hour. what you need to start your day -- opens statements begin in the accused underwear bomber. umar farouk abdulmutallab charged with trying to blow up a flight on christmas day 2009. the alleged terrorist plans to represent himself. the senate is expected to vote this evening on president obama's $474 jobs bill. imposing a new 5.6% surtax on anyone earning more than $1 million a year. something republicans oppose. nba fans getting slam dunked by league owners and the players union. commissioner david stern cancelled the first two weeks of the regular season, because the to sides are still far apart on a new labor deal. the entire nba season could be in jeopardy. a significant amount of oil is leaking from a container ship that's run aground on a reef off the coast of new zealand. maritime officials estimate more than 100,000 gal, of crude may have stilled already into the pacific. big ben is tilting. london's beloved landmark is leaning to the northwest as it continues sinking into the ground. why it's still considered safe, engineers say something will have to be done with a few years if the problem continues to accelerate. that's the news you need to start your day. "american morning" is back right after this. were back to america america. the "talk back" question this morning, are you sold on the president's jobs bill? this from heather, no. why? nothing that has money shoved at you have worked so far. you see democrats dragging their feet you wonder, what's really in this bill? and joshua, generally speaking anything that can spur job growth is good. two thoughts. first, the $450 billion is coming on the backs of those who already have a job and pay taxes. second, a short-term solution. if a business really needed more employees they would have hired them already. i prefer to see loan guarantees to small businesses like mine, since the banks aren't lending to us. and this from mike. the sad truth is most americans probably know what is in the bill exactly. we've become so divided we take whatever party line swae port and that's it. keep the conversation going. face book.com/"american morning." >> the last one was very -- adhere to the people they believe in and -- >> don't bother to check further. >> the president purposely put in things in here that passed before by both parties so it would be more, i guess, appetizing, but it isn't -- >> get right down to it. the tax increase on millionaires. the republicans will never go on that. made it very clear and that's why it's dead in the water. >> also unemployment benefit extensions. some saying three years is too long. got to cut that off. going on too long on a taxpayer dime. and payroll tax holidays, doing it for too long. there you go. the three-day weekend now over for many of us. it was another rough weekend for tiger woods. you know, you're going to love your late-night laughs. take a look. >> tiger woods had an unusual experience. playing in the open yesterday when a man described as a fan, watch this. started yelling -- and then -- threw a hot dog at him. now, i'm not sure you can still be call add fan of someone when you're throwing meat at him on the golf course, but they tackled the guy, and that's the hot dog, in the hand. at least i hope it's the hot dog. maybe elin is angrier than we thought. >> during a golf tournament a fan was arrested for throwing a hot dog at tiger woods. tiger woods is like, it's okay. i know how hard it is to control your wiener. no, no, no. >> i didn't hear that one. >> good. >> i'm sorry. that was a great line. >> elin moved on, by the way. >> we're about to move on as well. the art of the trade. the swap being born, reborn, i guess, swapping everything from jean jackets to engagement rings for stuff they want but can't fully afford. we'll talk about it on the other side of the break once my colleagues stop giggling about wiener jocks. it's 56 past the hour. i thought we'd be on location for 3 days, it's been 3 weeks. so, i used my citi simplicity card to pick up a few things. and i don't have to worry about a late fee. which is good... no! bigger! bigger! 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(laughing) yeah. get $100 rebate when you buy four tires. 100 bucks! only at your ford dealer. 3 million tires. 11 major brands, fiona's kind-of-nice. i don't know why you're not here. new details this morning on the last moment of former apple ceo steve jobs' life and the official cause of death. the accused underwear bomber goes on trial in detroit and he plans to defend himself. a live report just ahead. the nba cancels the start of its season after players and owners fail to agree on a labor deal. and is that big ben or the leaning tower of pisa? what's up with the famed london landmark on this "american morning." -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com good morning, it is tuesday, october 11, 2011. welcome to "american morning." >> that is not all it is. >> that's right. ♪ >> a very special day today. today is carol's birthday. thank for spending it with us. >> i expect really expensive presents later. >> is your birthday the same day at brian? >> our executive producer, brian bell. happy birthday to all of you. i'm not getting involved. i tweeted something you tweeted about how october 5th -- >> the most common birthday. more people have that birthday than any other birthday. i was suspecting it has to do with new year's eve. >> and conception. >> i don't really want to think about what my parents were doing back then n. that case, let's move on. terrorist on trial. in a few hours laying out a case against accused underwear bomber umar farouk abdulmutallab, chargeded with attempting to blow up a deltaelines flight in 2009 with explosives hidden in his underwear. deb fave rik is live outside the court in detroit. >> reporter: when these would-be bomber radicalize they're taught not about failure but to do simply blow up a plane or whatever it is they're targeting. it's interesting to see what bm s abdulmutallab is thinking. nigerian graduate student turned accused suicide bomber is now acting as his own lawyer and already 24-year-old nigerian umar farouk abdulmutallab showed he's defiant during jury selection. he invoked anwar al awlaki, recently killed in a drone strike in yemen. >> anwar is alive, he shouted in court saying, "the mujahadin will. i out the u.s." >> when he got on the plane and came to the united states, there were only either two things that were going to happen. he was either going to be dead or he was going to serve life in prison in the united states. >> reporter: defense lawyer ed mcmahon is not on this case, but has handled similar ones. >> the idea of given one last speech or one last moment in the sun before he goes off to prison for the rest of his life probably sounds appealing to him. >> reporter: abdulmutallab is accused of trying to detonate a bomb hidden in his underwear. authorities say he chose a window seat near the wing and fuel tank and waited until the plane was on its descent to cause maximum damage. >> if you look back at pan am 103, it only took 14 ounces of explosives to bring down the 747. so it doesn't take a lot. >> reporter: among those likely to testify, dutch passenger jasper schuringa, a row behind when he heard what sounded like a gun shot. >> i freak, of course, and without any hesitation i just jumped over all the seats and jumped to the suspect and thinking, you know, like, he's trying to blow up the plane. >> reporter: also on the christmas date flight, patricia keaton and her husband bringing home their newly adopted ethiopian children. >> started to smell smoke and saw the reaction of the flight attendants and running with fire extinguishers we knew our situation was dire. >> reporter: authorities were stunned at how easy it was for abdulmutallab to pass seemingly undetected through malt poor airports, including ghana. nigeria and amsterdam where he boarded the delta flight. officials believe the device was made by the same yemeni bombmaker responsible for bomb-filled printer cartridges sent to the u.s. last year and also a similar device used in the attempted assassination of saudi's head of counterterrorism. now, shortly after he was arrested, abdulmutallab did give statements to fbi agents. his standby counsel, the guy who sort of is standing in for him, is going to try to get the statements tossed out saying abdulmutallab was on medication treat for burns sustained during the attacks. so far the judge allowed the statements. pretty powerful listening to passenger testify what they saw and heard and see whether or not abdulmutallab is the one who decides to cross-examine them. carol, christine? >> thanks, deb. president obama takes to the stump in pennsylvania today to promote his $474 billion jobs bill. the president's going to rally supporters just as the senate prepares to vote on his jobs plan tonight. right now even members of the president's own party are slow to rally behind this plan. following this closely live in washington, kate bolduan. it's not expected to pass. what's going on? the president said in his speech to the joint session of congress, i'm going to take this to all corners of the country to get americans to back it. >> reporter: he sure has done that, taken his message on the road. the vote in the senate is a key procedural vote on the president's jobs bill. not a final passage vote, rather a key test vote for this measure. the modified bill put out by senate democratic leaders including that so-called millionaire surtax we talk about to pay for the legislation. the surtax on income over $1 million. you mentioned, neither senate republican or democratic leadership aides think any republicans will support the bill, and republicans, of course, are labeling this package as another round of wasteful stimulus spending, while democratic leaders are confident they'll get a majority of democratic support. there are real concerns among some democrats around this package as well. the more moderate centrist democrats especially those up for re-election. the bill tonight is not expected to get the 60 votes needed to clear this hurdle and then, of course, the question is what's next? talk of pulling out elements of this bill and trying to pass it piecemeal, to which they would think would win more support, but no real serious talk about that. >> probably dead on arrival but an opportunity for the president and others to put their ideas forward on jobs creation. okay. good to e see you. thank you. now's your chance to "talk back" on one of the big stories of the day, as in that story. the question this morning, are you sold on the president's jobs bill? one, two, three -- all together now. >> let's put construction workers on the job. let's put teachers in the classroom. let's give small businesses a tax break. let's help our veterans. pass this bill. let's meet our responsibilities. >> the president has said that a gazillion times in eight different cities. now, if you need a refresher course, the president's jobs bill provides money to hire nor teachers and construction workers, you know, infrastructure jobs, and boasts a tax on million tears to pay for a all. republicans have their own mantra. >> what this weekend's shown beyond any doubt is that democrats would rather talk about partisan legislation they won't pass than actually passing legislation we know will create jobs. >> because of the tax increase on millionaire, but you already knew that. what we want to know today is if you're buying what the president is selling. so the "talk back" question today, are you sold on the president's jobs bill? facebook.com/americanmorning. facebook.com/americanmorning. read your comments later this hour. the wall street protests are moving on up to the east side this morning. they plan to march to the homes of millionaires and billionaires including the cpo of jpmorgan chase and rupert murdoch. organizers say they're being targeted for what they call a willingness to hoard wealth at the expense of the 99%. last night, things began to erupt, a sister march in boston. police moving in after they were warned they were in an dwlaer was off limits. other protests planned and a new orc poll saying more people are paying attention. half the knt saying it has now heard about the occupy wall industry protests. many are still asking, what's their point? fewer than one-third agreed with movement. 19% are against it, but 54% still haven't made up their minds about it quite yet. all right. apple ceo co-founder steve jobs died of respiratory failure brought on by a pancreatic tumor, jobs died surrounded by his family at his home in palo alto. celebrating his life on october 19th. nba players and owners dug in and fans are bummed out. david stern cancelled the first two weeks of the regular season saying the sides remain very far apart on every labor issue. and weather with jacqui jeras. >> good morning, guys. not a bad morning up in the northeast. the southeast is downright ugly. one of those mornings you need an extra cup of coffee to get you out of the house because it's so dreary. rain showers, a lot of cloudiness and fog developing in the low-lying areas. it's going to take you longer to get where you need to be and keep that in mind along i-95 and i-75 heading throughout the rest of the day. rain fall amounts really widespread. for the most part we're going to see one to two inches. a couple isolated spots. especially the appalachians here where we could see as much as four-plus inches in the next 48 hours. also keep in mind the carolinas really got hit hard in the last couple of months with additional rainfall here. not necessarily welcome. we'll see a lot of standing water on the roadway. keep that in mind, too. if you are traveling today, things look good in the northeast, but we'll watch the clouds begin to increase throughout the afternoon. you'll start to see showers in d.c. up towards philly, later in the day. new york city, you'll see it late other than tonight. the nation's midsection looking for mostly pleasant weather leer. an isolated shower or two possible in the great lakes extending down towards the gulf coast. not a whole lot, and our storm in the pacific northwest, this is going to track all the way across the country this week and could bring severe weather to the plains by tomorrow. major delays in atlanta, hartsfield-jackson international airport. d.c. and charlotte looking for showers especially in the afternoon. and kansas city, be aware. seattle, portland, the last big day with the storm and fog in san francisco this morning, but it should be clearing up as you head into the afternoon hours. temperaturewise, man, it's feeling good in the plains. look at this. 70 and 80-degree weather, feeling well above average. you can see the rain-cooled air here. better in minneapolis today than it is going to be in atlanta. the last weather story of the day, hurricane jova, a major hurricane. category 3. it's weakened a little since yesterday. either way you slice it, it's going to slam into the mexican coast we think late tonight, bring in incredible amounts of rain. 6 to 12 inches near the center of the storm and wind damage expected as this thing moves close to or possibly even over puerto vallarta. a lot of people live to travel there. a lot of cruise ships having to navigate their way around that storm. and carol costello, you've been holding out on me. happy birthday! you blew that right off the whole earlier show. >> thank. i'm prepared to have a fabulous day. let me tell you. >> and brian, and my husband share that day. >> really? >> all of these people born on october 11th. >> happy birthday to all of you. great day to celebrate. >> fellow libras, unite. >> must have been your parents' new year's resolution. >> stop it. stop this conversation. please, carol, take it away. still to come, hank williams jr. out with a new song that slams fox news, espn and the united socialist states of america. his new song, we'll play it for you, right after a break. plus, first lady michelle obama, a guinness world record. ali's speechless. what she's doing. you're watching "american morning." >> people were exercising. welcome back. 16 past the hour. markets soared on a solution could be at hand in europe's debt crisis. our next guest says it would be a big mistake to become complacent. the author of a book "obama's challenge and a presidency in peril." good morning. >> good morning, and happy birthday. >> oh, thank you. i appreciate that. and i was happy that the stock market surged yesterday, because at least i could look at my 401(k) and it looks a little better, but what i wonder is, so european leaders say, oh, they have this plan it help out the european banks and i guess the big question i have, will it work? >> well, it's far from signed and sealed. the french and germans had a good day. they're closer to an agreement, but, you know, you've got 17 different countries that use the euro. they disagree with each other on giving greece aid, without rewarding greece for getting in over its head. how to recapitalize the european banks and are a long way from a real solution. on our side, several banks up to their ears on mortgages not getting back back in time. the stock market has good days and bad days. we are a long way away from getting out of this mess. >> and countrywide inherited all the bad mortgages, is losing money because of them, will bank of america need a bailout eventually? >> i guess i don't know. i don't have a crystal ball. my point is, if bank of america does get into real trouble it shouldn't get a bailout. it should get something more like what general motors got, prenegotiating bankruptcy where the government eventually has to resolve it under the new authority of the dodd frank law meaning the people who got us into this mess lose their jobs, and the bank is perhaps broken up. it's temporarily taken over by the government. what the fdic does with small banks and then they take a good, honest look at theirs books. the bond holders eat some of the loss as happened with gm and then they restore it to health under new ownership. that was a big fight in '09. secretary geithner of the view you don't want to do that, might be bad for market confidence. better to throw money at them, better to prop them up. if obama gets a do-over and faces this again with, let's say, bank of america, and i should say i'm speaking hypothetically. i don't want to cause a run on the bank, this time use it's new authority under the dodd frank act and do something like they did with gm, which actually worked. >> you know, i can't envision another bailout because of all the protests going on on wall street. the tea party, a political force, and the tea party didn't so much love the idea of a bailout. i just can't see how that would happen again. >> no. and what i'm saying is, i'm distinguishing between a bailout where you throw money at these banks that got us into trouble and don't require them to change their business model. none of the bankers that caused the crisis lose their jobs. rather, break it up, clean it out and it's the bondholders who take the hit rather than taxpayers. if one of these big banks turns critical, that's the crucial choice obama faces. you're very right to point out the protests on wall street, even though not everybody sympathizes with the tactics, there's a lot of sympathy with the idea we are the 99%, they ares 1% that got us into this mess. so i'm saying it would be good politics, good economics not to bail thm out, but to clean them out. >> so you're saying these wall street protests as unfocused as they may be, are having an affect on policy being made in washington right now? >> well, the president himself has said they've tapped into popular frustration. other mainstream democrats certainly have said that they speak for a general feeling that it was wall street who got us into this difficulty, and it cups the ante on the president and his treasury secretary, not just to throw more money at them, but to fix the problem, because the banks have been dragging down the economy, when you just bail out a bank that's effectively insolvent and pretend everything's okay, then the bank is risk when it comes to making loans, you don't get refinancing are mortgages. small business doesn't get the credit it needs and it's like a lead weight on the economy. this time, if another one gets in big trouble, fix it properly. >> robert kuttner, thanks for joinings. appreciate it. after dropped from monday night football for compares president obama to hitler, hank williams jr. is venting in a new song called "keep the change" just released on the web. listen to the words. ♪ this country sure the hell will go down the drain we know what we need ♪ we know who to blame ♪ ♪ united socialist states of america, how do you like that name ♪ you can keep -- >> i'm keep the usa. you can keep the -- >> who took that out? the best part of the song. >> because we wanted you to sing it. ♪ i'll keep the usa, you can keep the change ♪ >> called espn and fox news in the song accusing them of twisting his words around. first lady michelle obama. knop stranger to working out. hoping to set a guinness record on the south lawn of the white house. most people jumping, doing jumping jacks. that's a hula hoop. >> she's not going to win. i was going to say. if that's what she's doing. >> jumping jacks starts at 3:00 p.m. eastern. >> showing something else. >> exactly. big ben is beginning to look like the leaning tower of pisa. now leaning so much it is visible to the naked eye. the level of the tilt increased over the years due to construction underground. even though there was cracks in the walls and ceiling, according to a new report, big ben is considered safe. >> is it true that big ben is not the clock, it's the bell? is that right? >> good question. >> hmm. >> i've got to look at that. >> i thought of it in its entirety. >> i'm going to google it. >> all right. choosy moms may have something to choose other than jiffy -- jiff. sorry. jiff. why you could pay a lot more for your peanut butter. plus, cash may still be king. in today's economy, an old world form of commerce is making a comeback tell you all about that. it's 22 after the hour. ♪ ♪ ♪ when your chain of supply ♪ goes from here to shanghai, that's logistics. ♪ ♪ chips from here, boards from there ♪ ♪ track it all through the air, that's logistics. ♪ ♪ clearing customs like that ♪ hurry up no time flat that's logistics. ♪ ♪ all new technology ups brings to me, ♪ ♪ that's logistics. ♪ i took some steep risks in my teens. i'd never ride without one now. and since my doctor prescribed lipitor, i won't go without it for my high cholesterol and my risk of heart attack. why kid myself? 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[ female announcer ] lipitor is not for everyone, including people with liver problems and women who are nursing, pregnant or may become pregnant. you need simple blood tests to check for liver problems. tell your doctor if you are taking other medications, or if you have any muscle pain or weakness. this may be a sign of a rare but serious side effect. [ man ] still love that wind in my face! talk to your doctor. don't kid yourself about the risk of heart attack and stroke. if lipitor's been working for you, stay with it. lipitor may be available for as little as $4 a month with the lipitor co-pay card. terms and conditions apply. learn more at lipitorforyou.com. 26 after the hour. welco welcomeback. "minding your business" this morning, markets are on track to open lower despite the dow jumping 3% yesterday pushing stocks higher. a less gloomy view of the economy and hopes europe is beginning to get a handle on its debt crisis. corporate earnings season kicks off today after the closing bell. one of the largest aluminum producers in america, alcoa, releases third quarter earnings. banks are bracing for the governmental proposal designed to limit the kinds of risky trading that played a part in the financial crisis. it's called the volcker rule, if implemented could cut wall street brokers up to 25%. if you thought pb & j sandwiches could get you through recession. think again. because of a peanut shortage, prices on the rise. by next month, you could pay 30% more for peanut butter. for the latest news, check out c cnnmoney.c cnnmoney.com. "american morning" will be right back after the break. what's in the mail? well, it just might surprise you. because this is how people and business connect. feeling safe and secure that important letters and information don't get lost in thin air. or disappear with a click. but are delivered. from person to person. and, sometimes, even face to face. have a great day. you too. for some of the best ways to connect and protect... it's all in the mail. learn more at usps.com/mail. consumers er wanchai ferry orange chicken... over p.f. chang's home menu orange chicken women men and uh pandas... elbows mmm [ male announcer ] wanchai ferry, try it yourself. better deposit that before you get hurt! [ echoing ] hurt! hey, wha-- [ camera clicks ] oh, state farm bank's pocket agent. it lets you deposit checks right from your phone. you just shoot, send, done! boom. give it up! [ male announcer ] another reason more people stay with state farm. get to a better state. egypt erupting against. the worst violence in the nation since the revolution in february. 25 dead, close to 2300 wounded. egypt's prime minister vowing this morning to ban all discrimination based on religion, language, gender or ethnicity. a virus infecting computers that control u.s. drones. the unmanned planes, probably the most effective weapon in the war against al qaeda. they are controlled from an air base in nevada. a defense missile says it hasn't grounded flights worldwide and are trying to figure how the virus was installed. republican presidential candidate jon huntsman is firing back at robert jeffress who referred to the norman faith as a cult. huntsman running for the white house did not pull any punches. >> the fact some moran can stand up and make a comment like that, first it's outrageous, second of all, the fact we are spending so much time discussing it makes it even worse. >> saying the reverend's remarks created a political side show and we need to talk about jobs and the economy, not religion. president obama's $474 billion jobs bill faces its first vote in the senate later today. and while democrats control the senate, there's no guarantee the bill will get the 60 votes needed to clear tonight's proposal hurdle. the president in the meantime will be talking up his jobs plan today speaking to supporters at a training center for electrical workers in pittsburgh. and there's one provision included in the president's bim that's getting a lot of attention. it has to do with discrimination against people who don't have jobs. >> reporter: unemployed? president obama's jobs bill would make it "an unlawful employment practice" if a business with 15 or more employees rejects an applicant because of being unemployed. >> it's bad for the economy. a tremendous waste of human capital to tell people because they lost a job they're not eligible to get a new one. >> reporter: business groups are critical saying employers will always hire the best person for the job, regardless whether they have one now or not. they argue that this means frivolous lawsuits looking to blame someone for their unemployment. >> we are concerned it would chill the hiring practice of small businesses, because they would be worried that they would get sued if they fail to hire a person who had been unemployed for a long period of time. >> reporter: roughly 14 million americans are out of work right now, and the average unemployment lasts more than 40 weeks. some minorities are hit harder. the national unemployment rate stands at 9.1%. hispanics, 11.3%, blacks, 16%. >> if there are groups of americans disproportionately hit by long-term unemployment, there undeniably are, yes, it's going to be more difficult for those people to get a job. >> some states are taking action themselves. new jersey already pass add bill outlawing this kind of discrimination. illinois, michigan, new york, all introduced bills as well doing this, but some companies say it's simply the way they're doing business now. they want to only consider people who currently have jobs, cabinet contacts and experience in the industry. >> some of this stuff going on in new jersey, published before new jersey made it illegal. it wasn't stuff you need contacts. it was just discrimination. if you're out of a job, you don't get a job. a lot of jobs in the country you don't need to bring anything, except your own experience. some are just nasty about it. >> new jersey clamped down. other states looking at it, too. in the jobs bill, wording to make it law. how do you enforce it, too, is the question? >> okay. time to make a deal. talking about bartering. an ancient form of commerce will people swap their skills or stuff for things they want. >> on forever, making a comeback thanks to a new high-tech twist. pob poppy harlow joins us now. >> reporter: i've always heard a bargain but never in the way you hear this story. bartering is back in a big way thanks in large part to the persistently weak economy and also thanks in large part to technology. take a look. it's as old as time. more benjamins and plastic, before these, there was battering. >> swap, swap, swap, swap. yeah. everything i'm wearing is swapped. >> reporter: and it's back in fashion. priceless, seeing eye popping growth in bartering sighting a lousy economy as the catalyst. >> i love it. >> reporter: swap.com says it's seen more than 4 million barter exchanges since last year, and bartderquest says its seen 150% increase in users since that time. >> we believe it is a mul multibillion dollar market after buying, selling auction, you're going to find people looking more and more to bartering. >> reporter: the latest numbers from the international reciprocal trade association valued the barter market in north america alone at $12 billion. >> this is a new way for some people to think about how to get the things they want or need. >> reporter: and people are bartering for almost anything. >> we did for 300 -- >> reporter: then this engagement ring recently offered up on craigslist in exchange for car, trucks, jet skeeis. you get the idea. and in vogue in high fashion and on display during new york city fashion week i. found this sequinned blazer. which came from one of our swap hosts in atlanta. >> reporter: a good barter? >> a good barter. >> reporter: all because of the state of the economy? >> no. not at all. it's a con have a lucent factor because of the recession, we've become so digital we want to meet in real life. >> reporter: for some business owners, though, it's old hat. how many t-shirts do you pump out of here daily? >> could be thousands, could be hundreds. >> reporter: custom t-shirts for 25 years. what do you get out of this? >> some of the broadway -- all the broadway shows. i love broadway. travel, professional services, personal stuff. work around the office, if it needs all that, barter has made that easy. >> reporter: he warns it's important to use a reputable bartering service to prevent getting ripped off by someone who doesn't fulfill their end of the deal. you may be wondering about taxes. it's very important, legally important in the irs, anything you barter you have to pay taxes on at theened of the year. if you barter a $300 service for example, even though you're not exchanging a natural item, you have to write that on your tax return. >> is there paperwork for this? something between businesses, you get a receipt? >> you should ask for one. all on the irs website. any tax attorney says you've got to do this. i don't think is happens awe the time, but if you're going to barter, follow the law, do it. one thing when researching the story, in lynnwood, missouri they launched a tuition for pork farmer. gave the school pigs for the cafeteria and the kids could go to school. the extreme. not doing it anymore. what a a neat form of bartering. >> pork prices had gone so high, more expensive than tuition. >> interesting story. have to think about that. >> thanks, poppy. take a look at the surveillance video from a robbery gone awry. two armed men wearing masks entered a gas station. see them coming in. one jumped over the counter while the other fires a gun at the clerk. oh, but the thieves didn't know there was another clerk in the store and that clerk had a gun and there he goes. he's out of there. both robbers ran. the one robber who was wounded, he did not get far. he's now in police custody. the other suspect is at large. everybody has minor injuries but are okay. >> a crime like that with the gun, your sentencing guideline went way up. and a fear of flying, this won't help. capturing a southwest airlines plane getting out of the runway after landing in a rain-soaked storm in chicago's midway airport. it happened in april. look at it close-up. came in too fast. went to make a turn before slow enough. you can see the rain spraying on to the camera there as it slides off into the mud. the ntsb just released that video. another one from amazing video files. the famous cornwall rock cliffs in southwest england seen crumbling then crashing more than 100 feet into the ocean. rare to catch this. taking a battering from recent storms and rising tides. still to come this morning, doctors say this is one lucky little 4-year-old boy after a pencil was lodged in his eye. you're going to meet this little guy and his family, and we're going to talk about the surgery that helped him when "american morning" continues. exclusive to the military. and commitment is not limited to one's military oath. the same set of values that drive our nation's military are the ones we used to build usaa bank. from free checking to credit cards to loans, our commitment to the military, veterans, and their families is without equal. ♪ visit us online to learn what makes our bank so different. usaa. we know what it means to serve. so if i didn't know better i'd say you're having some sort of big tire sale. yes we are. yeah. how many tires does ford buy every year? 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(laughing) yeah. get $100 rebate when you buy four tires. 100 bucks! only at your ford dealer. 3 million tires. 11 major brands, fiona's kind-of-nice. i don't know why you're not here. welcomes back to "american morning." we have a very special guest this morning. his name is keegan tinsdale. he's 4 years odd and lives in mesa, arizona. nine weeks ago practicing writing letters at his grandma's house when he fell off his share. the little guy the pencil wound up lodged inside his eye socket and deep into his head. look at the brain scan. the white spot is the lead of the pencil. doctors say he came with 1/16 of an inch from death. keegan, his dad and mom are with us live from phoenix. good morning, you guys. and our senior medical correspondent, elizabeth cohen joins us live in the cnn center in atlanta. mom, let me ask you first how this happened. writing letters like a good little guy should, and slips off of his share, and right away -- at his grandma's house. right? right away folks knew something was wrong. tell me what happened? >> at my mom's house, practicing, because he was supposed to start preschool the next week, and was writing letters and fell off the claire. when it happened, no one knew it happened. my mom thought just the tip of the pencil was in his little eyebrow right there. no one knew the entire pencil was in his eye. did she call an ambulance? she called bad. you're a -- >> calmed dad. >> you're a local firefighter. 's had you got there, what did you see? >> she actually brought him over to me. i was at home, and his baby brother was sleeping at grandma's house. loaded him up, brought him to me. when he got to me he was real pale, vomiting and -- dg look very good. had i looked at his eye. it didn't look right. off to the left. not really reacting really well. >> as a firefighter, you knew to look in his eyes to see what the reaction was and knew something was up. loaded him up and took him to the hospital? >> well -- i started to head to the hospital. it was a little later in the afternoon, and the hospital is in traffic a little bit. i actually stopped at the closest fire station and had those guys help me out a little bit. >> all right. i want to talk a little more. heather, about what the doctors told you when you finally were starting to get this looked at. had they showed you pictures of this brain scan. we just looked at some of the pictures. showing you the pencil inside there, what were you thinking? >> i was freaking out, because no one no what it was. kept calling my mom. she september telling us, just the tip of the pencil. none of the doctors new. then you see far it went down in the scans. you get nervous, because it's right by the brain. >> it didn't go into the brain, right? >> went right by. >> i can't decide if this was the unluckiest or the luckiest kid ever. the chances having that go through the soft tissue and not hit anything major, you must be horrified and relieved at the same time. >> yeah. it was definitely -- insane. it was the craziest thing we've heard you just look at him -- >> he looks like a great little kid. wearing glasses to protect his eyes? >> yes. >> does he have any eyesight loss? how's he doing? >> he does. he has a little -- 2400 vision in one eye. doing good. tracking better. he's actually, back to his normal self. playing hockey again and back to school. so he's adjusted so well. >> keegan, when you were at the medical center, keegan, i don't know how talkative you are, 4 years old is a tough age, especially for predictability of toddlers toddle toddlers, did you get to meet hockey players at the hospital? >> who did you meet? >> did you meet -- >> he's shy. >> so shy. i'm telling you i got kids that age that could never even sit there. i want to bring in senior medical correspondent elizabeth cohen in atlanta this morning. elizabeth, how crucial was this surgery in removing this from this little guy's eye? it must have been a delicate procedure? >> absolutely. a call out to the surgeon, because that pencil, christine, was about a millimeter and a half away from his internal carotid artery. if it had gotten to that artery and poked it, he could have died, he could have bled out. in the surgery, the surgeon could have put it into that artery, but she didn't. she got it out safely. when she took it out, a gush of blood, made her extremely nervous. turned out it was blood from the initial injury, not blood from the internal artery and she controlled the blood. as you can see, he was fine. interesting. we asked the doctor, was this a complicated surgery ask she said, no. not really. it came out pretty easily. about half an hour. the real sort of anxiety time was making sure they didn't nick that artery. >> elizabeth, you're a mom, too. all the things you could think of that could happen to your kids, this is not one of them. how many times have you heard your mom say, better slow down, you're going to poke yourself in the eye. this little guy was just sitting there writing letters? >> wasn't running around anywhe anywhere. you never know. as the mother of three boys, christine, you will not be surprised to hear three quarters of the injures like this in children are boys. >> oh. great. says the mother of girls. elizabeth cohen, thank you. heath, heather and keegan tinsdale, thank you so much for bringing your story this morning. we are so glad that it's working out and hope he can recover more of that eyesight and everything works well with him. he's a cute little guy. looks tough. thanks, guys. have a great day. >> thank you. >> say bye. >> a great story. always a miracle, growing up as boy and with my boyfriends, how we made it this far without serious serious, serious injury. >> the day's still young, velshi. top stories just ahead and today's "romans' numeral." it's all about getting your name and message out there. that's the hint. it's 49 after the hour. ♪ [ cellphone rings ] cut! 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[ male announcer ] write your story with the new citi simplicity card. no late fees. no penalty rate. no worries. get started at citisimplicity.com. ♪ where the sun never goes out ♪ ♪ and the sky is deep and blue ♪ ♪ won't you take me american flight 280 to miami is now ready for boarding. ♪ there with you fly without putting your life on pause. be yourself. nonstop. american airlines. me-tying homer in the seventh with a walk-off grand slam in the 11th inning to give the texas rangers a 2-0 lead on the detroit tigers in the american league championship series. but as carol will tell you, it's not over until it's over. in the nlcs, albert pujols led 12-3 to even their series at 1-1. you're caught up on the day's headlines. "american morning" is back in 60 seconds. all right, welcome back. this morning's roman numeral. the number is 49%. >> the number of men in the world. >> that's good. that's a good guess. >> actually, a lot of different things. the percentage of people who said they have never heard of the occupy wall street movement. that's according to the orc international poll, which means 51% have. right? more than half have. >> if you are wuondering how ths compares to other things, the federal reserve chairman ben bernanke, more people know of the fed chief. >> and the occupy wall street, people will tell you the only reason 49% of people know it they feel like a lot of main stream media has avoided the issue. >> they have been after you a little bit about that. >> we haven't avoided the issue. we got a tweet three minutes ago saying why didn't you cover the arrest in boston. and credit to the occupy wall street folks, they have been going on so long about this, it's unignorable. >> more people know about occupy wall street than the fed chief. shows you the movement is really resonating. >> nobody would know ben bernanke, really. that doesn't surprise me. >> we ask you to talk back on one of the big stories of the day. the question for you this morning, are you sold on the president's jobs plan? this from edward. the close to trillion dollars allocated didn't create a lot of jobs. the government cannot create sustained economic value. businesses needs to create value. not throw money at a problem for political sake. estimates in the first round said it took about $250,000 to create one job. we would be better off giving that money to people who need it. this from renee. what is wrong with the rich paying more taxes? men and women around the country willing to work hard for their money. why is it okay for millionaires to not pay as many taxes when there are thousands of people in need of jobs. i'm sold on it and most americans sold on it. the problem the gop members of congress aren't shoeld on it and won't be until they're voted out of office. the world is quite aware that the gop protects the healthy on the once middle class. this from ann, this will give the economy the much-needed boost and we need construction workers need jobs. how many bridges have to fall before we do something to make them safer? pass the jobs bill. facebook.com/americanmorning. keep the conversation going. most polls do show that, i guess, 75 per % of americans ar the president's jobs bill and that's reflected in our comments this morning. >> the president saying he wants to take it straight to the american people but the people in the house and the senate who have to decide whether or not it happens. >> if it became a ground swell movement and folks really said let's push our congressman on it, but that doesn't seem to be happening at the moment. polls indicate people are in support of it, not doing anything to enforce it. >> hoping voters would put pressure on congress to do something, but that's not quite working. coming up ahead in the next hour, you still do have a choice. we'll tell you the top five jobs you can jump to if you want to get into an industry that's growing. and how are the chilean miners doing. all of theome talking about s l selling movie rights and never having to work again. life out of the mine, much different. we'll have a special update on their lives one year later. you're watching "american morning." it's 57 minutes after the hour. thank you so much, i appreciate it, i'll be right back. they didn't take a dime. how much in fees does your bank take to watch your money ? if your bank takes more money than a stranger, you need an ally. ally bank. no nonsense. just people sense. gives you a 50 percent annual bonus. so you earn 50 percent more cash. if you're not satisfied with 50% more cash, send it back! i'll be right here, waiting for it. who wouldn't want more cash? 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[ male announcer ] the new capital one cash rewards card. the card for people who want 50% more cash. what's in your wallet? sorry i'll clean this up. shouldn't have made it rain. i'm christine romans. the accused underwear bomber goes on trial this morning in detroit and plans to defend himself. a live report just ahead. you've got no game. i'm carol costello. the nba cancels the start of its season after labors and owners won't agree on a labor deal. 33 trapped miners were rescued one by one in chile. fast forward one year and we're finding out their struggles are far from over on this "american morning." good morning, everyone. it's october 11th, 2011. it's tuesday. it's also carol's birthday. happy birthday, carol. >> thank you so much. >> you're very grateful -- >> what did you get her? >> i can't say on tv. but the box is sitting outside. >> really. is it blue? >> what do you mean is it blue? >> i thought maybe he bought you a nice bracelet. mr. money bags over here. at least you don't have to defend yourself in court. a federal jury in detroit is set to hear opening statements in the trial of a nigerian man branded the underwear bomber. 24-year-old umar farouk abdullmu tallb is accused of trying to set off a bomb hidden in his underwear back on christmas day 2009. cnn's deb feyerick was covering it for cnn that night and she is now outside the federal courthouse in detroit. carol, this was a strange situation from day one and it continues to be strange. is it likely that he's going to be able to put up a good defense for himself? >> you know, that's what's so interesting. he initially fired his very qualified federal public defenders. that's a move that we do see repeated by some of these sort of would-be terrorists. he does have stand-by counsel, somebody who is basically in the wings to step in. even during jury selection abdulmutallab spoke once or twice. how much of an antibioticive, hands-on role he plans to take. the judge said he can represent himself. he's within his legal right and he seems able to stand and represent himself. so, we'll see how much of a voice he does plan to have in court. this as he faces a possible life sentence. innigerian graduate student turned accused suicide bomber is now acting as his own lawyer and already 24-year-old nigerian umar farouk mutallab is defiant. he invoked his jihadist as his mentor. anwar is alive, he shouted in court. saying, "the mujahadeen will wipe out the u.s.." >> when he got on a plane and came to the u.s., only two things were going to happen. he was either going to be dead or serve life in prison in the united states. >> reporter: defense lawyer ed mcmahon is not on this case, but has handled similar ones. >> the idea of giving one last speech or one last moment in the sun before he goes off to prissen for the rest of his life probably sounds appealing to him. >> reporter: abdulmutallab is accused of trying to detonate explosives in his underwear and blast a hole in the side of the plane. he waited until the plane was on its descent in order to cause maximum destruction. >> so, it doesn't take a lot. >> reporter: among those likely to testify, dutch passenger jasper, who was a row behind when he heard what sounded like a gunshot. >> i freaked, of course, and without any hesitation i just jumped over all the seats and i jumped to the suspect and he's trying to blow up the plane. >> reporter: also on the christmas day flight, patricia and her husband, bringing home their two newly adopted ethiopian children. >> as we heard the screams and we started to smell smoke and we saw the reaction of the flight attendants and then running with the fire extinguishers, we knew that our situation was dire. >> reporter: authorities were stunned at how easy it was for him to pass seemingly undetected through multiple airports. including ghana, lagos and amsterdam. officials believe the device was made by the same yemeni bombmaker responsible for bomb-filled printer cartridges sent to the u.s. last year and also a similar device used in the attempted assassination of saudi's head of counterterror m counterterrorism. and during opening statements today, prosecutors are expected to actually play videotape segments of abudmutallab shortly after he was arrested and he was talking to fbi agents. remember, he is the one that told the fbi he got and learned how to use it. his lawyer tried to getting those statements dismissed because he said at the time he was on pain killers because he had suffered serious burns to the area where he was carrying the bomb. so, there will be a lot of back and forth, but, again, both sides today have the chance to lay out their case as we get set for a month-long trial. ali? >> an interesting one. deb feyerick outside the federal courthouse in detroit. the protesters "occupy wall street" moving up to the east side this morning. plan to march outside the homes of millionaires and billionaires, including the ceo of jpmorgan chase and rupert murdoch. those millionaires are being targeted for a willingness to horde wealth at the expense of the 99%. we'll explain what that will mean in the conversation. last night things began to erupt in a sister march in boston. police moving in after they warned activists that they were in an area that was off limits. other protests planned nationwide this morning. apple co-founder steve jobs died of respiratory failure brought on by a pancreatic tumor. that's the official cause listed on his death certificate released monday. he died at his home in palo alto. it is now seven minutes past the hour, let's head to r atlan and check in with jacqui jeras who is watching a big storm out there. >> it's not a fun one either, guys. not terribly strong but we're watching this system across parts of the southeast at this time and really bringing in some lousy weather. very drizzly and occasional heavy downpours. you can see clouds from the panhandle of florida stretching into new england here and the rain coming down in richmond, raleigh. on and off there into the charlotte area and in atlanta a break right now and the second wave will come through by mid-day. the rainfall could be heavy in a few locations, especially across the appalachians. the next 48 hours we could potentially see as much as two to four inches in some of these spotty areas. remember, the ground is really saturated here in the carolinas. in particular, a very wet, late summer for you guys. a lot of standing water on some of the roadways. the northeast, most of your rain is going to come in later on tonight. most of your day should be a dry one. the nation's midsection mostly dry, as well. a few scattered showers you can't rule out and a big storm slammed in the pacific northwest early this week. that's making its way towards the mountains and this thing could cause severe weather in the plains. looking for major delays in atlanta later today d.c. metros and charlotte, foggen kansas city, seattle and portland some delays and san francisco could have some problems, just this morning, though, because of that fog. the corners of the country. northwest, southeast, everybody else pretty okay. >> thanks so much, jacqui. now is your chance to talk back on one of the big stories of the day. the question for you this morning, are you sold on the president's jobs bill? one, two, three, hit it, mr. president. >> let's put construction workers on the job. let's put teachers in the classroom. let's give small businesses a tax break. let's help our veterans pass this bill. let's meet our responsibilities. >> the president has said that, oh, a gazillion time in eight different cities and today the senate will take him up on it. the democratically controlled senate will debate the jobs bill. it extends unemployment benefits and provides money to hire more teachers and construction workers, you know, infrastructure jobs and posts a tax on millionaires to pay for it all. republicans, they have their own mantra. >> this week has shown beyond any doubt is that democrats would rather talk about partisan legislation that are actually passing legislation we know would create jobs. >> because of that tax increase on millionaires. but you knew that. what we want to know from you today is if you're buying what the president is selling. the talk back question today. are you sold on the president's jobs bill? facebook.com/americanmorning. i'll read your comments later this hour. all right, still to come this morning, one year after their joyful rescue unfolded on television screens around the world, many of those 33 chilean miners still haven't recovered from their 69-day ordeal underneath the surface. we'll talk to someone who has been following their progress and finding out what is still wrong, when we come back. fore! no matter what small business you are in, managing expenses seems to... get in the way. not anymore. ink, the small business card from chase introduces jot an on-the-go expense app made exclusively for ink customers. custom categorize your expenses anywhere. save time and get back to what you love. the latest innovation. only for ink customers. learn more at chase.com/ink and i swear by it. [ male announcer ] osteo bi-flex with 5-loxin advanced™. shows improvement in joint comfort within 7 days. osteo bi-flex. the #1 doctor and pharmacist recommended brand. welcome back to "american morning." it's 14 minutes past the hour. to hear nba commissioner david stern tell it, separating players and owners. among them, how to split $4.3 billion in league revenue, whether or not to impose a hard salary cap and the length and salary requirements for player contracts. >> we remain really very, very far apart on virtually all issues. >> we're not at that place where a fair deal can be reached between ourselves and the nba. and, you know, at this point, we're not sure how this will proceed. >> so, the big question this morning, could the entire nba season be in jeopardy? joining us now senior writer for espn the magazine. thanks so much for being with us. let's look first at the revenue sharing. the players agreed to share 53% of the revenue and the owners could have the rest. they were at 57%. so, why are the owners balking at this? >> the owners say they lost $300 million last season, the players disagree. the owners say 22 teams disagree. the players say six to eight teams lost money because they feel like the own oers are including deappreciation and interest and things like that. cooking the books, if you will. so, the players have offered to give back in going from 57% to 53% roughly $200 million a year out of that 300 that the owners are claiming to lose and they say if you come up with a robust sharing revenue plan you can meet the other $100 million and then you're not losing anything. the owners want to make a profit. they just don't want to break even. the small market teams, they want to make a profit and, so, that's why we have this. >> that sounds reasonable. i think to most americans when they hear the owners make or share less of the rev fwenue th the players, that's just weird. >> the players feel they understand everyone plays a role to make the nba successful, they should get more than 50% of the revenue, even if it's only 3% more. they also feel like if you go back to the history of the collective bargaining agreements, the players always end up giving, giving, giving. they feel like in six, seven years when they renegotiate the cba, if they accept 50% now, they'll be below 50% at 45%, 56%. >> the players are certainly making it seem like, you know, their side is the winning side. tweets have gone out. like i think hundreds of tweets have gone out. i'll just read some. this from king james which is, of course, lebron james. i want to sincerely say sorry to all the fans. it's a sad day for all of us. there's no us without you. love you guys. this strom steve nash. why are the owners unwilling to negotiate in good faith. i apologized to the fans in this position. this from dwyane wade, stern's words hurt the people who work at the aaa and other arenas, as well. as local businesses and our fans. whose side do you think fans are on? are they on the players' side? i have to tell you, right now in lebron james' case, many fans are still angry at him, you know, because of all the cleveland stuff. >> typically when you have a work stoppage, the players take the brunt of the criticism because the owners are faceless for the most part. nobody knows the owners and they see the players all the time. but now that you have social media, the players are able to kind of even the score, fw yif will. they can get out tweets and playing these exhibition games and these charity games and the fans are coming out and lots of hundreds of thousands of fans are watching and streamlining it on internet and stuff. so, i think the players have actually done a much better job in holding their own in the pr war this time around than they did in 1998. so, i really think the educated fan blames both, the owners and the players. neither one is getting off scott free, but not just on the players any more like it used to be. >> both sides are making a lot of money. you know what this strike really says. they can cancel the first two weeks of actual games, they're making too much money. they can afford to do this and survive. >> they may lose. if they miss the first two weeks, they'll lose about $200 million. >> unbelievable. thank you so much. we'll probably see you, again, at least i hope so. thanks. ali? >> thanks, carol. a year ago, you'll remember this. millions of us were riveted to tv screens as 33 trapped chilean miners were rescued from their underground hell one by one. they had been there for 69 days. a joyful ending to an unimaginable ordeal. something in the beginning we weren't sure they would make it through. fast forward 12 months and we're finding out many miners are suffering today. mentally and physically. joining us this morning from santiago, chile is jonathan franklin. the author of "33 men, a firsthand account of the miners' struggles." also exclusive access to the psychiatrist who is treating many of the miners and their post-traumatic stress syndrome. give me an update. you have just written about this, but what is the update on the state of most of these miners? >> i think the update is that people forget how much these men suffered. we all saw this triumphant rescue, but they were 17 days, basically slowly starving to death, dying this collective death and people don't realize the kind of trauma they had. very difficult for them to kind of develop a new lifestyle and get back on their feet. >> part of the reason people don't realize the trauma they had is on that day a year ago today we saw them come out and what seemed to be an intigz nation and an entire world supporting them. their government was there and they were getting free things and getting movie deals and book deals. it looked like they'd get care for the rest of their lives. what went wrong? >> i asked them to the miners themselves and they said we feel like oorphans. the world came to us and then they forgot about us. it has been a busy world with uprisings and tragedies around the world, but many people have simply forgotten about the chilean miners and people think because they were saved they're going to be okay. like a soldier that has been through too much combat. these guys lived something that nobody should have lived. i detail this in my book that these guys had 17 days where they are slowly, slowly collectively underground in the heat and humidity dying. yes, the rescue was triumphant, but a lot of psychological scars in the process. >> interesting that you're distinguishing between the 17 days and then the period after that. obviously, things were a little different in the days after that and a lead psychologist during the entrapment used a what a lot of people are calling now a very controversial method by sort of provoking them and pushing them. that's coming under some criticism, particularly from the psychiatrist you're talking to. tell me about this. >> well, basically, there is no rule book for how you keep people united. one of the things the chilean psychologist did is he deliberately provoked the men in the hopes that their unity would be directed against them. that they would not fight against each other and direct all this anger above ground at him. that certainly worked. he provoked them, they were angered. now we're starting to see had some of the fallouts from that. the men have all sorts of psychological issues that are not cured. they are not being well served by that kind of o attitude. >> what happens next? there is, in theory, a good deal of money coming to them from various deals. are some of these problems likely to be alleviated. from what i understand from your writing, many have good psychiatric care, but it's going to be a long time before they're better. >> well, there's two things going on here. one is that they're living in a pretty dire poverty right now. despite all this talk of being rich, they don't have that yet. fortunately, phoenix pictures, a very professional company, william morris is going to help them on their rights and getting their movie out there. they will make money eventually. but right now living day-to-day. you have the combination of psychological problems and plus, day-to-day poverty. >> jonathan, great conversation and great article you have written about this. 33 men, an account of the entrapment of the 33 miners. 23 minutes after the hour. 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"american morning" will be right back after this break. [ male announcer ] you've climbed a few mountains during your time. and having a partner like northern trust -- one of the nation's largest wealth managers -- makes all the difference. our goals-based investment strategies are tailored to your needs and overseen by experts who seek to maximize opportunities while minimizing risk. after all, you don't climb a mountain just to sit at the top. you lookround for other mountains to climb. ♪ expertise matters. find it at northern trust. good morning, welcome back to "american morning." 30 minutes past the hour. top stories for you now. opening statements begin this morning in detroit in the terror trial of accused underwear bomber umar farouk abdullmutallab. the entire nba season may now be in jeopardy. commissioner david stern canceled the first two weeks of regular season games after failing to get an agreement with players to end a lockout. the two sides remain very far apart on virtually all new issues. president obama's jobs bill faces the first vote in the senate later today and democrats control the senate, but no guarantee the bill will get the 60 votes needed to clear tonight's procedural hurdle. the president, in the meantime, speaking up the jobs plan speaking to supporters at a training center for electrical workers in pittsburgh. also today in detroit, we expect to hear from the council of business and labor leaders appointed by the president to recommend ways to create jobs. the council, as you probably know, is headed by ge chairman and ceo jeffrey imel. new schools and bridges through a streamlined approval process. the council also wants to reduce bureaucratic red tape and regulations for business. perhaps the most controversial idea is a plan to ease immigration rules for highly skilled foreign workers in those areas where the u.s. doesn't seem to educate and produce enough workers like engineering. >> a lot of people say, we have 15, 14 million people out of work and millions more underemployed and an education system that is really struggling to keep up with educating people like this. if you bring people in from the rest of the world, what is the incentive to produce? >> the counterargument to that, we just don't have enough people we are putting out in those fields in the united states. >> automatic visas, work visas for all students if they stay in the u.s. and do their work. >> which a lot of other countries do and seems to work. are you ready for some football? >> love this story. >> talking about hank williams, jr. he's not going out quietly. the country star was dropped from monday night football for comparing president obama to hitler. now, he's venting. in a new song called "keep the change." just released on the web. check it out. ♪ ♪ we know what we need we know who to blame ♪ ♪ united socialist states of america how do you like that name ♪ ♪ i'll keep the usa and you all can keep the shame ♪ >> it's catchy. he also called on espn and fox news accusing fox of twisting his words around and, you know, he accused them of one of those gotcha moments. >> i watched that interview. >> didn't seem gotchaish to me. he got a lot of time to talk and the more time he had, the more he talked. >> they gave him an ample opportunity -- >> supposedly he's on "the view" today. i'll be watching. coming up next, a blog sharing personal stories of americans who are hurt by the great recession. we'll speak to the co-editor of a new blog who is taking wall street protests to the web. 33 minutes after the hour. 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[ male announcer ] the same 117 elements do the fundamental work of chemistry. ♪ the difference, the one element that is the catalyst for innovation, the one element that changes everything is the human element. ♪ welcome back. just like many of the protests that have erupted around the world in the past year, the "occupy wall street" crowd is using social media to gain momentum. one tumbler blog has posts from people holding up signs sharing their stories about working long hours for little pay or about not having any work at all. joining us now is the co-editor of that tumbler site, priscilla grimm. priscilla is also an occupier. you spent a lot of time down there. thank you for being with us. >> thank you. >> let me ask you about something you put on the blog. you said, we are the 99%. we are getting kicked out of our homes. we are forced to choose between groceries and rent. we are getting nothing while the other 1% is getting everything. i think that's, that's a great description of some of the frustration that people are feeling. but you're sort of identifying it with 99% and clearly 1% that's doing very, very well and there's a big percentage of people who are what you just described. but there are a whole bunch of people who aren't. what percentage of the population do you think fits the description that you just gave? >> first off, i did not write that. chris who created the blog is the one who wrote that. i'm just supporting his efforts. it's amazing. we're all the 99%. the top 1% of wealth holders in the world, at least in the united states, have always had the wealth. when they and their families came over to america from wherever, they are the ones who came over with the most resources, with the most connections, with the most money, with the most land. they were the first landholders and first business holders and those are the people who are incompassed in the 1%. we're not talking about, you know, it's not talking about people who have worked very hard in their lives and have brought themselves up from incredible challenges to be successful individuals and successful americans. this is about the people who have always been a part in one way or another. >> you got involved and one of the things you're doing is helping with sort of the media outreach, the media message. how do you feel about the criticism of the occupy wall street movement? sort of criticisms that it hasn't got its message out well and then criticisms of us in the media to say we're not embracing it or covering it in the way we should. tell me about both of those thoughts. >> the occupy wall street movement is creating its own media. we don't have to depend on main stream media outlet to get the message through. i think it's accepted pretty much at this point that at least the foundations of the protests, the reasons that we're there is getting through. you know, the idea that corporations have run amuck and have larger control over our government and more of a say in our government than we do as people. i think that's very apparent, that's why we're there. i'm very confident that most of the american public is getting that message. we have video updates that are coming out daily through our media team. there's the occupy wall street journal which naomi klein just had a great article in. we're about to publish a national edition, pretty excited about that. >> what is your sense about the main stream media? aside from the fact that you and i are sitting here talking on a cable news show on cnn, generally speaking, do you feel that they have still pushed back or do you feel you're being fairly treated. >> i feel in today's day in age main stream media is just one part of the puzzle. the main stream media has its view on things and then the media that is coming out of the occupation is different. >> right. >> so, we both have our own opinions and we both have the same audience because of the internet. >> we do have the same audience, but some sense that main stream media in this country tends to be controlled by or owned by some of the interests that -- >> when you only have a handful of media outlets that are responsible for 85% of the news reporting that comes out, i think that's something that's unavoidable and it's a danger and you have advertisers that you need to keep happy. >> let's talk about some of the people who have blogged. your particular efforts are to sort of show these pictures as a nursing student. nursing a great profession to grow into. a woman who says, i'm studying to be a nurse because registered nurses make a good amount of money. my big dream is to be a fashion designer, but i am scared that isn't enough to succeed. i'm that 99%. a lot of these say somewhere in there that i am the 99%. a lot of student in the movement and they are concerned about their future. i would say to you, students have always been concerned about their future for little windows of time when you could graduate and get a great job and be paid a lot of money. >> we're all students. i'm not in my 20s any more. i am, you know, on the edge of 40. hanging to my youth by a thread and i am a graduate student right now. so, i mean, we are all students and we are all in some way affected by corporate control of our government and of our lives. i grew up in a small town in tennessee and when i grew up, it was, you know, a plethora of mom a and pop owned businesses and now when i go back to business, i look down the main row of the town i grew up in and it's all franchise corporately owned restaurants where young people who live in the community their only choices for jobs are to work for minimal wage or less at these restaurants. and that's not, that's not a living that sustainable and that people can actually move forward from. it's, you know, the mcjob trap. when i was in my 20s and we were told that, you know, we were slackers. that we didn't want to engage with the world, the working world. where in reality we were all looking for jobs really hard. they just weren't available and now they're telling kids in the same age range that, you know, you're entitled, you're overeducated. you're not used to working and the only thing between those two generations that made that not happen is a bubble. that's not sustainable and we deserve better. >> priscilla, thanks for articulating that so well. appreciate you coming to talk to us. >> co-editor of we are the 99% tumbler and also an occupier in the movement. thank you for being with us. we'll be right back. it is about 45 minutes after the hour. here are your morning headlines. markets open in about 45 minutes. right now u.s. stock futures are trading lower. investors are waiting for more news on the european pabailout fund. the senate expected to vote this evening on president obama's $447 billion jobs bill. the president wants to pay for this measure by imposing a new 5.6% surtax on anyone earning more than $1 million a year. someone republicans oppose. nba fan s crying foul. david stern canceled the first two weeks of the reg ler season. stern says the two sides are far apart on virtually every issue putting the rest of the season in jeopardy. blackberry outage. it is believed a server near london crashed leaving users without the instant messaging device and web browsing. that is the news you need to start your day. "american morning" back right after this break. so you earn 50 percent more cash. if you're not satisfied with 50% more cash, send it back! i'll be right here, waiting for it. who wouldn't want more cash? [ insects chirping ] i'll take it. i'll make it rain up in here. [ male announcer ] the new capital one cash rewards card. the card for people who want 50% more cash. what's in your wallet? sorry i'll clean this up. shouldn't have made it rain. what's vanishing deductible all about ? guys, it's demonstration time. let's blow carl's mind. okay, let's say i'm your insurance deductible. every year you don't have an accident, $100 vanishes. the next year, another $100. where am i going, carl ? the next year... that was weird. but awesome ! ♪ nationwide is on your side it is a mystery that has consumed the fashion industry. >> journalists and designers upon every clue who will lead them to the person that will succeed. >> did we build that up well? >> i have been laying in bed at night dreaming about who it might be. i have not been thinking about this, but alina cho has. >> i have a little bit. sad to admit. but it is all anybody is talking about in paris. you know, there hasn't been this much drama in fashion since john galialo was fired back in march. the biggest parlor game if the rumors are true. marc jacobs a famous american designer has the job already or does he? it's not just dior's future at stake here. it's the pride of france. this carousel of fashion on display at marc jacobs fashion may have been a wink and a nod to what's swirling around him. the rumors that he could be the next designer of christian dior. anti-semettic remarks got him fired back in march in the horse race to replace him, marc jacobs is in the lead. >> this all comes from the hands, you know, it's very human. he's very human. >> reporter: you know who has magic hands is marc jacobs. >> i heard about. >> reporter: magic hands. what do you say to that? >> no, i have normal hands. i have five fingers on each of them and one of them doesn't work very well. >> reporter: have you made a decision? may i ask you that? >> the ones who know aren't talking. >> reporter: he founded his fashion house in 1946. introducing flowers and vuluptuous shapes, far different from the boxy world war ii styles that had been in fashion. after he died, his assistant launching his career, but it was john galiano in the '90s that brought glamour back to the house of dior. for 23 years he worked with his right hand, bill gaten, now creative director of his own label and also designing dior until a permanent designer is named. how has that felt for you to be suddenly thrust into the limelight, as you have been? >> it was alarming at first because it was unexpected and it was a shock for everyone. getting used to it quickly. >> reporter: marc jacobs? >> did you like it? >> marc jacob has a tremendous following. he has the cool and also has the experience. >> reporter: in addition to his successful namesake label, jacobs has revitalized another brand. louis vuitton. >> suddenly the brand exploded because it was under the right people. and it was on the models and the actresses. >> reporter: the fashion world believe jacobs could do the same for dior. he reportedly wants $10 million a year, but if ever there was a try-out, insiders say he nailed it with this collection for vuitton. back stage it was emotional. one top editor called it a sweet farewell and a fashion moment to remember. so, when could we know for sure? i know we're all waiting for this. dior ceo said the world will know in several weeks when i asked him two, three, six, eight, he wouldn't say exactly when. remember, christian dior is more than just a fashion house, really part of the patrimony of france and it's a very big deal in fashion and, of course, i'll be watching closely and i'll keep you posted. >> that ceo's line was fantastic. applied to so many things in life, the people who know are not talking and the people who are talking, are not knowing. >> that is correct and that is a very, very good impression. >> that was -- can you say, v urbs i t uitton. >> it airs this saturday, october 15th at 2:30 p.m. eastern and has got me more interested in this than i ever thought i would be. plus, my wife thinks i'm smarter for watching it. >> thank you, alina. coming up next, the talk back question of the day. are you sold on the president's jobs bill? we have your responses next. first, today's human factor. dr. sanjay gupta introduces us to a man who helps us realize that food may be the best medicine. >> hans is a chef without a stomach or much of an esophagus. >> i had 11 surgeries in the last six years. >> reporter: you see he was diagnosed with gastric cancer just weeks after appearing in the 2005 season of the next food network star. >> there was a tumor sitting right at the stomach and esophagus. >> reporter: he had half of his stomach and most of his esophagus removed immediately after his diagnosis and then more operations, chemo, radiation, but eventually he was cancer free. that's when the headaches began. >> they saw 10 to 12 lesions and was told, this is it. you're on your way out. >> reporter: it wasn't cancer, but it was a serious brain infection caused by his newly constructed digestive system. >> i ended up springing a leak at that junction and that leak actually almost killed me. >> reporter: antibiotics got rid of the infection, but a year later a second one. worse than the first. both infections were so serious that doctors didn't want to risk him getting yet another one. at the end of this year, the rest of his stomach was gone. he eats six healthy small meals every day. which go directly into his intestines. >> the expression is you are what you eat, you know, it's cliche as it can be, and it's cliche because it is true. >> reporter: he wrote a cookbook while in the hospital after his first operation. for the last five years, he's been teaching fellow survivors how to incorporate healthy, cancerer-fighting foods into their diets. >> it's power and it's nrenergy and it's energy that our bodies can ready ass. >> reporter: surrounding himself with family and friends have helped him overcome every challenge so far. >> somehow you just have to find a little more strength just to keep going, keep going and keep going and here we are. i just had my six-year checkup and we're six years cancer free. >> reporter: dr. sanjay gupta, cnn, reporting. our 4 new rich & hearty soups really have people talking... [ guy ] ring, ring. progresso... i love your new loaded potato with bacon. that's what we like to hear. ring, ring. progresso... ...switch our phone service? ...no, i think we're pretty happy with our phones. [ male announcer ] progresso. you gotta taste this soup. (announcer) everything you need to stretch out on long trips. residence inn. you can't change the way banking works. just accept it, man. free ? doesn't close at five ? try nature. it's a bank. what do you want, a hug ? just accept it. hidden fees, fine print, or they'll stick it to you some other way. stay with the herd, son. accept it. just accept it. accept it. just accept it. accept it. if we miss this movie, you're dead. if you're stuck accepting banking nonsense, you need an ally. ally bank. no nonsense. just people sense. now it's time for our talk back question of the day. this was the question for you. are you sold on the president's jobs plan? this is from james. at least the president is trying to do something to help the middle class and give students like me a fighting chance. occupy wall street folks need to gather enemies and march on congress, as they are doing nothing to help the middle class. telling my teachers are lazy, overpaid and making them the bad guys. james, we do take your point seriously.

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