Transcripts For KPIX CBS This Morning 20140820 : comparemela

Transcripts For KPIX CBS This Morning 20140820



beheading of james foley by an islamic extremist. >> militants say they executed foley in retaliation for u.s. air strikes in iraq. >> a nice of protests in ferguson briefly turning into a tense confrontation. >> authorities believe that they were successful. >> i believe there was a turning point made. >> in arizona, rising waters resulting in dramatic rescues after heavy monsoon-like rains. >> as much as 8 inches fell in some areas. >> it was like the beginning of watching noah or something. >> in california firefighters are gaining ground on a wildfire near yosemite national park. the fire scorched more than 300 acres of land. >> in the middle east more rocket fire. air strikes after peace talks failed. >> texas governor rick perry formally booked on felony charges. >> i'm going to fight this injustice with every fiber of my being, and we will prevail. >> a tense hostage situation in chicago. two officers were wounded. the suspects took six children. four have been released. >> beer drinkers beware. there could be something in your corona. the company is recalling batches of bottled beer. >> all that -- >> dash cam video shows a motor motorcyclist slam into a sedan. >> looks like a stunt. >> lance robler right up to you. >> good catch. >> and all that matters. >> the worker at a new jersey store offers real inspiration for staying on the job. >> yes, he's 101 years old. >> how long are you going to continue working? >> as long as i have the strength to do it i'll do it. >> on "cbs in morning." >> bob schieffer is here to take the challenge. >> heavens! >> this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs almost to "c welcome to "cbs this morning." president obama today is expected to address a new and vicious threat from isis. u.s. officials believe the islamist terror group beheaded an american reporter and a second american hostage could be next. >> an online video from isis shows a man believed to be james foley with his head cut off. a message in english appears saying the execution is in retaliation for u.s. air strikes on isis forces in iraq. foley was captured in november, 2012, while covering a civil war in syria. a year earlier he appeared on cbs talking about another kidnapping when he was detained for 45 days in libya. >> foley's mother released a statement last night saying she has never been prouder of her son. diane foley called on the kidnappers to release other hostages saying like jim, they are innocents. they have no control over american government policy in iraq, syria or anywhere in the world. cbs news senior security contributor mike morell is in washington. he was deputy cia director when foley was taken, mike, good morning. >> good morning, norah. >> how do you think the u.s. will respond? >> so i think what isis is trying to do here, norah, is intimidate the united states into backing off of the attacks that we've done the last several weeks. and i think our response should be and our response will be to not do that. in fact we should -- we should pick up the pace here. the definition of terrorism, norah, is political violence. violence for political effect. so we should mark this date down because this is isis' first terrorist attack against the united states. >> mike you briefed president bush after daniel pearl was murdered in 2002. what was his reaction at the time and what are you expecting we hear from president obama when he speaks today? >> his reaction was what you would expect it to be. there was empathy for the family and friends of daniel pearl. there was disgust at the way the execution occurred. and there was reinforcement in his belief that the people we were dealing with were evil. and i wouldn't be surprised if president obama reacts exactly the same way. >> mike take us behind the scenes, since you've been in the national security apparatus, about what's going on the decision-making. if you look and say we're not going to show it it's far too gruesome, but there is that man in black on the tape. he speaks in english. does that suggest there might be westerners involved? what's the thinking behind the scenes? >> norah, we know that there are a large number of foreign fighters who have gone to syria and who have joined the fight for isis. they are both in syria and they're in iraq. a number of those are americans. a number of those are europeans who have passports where they do not need visas to get to the united states. so this is the main danger that isis now poses to the united states. isis could send those individuals back to the united states to conduct attacks. that is the number one thing we need to worry about. >> and isis mike says they're holding another american hostage. how does the u.s. handle that? >> we need to keep moving forward with our policy. i would suspect that isis may assassinate him. but we need to keep moving forward. we cannot let something like this stop us. >> mike morell thank you so much. >> you're welcome. and this morning iraq's foreign minister called isis savage and a threat to the world. he asked for international support as iraq's government tries to drive isis out. charlie d'agata is in erbil, a region still under threat from the militants who control much of northern iraq. charlie, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. to the iraqis the only way to remove that global threat is by defeating isis militants here but they made clear they cannot do it alone. we saw that for ourselves out at the dam. isis held it for almost two weeks. finally fought for five days facing kurdish forces iraqi forces and american air strikes before they were defeated. but we also saw the impact of those air strikes. isis vehicles tried to take cover under trees were completely destroyed and the reason why those craters nearby. now everybody is waiting for isis to regroup and attack again. in the meantime they're still holding large parts of territory in iraq including mosul and the longer they hold it the harder it is to take it back. jeff. >> charlie, thank you very much. in ferguson missouri another round of late-night protests met a forceful police response. officers arrested at least 47 people overnight and seized three handguns from demonstrators. community leaders are working hard to diffuse the violence and the top officer at the scene says the situation, he says is at a turning point. mark strassmann is in ferguson where attorney general eric holder meets this morning with local officials. mark, good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning. fewer protesters were out last night, which was overall better but hardly peaceful. no tear gas, no shots fired, no molotov cocktails. also no sign these protests are going away. >> hands up don't shoot. >> reporter: what began as a peaceful night of protest shifted into yet another street battle as protesters began launching bottles in the direction of officers. >> the criminals embedded themselves and hid behind media. they threw urine on officers and that's what caused officers to take action and begin to make arrests. >> those responsible were removed one by one. police used pepper spray to scatter the crowd but no rubber bullets were fired. >> those small steps are going to turn into giant steps. those giant steps are going to be great strides for this community. >> reporter: this on the eve of a visit from the nation's top law enforcement official u.s. attorney general eric holder. in an op-ed published in the "st. louis post dispatch" holder said the justice department intends to learn in a fair and thorough manner exactly what happened. but frustration has long since boiled over. >> we feel like animals. they were just throwing tear gas at us. please bring us justice down here when you come down. >> reporter: tommy pearson is a missouri state representative and long-time local pastor. >> when the crowd says no justice, no peace, in attorney general holder do they see justice? >> i think they see justice in him. after all, for us, we got our freedom through the federal government, not states. >> reporter: holder, the nation's first black attorney general, also addressed the issue of race which is at the heart of the ferguson protests. arrest patterns must not lead to disparity treatment under the law and police forces should reflect the diversity of the communities they serve. according to data from the missouri attorney general, blacks are three times more likely than whites to be stopped by police in ferguson and twice as likely to be searched or arrested. >> it's more than michael brown. when you compile sewage on top of people and you put your foot on their neck every single day and you take away their child and tell them you can't do nothing about it we're going to leave him out here like a carcass, people are going to react. >> reporter: these national guardsmen have joined the security presence because local and state police have been overwhelmed. later today a local grand jury will begin hearing evidence in the shooting death of michael brown. his family has scheduled his funeral for monday. >> okay mark thank you so much. holder also states in this morning's opinion piece that in some cases individuals from outside of ferguson are to blame for the unrest. one out of state protester was arrested for a third time overnight but st. louis county's numbers show 38 of the 52 people arrested monday night are from missouri, the remaining 14 come from other states. the seemingly aggressive mill tarization of ferguson prompted the pentagon to release a surplus of military equipment given to st. louis county. on the list seven humvees including two belonging to ferguson, three helicopters, 12 rifles and six pistols. another police shooting just a few miles from ferguson nearly boiled over on tuesday. st. louis police officers responded to a 911 call at a convenience store robbery. they confronted a 23-year-old black man with a knife and shot him to death. local residents swarmed the police chief as he tried to explain. >> calm down let's listen to him. >> hey, listen to me. let the chief talk. we're going to get the answer now. >> so this is what i heard from the witnesses -- >> be quiet! quiet! >> listen, man. listen, man. come on y'all. >> when the officers get there, he pulls out the knife. the officers got out of their car and didn't have their guns drawn but then the suspect pulled out the knife in what they said was an overhand grip. that's what i know so far. then he walked -- >> let him talk, man, let him talk. >> police say the man rushed toward the officers saying quote, "shoot me now." a witness claims the man also said "you'll have to kill me." two kids and two adults remain hostages in a chicago suburb. police in harvey illinois, say four children have already been released from this home. the drama began yesterday afternoon when police responded to a robbery call. one robber shot and wounded two officers. they're recovering this morning. negotiators are continuing talks with the two hostage takers. it is monsoon season in arizona and it sure looks like it right now. this morning people are bracing for more stormy weather and dangerous flooding. in the phoenix area emergency crews rescued drivers stranded in their cars on tuesday following torrential rains. they also helped people trapped in their homes surrounded by rushing water. christina estes of our affiliate kpho is in phoenix with more dramatic pictures. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. at one point yesterday 1 inch of rain fell in just 15 minutes. to give you some perspective that's what we're used to here in the phoenix area in the entire month. the flooding left many people stranded. as you'll see, led to some dramatic rescues. after nearly 5 inches of rain fell near phoenix, a surge of rushing water flooded roads and low-lying neighborhoods. when a barrier meant to hold back a nearby river failed it sent a wall of water in tracie tomlinson's home lifting it off its foundation and moving it more than ten feet. >> i got on the phone with 911 and called them right away. >> reporter: desperate for help she waved a white sheet out the window in hopes of attracting the attention of rescuers. >> i had thoughts about not making it but i was going to do whatever it took to try to get us out of there. >> reporter: emergency crews moved in to make an aerial rescue, but as the rain stopped, the water receded and they were able to guide tomlinson on foot to dry land. nearby nearby, another rescue team helped an elderly woman strapped in a small van struggling to pull her to safety through a rapidly moving current. >> suddenly the water came through. it was like the beginning of watching noah or something. >> reporter: a 15-mile stretch of the i-17 freeway was closed as it quickly turned into a river of mud, stranding many motorists. >> when i first started to go through, it wasn't that deep. maybe 6 to 8 inches. and then after getting a little further through, it quickly rose to probably i would say about 2 1/2 feet. >> reporter: the rain forced authorities to close or restrict traffic on nearly two dozen roadways and kaugsdcaused the evacuation of a mobile home park and one elementary school. >> since the river is over there and it got really flooded. and then the sidewalk got flooded so they moved us to the library. >> reporter: fortunately no one here in the west hurt during yesterday's flooding but we are in the middle of the monsoon season where we can see these fast-moving strong storms. more rain is in the forecast so we could see more flooding in the near future. >> all right, christina, thank you so much. a wildfire that forced evacuations near yosemite national park is under control this morning. the fire near oak hearst california, destroyed eight buildings. more than 1,000 people were forced to leave. the fire already burned one square mile. it's now 35% contained. several members of the grand jury that indicted texas governor rick perry say they're offended by the allegation their decision was politically motivated. perry was booked yesterday on charges of abuse of power, but the possible presidential candidate put the best face he could on while getting his mug shot. anna werner is at the travis county justice center in austin. anna, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the governor has hired a team of lawyers and plans to fight the charges, which he says are politically motivated. the scene was like a political rally. supporters cheering on the governor as he approached the court house. >> i'm going to enter this courthouse with my head held high knowing the actions that i took were not only lawful and legal, but right. >> reporter: the longest serving governor in texas was photographed and his fingerprints taken as he was booked on two felony charges. prosecutors say the governor's attempts to force travis county district attorney rosemary lehmberg lehmberg, a democrat to resign. last year she was pulled over for drunk driving. police found her blood alcohol level was over three times the legal limit. she later pleaded guilty. governor perry wanted her to resign. she refused so perry used his veto power to cut $7.5 million from her office's public integrity unit a move he defended in front of the courthouse. >> this indictment is fundamentally a political act that seeks to achieve at the courthouse what could not be achieved at the ballot box. >> reporter: but texas democrats say it's perry who's playing politics. >> they wanted to make sure that they could do whatever they want in austin. the only check against that authority is the public integrity unit's office. that's why they have been trying to shut down funding on this for years. >> reporter: perry, a potential 2016 contender, says he won't let the indictment slow him down. in the next few weeks he's scheduled for appearances in iowa, south carolina and new hampshire, all battleground states. on tuesday, his pac released this ad which highlights lehmberg's arrest video. it's called "setting the record straight" and asks supporters for donations. so what does a governor do after getting his mug shot taken? well, less than an hour after that governor perry posted on twitter that he was out grabbing some ice cream at a local stand. >> anna thank you so much. a new possible threat concerning the spread of ebola in the u.s. this morning. a woman is in a sacramento hospital held for possible exposure to the virus. hospital officials haven't said where or when the infection may have occurred. the cdc will test the patient's blood. results from another possible case of ebola in new mexico could come out today. israel and hamas are exchanging a barrage of rocket strikes after the cease-fire collapsed again. israel carried out some 60 air strikes on gaza targets after hamas fired rockets into israel on tuesday. hamas says the home of its military leader was targeted. his fate is unknown. israel withdrew its delegation from the cairo peace talks yesterday and called about 2,000 reserve soldiers back up for duty. army sergeant bowe bergdahl wants to get on with his life. that's according to his lawyer eugene fidel. he says the former taliban p.o.w. plans to leave the army and go to college once the investigation into his disappearance wraps up. critics claim bergdahl willingly left his base five years ago before he was captured. a report on the army probe is due out next month. massive landslides killed at least three dozen people this morning in western japan. torrents of mud crushed homes while people slept. several people are still missing this morning. a month's worth of rain fell in just 24 hours, about 9 inches. the mud knee deep in many areas and more rain is expected. >> incredible pictures. it's 7:19. ahead on "cbs this morning" the energy break through that's back firing. how solar power low clouds and fog moving well onshore this morning. a pretty strong sea breeze out there but not as damp as it was yesterday. still, some patchy drizzle outside. you see the clouds over the golden gate bridge right now in san francisco and russian hill. looks like as we head toward the afternoon, they are going to pull back to the coastline. we are seeing some showers in southern california. we are going to keep things dry for the most part. some of 70s and 80s inland. 60s and 70s around the bay? >> 60s at the coastline, and warmer toward the weekend. sponsored by target. expect more, pay less. outrage among the world's best athletes. >> ahead, how women in sock rer outrage among some of the world's best athletes. >> the news is back on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news. this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. n. 0% apr financing on a bunch of models. annual and it's right now. they're having fun. you can get all kinds of deals. come on down. yeah, you better hurry in. you 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>> that's the real question. welcome back to "cbs this morning." charlie and gayle are off. coming up in this half hour a new controversy over solar power. is literally flaring up. birds are getting ignited and then falling from the sky. we're going to take you to the california desert for this crisis. china is going far beyond just saying no. we'll look at a nationwide drug crackdown. the latest casualties jackie chan's son. but first, we have the morning's headlines with ben tracy. we're going to begin with the "washington post" which takes a look at plummeting support for national educational standards. a new survey by education next which supports school reform finds only 53% of americans approve of the so-called common core. now that is down from 65% last year. less than half of all teachers say they support it. the survey also finds 80% of americans disapprove of our nation's public schools. usa today reports the national rifle association is going after former new york city mayor michael bloomberg. the nra created an anti-bloomberg ad campaign that kicks off today. bloomberg is a vocal gun control advocate who claims to spend $50 million of his own money on the effort. now the nra ads portray bloomberg as an elitist that is out of touch with average americans. and an nra official called him an airrrogant hypocrite who thinks knows what is best for people's lives. "the new york times" says car service uber is putting president obama's campaign manager in the driver's seat. david fluk is the new director. he plans to run communication effort there's like he would run a political campaign. the goal is to attract customers and impress regulators. now the private car service is facing pushbacks from taxi drivers unions as it rapidly expands. "the wall street journal" says the nfl has a message for any potential super bowl halftime performers. show us the money. a record $1151 115.3 million watched bruno mars shake his stuff last year. this year's performers are being asked to give league some of the money they make when they head back out on tour. now potential accounts including cold play katie perry, and rihanna. >> my guess is that's going to go over like a lead balloon. >> i would think. so maybe they can make a donation to charity instead of giving the nfl the money. >> if i was a performer, i would argue i want the same amount in time the commercial gets. how much you're getting for a commercial, pay me. >> is it $5 million a 170,000 sets of mirrors the size of garage doors called hilio stacks. >> how much power do you get from each one? >> this will fuel 140,000 california home. so effectively, one hilostack can power one california home. >> tom doyle is the ceo of nrg, the company behind this $2.2 billion solar xbroekt. it's now under fire because the heat it produces up to 900 degrees, is charring the feathers of birds flying through. often causing them to crash and die. workers on site call them streamers because of the smoke plume created when they ignite in mid air. in a report on avian mortality, federal investigators found the solar farms may act as a mega trap attracting insects which in turn attract insect eating birds which are then incapacitated. more than 500 birds have died at one plant and 1,000 more are expected to die every year at another. >> they found mortalities at all three solar technologies. and they found a wide range of bird species being killed. >> reporter: bird often have a hard time navigating traditional barriers such as airplanes and windows. wind farms kill more than 100,000 birds each year. but solar farms are a new obstacle. one solar company spent $22 million to protect and relocate hundreds of rare desert tortoises and is now worried about the birds. in a statement the company said "we are evaluating the use of humane avian deterrent systems similar to those employed by airports." other solar fields have plans for the california desert which is on a well known flight path for migrating birds, eagles and falcons. so right now there is no solution but the solar plants plan to experiment with everything from light, sound and even drones to try to scare the birds away so they can keep up on them. >> 900 degrees? >> 900 degrees. >> wow. thank you. this morning the son biggest anti-drug crackdown in two decades. >> reporter: china's state broadcaster released this video showing police inside the home of 31-year-old actor j.c. chan during the drug bust. chan who is wearing plaid says this has been here two years. what's the drug the official asked? marijuana. inside the house, they recovered a quarter pound of marijuana. chan's superstar father jackie chan famous for his action-packed films is also known here in china for standing up against drug abuse. he was the spokesperson for a chinese anti-drug group in 2009. earlier this summer china's president warned authorities to beware of the danger of drugs calling on them to adopt forceful measures to wipe them out. as the gap between rich and poor grows, chi vowed to crack down on everything from bureaucracy to hedonism. prostitution rings have been raided. a popular tv anchor has been detained amid suspicions of misconduct and in the last year and a half, more than a quarter million communist party members have been disciplined for everything from adultery to embezzlement. the anti-corruption campaign has gone to the top of government netting the former domestic security czar and one time top communist party official. the drug busts including the one targeting j.c. chan have focused on beijing where 7800 people have been caught in the both foreigners and chinese for drugs. >> thank you. a world cup battle on the field could soon be heading off the field. why some of the world's top i don't just make things for a living i take pride in them. so when my moderate to severe chronic plaque psoriasis was also on display, i'd had it. i finally had a serious talk with my dermatologist. this time, he prescribed humira-adalimumab. humira helps to clear the surface of my skin by actually working inside my body. in clinical trials, most adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis saw 75% skin clearance. and the majority of people were clear or almost clear in just 4 months. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal events, such as infections, lymphoma or other types of cancer have happened. blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions and new or worsening heart failure have occurred. before starting humira, your doctor should test you for tb. ask your doctor if you live in or have been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. tell your doctor if you have had tb, hepatitis b are prone to infections, or have symptoms such as fever fatigue, cough, or sores. you should not start humira if you have any kind of infection. make the most of every moment. ask your dermatologist about humira, today. clearer skin is possible. ♪ ♪ ♪ i think the sun might be shining ♪ ♪ just a little more bright ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ i think the stars might be hanging ♪ ♪ just a little more high ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ come on, love ♪ ♪ a new day is calling, and it feels so right ♪ [ female announcer ] with ingredients like roasted hazelnuts skim milk and cocoa, there's a whole lot of happy in every jar of nutella. spread the happy. what if there was a credit card where the reward was that new car smell and the freedom of the open road? 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(vo) the longest-lasting midsize sedan in its class. introducing the all-new subaru legacy. it's not just a sedan. it's a subaru. good morning from the traffic center. let's take you to conditions through the south bay. westbound 237 at matilda accident clearing still very slow-and-go as you work your way through there. north 101 also seeing some delays. north 101 slow-and-go through san jose as well as 280 northbound sluggish, gets a bit better through the peninsula a live look at west 237 into milpitas. you can see traffic very slow as you make that connector road there. that's a look at your morning drive. here's lawrence with the forecast. >> a lot of clouds gianna, just patchy drizzle not as wet as yesterday but out the door into san jose, you see partly cloudy skies. we are going to see a whole lot of sunshine by the afternoon except along the coastline. locked in with low clouds and fog there. 60s toward the beaches, mild inside the bay, 60s and 70s. and 70s and 80s inland. female narrator: the mattress price wars are on at sleep train. we challenged the manufacturers to offer even lower prices. now it's posturepedic versus beaut with big savings of up to $400 off. serta icomfort and tempur-pedic go head-to-head with three years' interest-free financing. plus, free same-day delivery, set-up and removal of your old set. when brands compete, you save. mattress price wars are on now at sleep train. ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it is wednesday, august 20th, 2014. welcome back to "cbs this morning." real news ahead, including a testy governor chris christie. he swears new jersey's other boss is still a fan. >> mark this date down because this is isis' first terrorist attack against the united states. >> that video shows a man believed to be james foley with his head cut off captured while covering the civil war in syria. >> fewer protesters were out last night which was overall better but hardly peaceful. >> at one point yesterday, one inch of rain fell in just 15 minutes. the flooding left many people stranded. >> the governor has tired a team of lawyers and plans to fight the charges which he says are politically motivated. >> israel and hamas are exchanging a series of rocket attacks after the cease-fire is broken again. >> federal wildlife officials want to pause their expansion. >> chan is accused of something called accommodating drug users which is a more serious charge than drug consumption. for months players have protested the decision by feeifa arguing it would never allow synthetic fields for are a men's cup. >> that looks like you injured yourself. >> can you do a split like that? >> well when i used to drink. >> this morning's "eye opener@8" presented by panera bread. good morning, i'm norah o'donnell. isis says it beheaded 40-year-old american journalist james foley because the u.s. attacked its forces in iraq. in a graphic video showing the apparent execution, isis says president obama's actions will decide if another kidnapped american journalist will live or die. >> foley spent years covering wars in the middle east. he spoke with cbs news in 2011 after he was kidnapped for the first time and held for weeks in libya. he was kidnapped again in syria 21 months ago. earlier on "cbs this morning," we asked the former cia deputy director mike morrell how the u.s. should respond to foley's killing. >> we should pick up the pace here. the definition of terrorism is political violence violence for political effect. we should mark this date down because this is isis' first terrorist attack against the united states. >> president obama is expected to respond to foley's death later today. attorney general eric holder is on his way to ferguson missouri at this hour to talk with local officials and investigators looking into the police killing of michael brown. peaceful demonstrations flared up again late last night with dozens of protesters who wouldn't leave. officers chased them down arresting 47 people and seizing handguns. meanwhile, the st. louis county prosecutor's office says it will start presenting evidence to a grand jury this morning. that process could lead to criminal charges against the officer who shot michael brown. cbs news legal analyst jack ford is with us. good morning. grand jury evidence being presented. what do you think will happen? is. >> well, what happens is this. grand jury consists of 12 people and grand jurors listen to basically one side of a case. although the police officer has been invited to come and testify, if he chooses to. at the end of that, you have to remember, grand jury is not a trial jury. they don't decide guilty or not guilty. all they decide is is there probable cause to believe that a crime has been committed and that this defendant was involved in it. if they say yes, if 9 of 12 of them say yes, then charges are filed and then it would move on to the trial process. it is going to take probably a couple weeks. they're going to be very careful and deliberative about this. but you don't know what's going to. come out of this because we still don't know what each side has in terms of facts. >> "new york times" reporting officer wilson sustained an injury during this struggle in the car. how does that potentially impact the case? >> what it does is it gives some hard evidence for the police officer to justify his position saying, look i was defending myself. remember, the defense is self-defense. the shooting took place and the young man tragically died. question is whether he should be criminally responsible. remember george zimmerman very quickly showed the damage the injuries that he had to his head in the confrontation with trayvon martin. that became very significant ultimately for jurors when they decided that it was indeed self-defense. so does this mean yes, indeed self-defense will prevail? no. but it does give the police officer something to point to in terms of physical fact. >> i'm curious how you would argue on behalf of the police officer. you keep saying self-defense is the defense. we read an op sed in the "washington post" where an officer wrote in and said if i'm a cop, if you don't want to get hurt, don't challenge me. i think a lot of people are wondering is that a reasonable defense? >> when you talk about self-defense obviously depends on facts and circumstance here. there is no doubt that the shooting took place. no doubt that the man died. the question is what prompted it? was the young man the aggressor and the police officer had to act in self-defense? if that's the case then he has something he can argue. it will be interesting to see whether he will in front of the grand jury. he is given that ability. at some point in time your defense is self-defense you have to tell your story in some fashion or the other. the decision for his lawyer might be, do we tell it sooner rather than later, in the hopes of, if the grand jury does believe what he's saying there may be no charges coming out of. or do you wait if you get indicted, tell your story at a trial. one of the big issues here is when we will hear from the police officer as he offers up this defense of self-defense. >> jack ford for us thank you very much. governor chris christie showed who's the boss in a heated argument over bruce springsteen. at a local town hall meeting yesterday, a woman confronted the governor about his use of springsteen's music before the start of his public events. >> i was under the impression, i thought i heard that bruce asked that none of his music was played at your events because he didn't believe in your politics. >> no never did that. no, you're wrong. in fact i saw bruce just a week and a half ago. >> you were dancing with bon jovi maybe in the hamptons? >> no, that i was doing this weekend. i was dancing with jamie foxx. if you're going to be cute we should get the story right. no, listen. i know him and you're wrong. i understand you're now expressing your anger. you're now expressing your politics and your ox and that's fine. don't put it in mr. springsteen's mouth. put it in yours. i know and i've spoken to bruce an you're wrong. you're absolutely wrong. maybe, guys just when i leave, just so we can have this lady be a little calmer, let's play bon jovi on the way out. if you want to debate, run for governor and then i'll debate you. i'm not debating you nop. >> if you're going to be cute get the story right. >> for the rest of the town hall meeting the woman stood with a sign saying indict. >> she sounded like a reporter. >> but was she write? >> she was biased on one side yes, clearly. not a wall flower though. safe to say. ahead on "cbs this morning," women are launching businesses in record numbers. we'll look at the challenges they fac >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener @ 8 brought to you by panera. " brought to you by panera. most ad agency was love this free publicity. >> ice bucket bring it on! >> i haven't seen this ice bucket challenge. is this a new thing? it's new? it's brand new thing? a list actors spreading the challenge worldwide. we'll ask the editor of advertising agents and other agencies can strike ice cold gold. >> wow. >> yeah. that's next on "cbs this morning." 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[ male announcer ] new oscar mayer deli fresh bold. made with 100% turkey breast and real cajun spices. what if there was a credit card where the reward was that new car smell and the freedom of the open road? a card that gave you that "i'm 16 and just got my first car" feeling. presenting the buypower card from capital one. redeem earnings toward part or even all of a new chevrolet, buick, gmc or cadillac - with no limits. so every time you use it you're not just shopping for goods. you're shopping for something great. learn more at buypowercard.com the best part of coming together is how delicious it can be. hershey's s'mores, the unmistakable taste that reminds us that life is delicious. here we go. ready, bob? one, two, three! >> it's cold. >> it's really cold. >> like how cold? >> it is so cold. >> breaking news it is so cold. bob schieffer getting the cold shoulder at our affiliate wusa. the ice bucket challenge is making more than just a splash on social media, it's creating a jackpot bringing in about $23 million for the fight against als, lou gehrig's disease. other groups are trying to get in on that action and it could change the way we look at fund-raising and advertising. abby clausen is the editor of "advertising >> 2.4 million videos related to the ice bucket challenge. you look at a facebook feed these days and 70% of it is ice bucket challenges. >> that's what it feels like. >> seriously. >> surprised by this? >> i think everybody's surprised by it. i mean there's clearly some really key ingredients that went into making this a success. things that marketers will learn from. for example, it was simple. it wasn't over complicated. they weren't asking people do something that was really complicated yet it was real le fun to watch. so people got into it. fun to see your friends and celebrities get doused by a bucket of cold water. then thirdly, it was really social. inherently social. by tagging with your friends, issuing the challenge to them. it just spread like wildfire. >> you see lots of ad agencies trying to do sufficient that will go viral, then they fail. >> that's right. what's interesting about this i think, because we were just talking about how hard it is to predict viral success. what als did really successfully was they paid attention and they were listening. they didn't start the ice bucket challenge. but because they noticed it starting to take off they said okay, this is something we can use to our advantage. they got into it and really galvanized their members. now it's become synonymous with als. one of the things i think marketers can do a better job of is really pay attention to what's happening on social media and the conversations that are out there and saying what's our opportunity to get in here. >> that's a really smart point. yeah. >> when i was reading about this challenge, i also heard a term i've never heard up before. slacktivism. the idea that people may be doing these vie value videosral videos but actually not donating. >> i think we'll see a few spring-up. i think there is one around suicide prevention getting a pie in the face. but i think -- i'm sort of hoping that there will be something new that we won't see just a ton of rip-offs of this particular meme i guess. but it does come back to paying attention and figuring out what's the opportunity fobr your brand. the other thing here it is for charity. people don't want to be showing for are a marketer that's trying to sell them things. >> i'm also told bob schieffer has ice bucket challenged our cbs news news president david rhodes and also scott kelly. the ice bucket challenge continues. >> thank you. you can add one more time to the ice bucket brigade. george takei boldly went where a lot of people are going these days. this morning he's right here in studio 57 with the revealing new documentary. that's ahead right here on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by mercedes-benz. engineering some of the most advanced vehicles on the road today. corrects for lane drifting and if necessary it will even brake all by itself. it is a luxury suv engineered to get you there and back safely. for tomorrow is another fight. the 2015 m-class. see your authorized dealer for exceptional offers through mercedes-benz financial services. ♪ turn around! ♪ ♪ every now and then i get a little bit tempted ♪ ♪ by the chocolate all around ♪ ♪ turn around brian! ♪ ♪ this bar has protein oh yeah!♪ [ female announcer ] fiber one. ♪ ♪ ♪ hershey's spreads. bring the delicious taste of hershey's chocolate to anything - everything. with hershey's spreads, the possibilities are delicious. women are starting businesses faster than ever. close to 1300 a day. it is not easy. women often have to rely on their own money to get off the ground. we found one group hoping to turn their passion into profit. >> welcome to our company. we provide a curated shopping experience for the active woman. >> alice son doris has two minutes to pitch a company she's been building for four years. >> we have personalize the customer service that is the hallmark of our business. >> in 2010 doris left a career in recruiting to start pinks and greens.com, a shopping website for women's athletic ware. she wants her company to be a serious competitor in the $35 billion sporting goods industry. >> how hard is it to crack into this niche industry? >> i think it's difficult. you've got you know the really big players in the industry. we're starting a company from scratch. i started it a couple years ago in my one bedroom apartment. we completely drafted it entirely to this point. good pockets. >> doris says she spent more than $100,000 of her own money to launch pinks and greens and this year the company will sell more than $1.5 million of clothing. to continue growing, she needs more money. that's why she's pitching here. events like this one connects startups in need of money to experienced investors. it was a night created by women, for women. >> why are events like this so important? >> there's not that many of us. i go to the events and it's majority of men. >> that's because men still dominate american business. women run just 30% of all companies in the u.s. and when they start their own enterprises, women tip ukly don't start on a level playing field. on average, men launch companies with nearly twice as much money as women. >> i invest in women companies for one reason which i think i'm going to make more money. >> adam quinton came to this event as an investor. one of a few men in the room. he says the biggest challenge for women is that men tend to invest in other men. >> so if you got guys mainly investors and they're being recommended stuff by mostly other guys that's unconscience bias. >> increasing numbers of women are launching successful companies on their own. sarah blakely started the now billion dollar spanx line with her own $5,000 investment. and when carly roany started not.com, she wanted to bring the wedding industry into the bijtal age. today hermida company is worth more than $300 million. how much has changed for women when it comes to raising money for a company that's about women? >> i think the world is realizing that 80% of the purchasing decisions on the planet are made by women. companies founded by women could be a really amazing entry point to really building products that are going to speak to the market that is driving so much purchasing across the planet ultimately. we provide a boutique atmosphere. >> once you get in and they meet with you and understand exactly what it is that you're doing and your plan, i feel like that is the easy part. the hard part is getting, you know, your network. once you exhausted your personal network, it tauz time. >> and these women plan to prove the best network is the one you create. >> alice son from pinks and greens did not find out that night if she would be getting any additional invest. s. but she would are to meet win vestors again to advance any investment negotiations. they're truly about getting that first foot in the door. and that's the hardest part. >> raising money is still a big issue. i love hearing 1300 businesses created a day by women. >> go us. >> go women. >> go entrepreneur. >> you're pro woman. >> pro woman all the way. >> ahead, only on "cbs this morning," golfer phil mickelson on tiger woods, president obama and helping our troops. your local news is next. your realtime captioner is linda macdonald. good morning, everyone. it's 8:25. time for some news headlines. a patient is in isolation in a sacramento hospital this morning as blood is checked for the ebola virus. kaiser permanente sent out a short statement yesterday. we have a complete background on ebola including how you can get it on kpix.com. and today is the final opportunity to watch the 49ers practice at levi's stadium. the team is holding its last open practice at their new home from 4 to 7:30 p.m. the only way fans could go is if they had entered an online drawing last month. traffic and weather coming up in just a moment. stay with us. bulldog: if you're like me, you've been working like a dog all year. but don't camp out 'til labor day to reward yourself. mattress discounters labor day sale is ending soon! rest those tired bones on a queen size serta mattress and box spring set. right now, they're just $397. get 48 months interest-free financing on the entire tempur-pedic cloud collection. not to labor the point, but this sale ends soon. ♪ mattress discounters ♪ good morning from the kcbs traffic center. 880 very busy southbound slow- and-go through hayward had an earlier fatal accident that's cleared for at least an hour and a half but sluggish conditions continue. san mateo bridge also affected. north 880 slow as you work your way through oakland. here's a live look at the san mateo bridge. 30 minutes almost westbound as you work your way between 880 and 101. bay bridge metering lights are on. you're backed up into the maze slow coming off the eastshore freeway. and a new accident to report north 101 at tully lanes blocked slow north 101 as you work your way through san jose sluggish along the peninsula. that's traffic. here's lawrence. >> plenty of clouds around the bay area this morning out the door. it's not as damp as yesterday. we are seeing delays at sfo of about 45 minutes on arriving flights and that's due to the low clouds and fog. looking toward alcatraz, we have some cloudy skies there and the fog is extending well onshore. strong sea breeze overnight carries the clouds inland. just beginning to break up now. and as we head toward the afternoon we'll see more sunshine. that area of low pressure that brought us heavy drizzle yesterday now moving into southern california bringing them some showers. we are going to see some sunshine but mild temperatures inside the bay. plan on 72 in oakland, 79 in san jose, about 82 in livermore, and 76 degrees in the napa valley. 60s along the coastline. high pressure begins to build in tomorrow, temperatures warming up on thursday and friday. slightly cooler this weekend. in response to criticism of the treatment of killer whales sea world said it will build them a larger habitat. yeah. that's pretty good. yeah. when asked for comment willer whales said hay, you know what is a larger habitat? the ocean! >> that's actually funny. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up phil mickelson is one of the world's best golfers. he's not just focused on his game. he tells us about his support for the troops his rivalry with tiger woods and his advice for another lefty, president obama. and did you want even make fun of my glasses which is nice. >> i love your glasses. >> your glosses look great there. >> plus, what does it mean to be the king? we'll ask the man himself. he is in our toyota greenroom. hi, george. his new movie looks at his -- there you are. >> his rise to fame on star trek and a few role he might want to forget. first, ben tracy is here with a look at this morning's headlines. >> good morning again. let's check out the economic times. it rorseports that amazon.com will launch the drone delivery program not in the u.s. but in india. sources tell the newspaper that amazon will start its drone drops in india. the retailer has warehouse there's. amazon founder jeff base yoes demonstrated the drone to mr. charlie rose for the very first time. the drone service could start in india as soon as october. fans of the chocolatey hazel nut spread nutella may want to stock up. "the washington post" says there is a shortage of hazel nuts. turkey produced 70% of the hazel nuts. they've had bad weather there and prices doubled. the rising cost of nutella's other ingredients may force the price of nutella to go up. anyone do the nutella thing in the morning? >> not in the morning. >> it's a breakfast treat. the huffington post says a connecticut man faked his death to avoid his wedding. he metal ex-winchester while they were students at uconn. they were supposed to get married last friday. he confessed to the daily mail that he impersonated his parents called his bride to be and told her that he died. he says he got cold feet and didn't know what to do. my guess is if that was his solution, maybe she dodged a bullet. >> i thought the same thing. >> no pun intended. >> yeah. >> it seems extreme. >> seems extreme. >> just say you don't want to get married. >> "sports illustrated" is making history putting 13-year-old monet davis on the cover. she's the first little leaguer to have that honor. now we've been showing you the standout pitcher for a team in philadelphia that is making a run in the little league world series. monet is expected to pitch in tonight's game. they're playing las vegas. she is known for throwing a 70 mile per hour fastball and not taking any heat from the boys. she could become the first girl to play on a championship team. >> first of all, "sports illustrated" has the most fabulous photographers in the world. and this is a great photo of monet. look at her arm. look at how she throws that ball. 70 miles an hour. she's awesome. >> it's amazing she's not sure she wants to continue to play baseball. we all want her to continue playing baseball. >> i want to birdie for the brave charity. we sat down with mickelson just off the 18th fairway. ♪ >> what an incredible event today. military appreciation day here. ♪ >> it's really flattering and cool that we have a chance to honor our military. all citizens, i feel have the obligation to do something for this country. and making the lives of the men and women more enjoyable when they return, making their quality of life better making sure they know they're loved and appreciated, that's the greatest thing we can do as citizens. >> oh, my god. >> part of that appreciation for the men and women in uniform was a shower for 40 military moms and moms to be which i had the honor of hosting tuesday. it was thrown by the nonprofit organization operation shower in partnership with barclay's and birdies for the brave. >> there you go. >> military outreach program mickelson started in 2006 with his wife amy. do you think people understand the burden that is falling on our military families? >> it's very difficult to understand being a single parpt even though you have a spouse. when your husband or wife is gone for six or eight months on each deployment and you're going through pregnancy and the emotions hopefully you have family to support you. many times without your spouse that, is very difficult. >> family has always been front and center in mickelson's life. it was his father phil sr., a former air force fighter pilot who taught his son to love golf. during the 1999 u.s. open when amy was pregnant with the first child, he famously wore a pager ready to drop everything if she went into labor. >> didn't appear to be on. >> the couple suffered through health scares. mickelson battles arthritis and in 2009 amy was diagnosed with breast cancer. your family is so important to you. how is amy doing? i know she joins new this charity project. >> nora, amy just had her fifth year cancer free celebration july 1st. we're so excited. that's a huge milestone. things are going really well. really well. so we have been fortunate. we had a tough time there for a few years. but we've been very fortunate to be in a much better place now. >> what's your focus now in terms of golf? >> i realized the last few years how much i love the game of golf. >> you didn't know that before? >> well i think that you take things for granted but when it gets taken away you realize how much you enjoy it. and what i found is that when i was dealing with my own diagnosis of sore attic arthritis or when amy and i were going through her battle i found myself going out and playing a couple of holes and it was very therapeutic for me to gather my thoughts. and figure out some solutions to some problems and what have you. i feel like these next five years i'm physically in as good of shape i've ever ben been. i want to make the next five years the best five years of my career. >> it is winning a u.s. open or another masters? >> that is absolutely part of it. that is the final piece of the career grand slam would be a huge piece tore me. all the players have proven to be complete players. and that's the greatest honor i think in the history of the game to win all four major championships. i'm one leg shy. >> mickelson has come in second six times in the u.s. open including in 2002 when he lost to tiger woods. >> a lot of us watch golf watched this intense rivalry with you and tiger woods. that's been missing this year. >> we both have had an off year. he's been injured. i had struggles early on. it's been the worst year of my career. and it happens. >> is it painful to see the injuries he's had? >> it was painful for me to watch at the pga championship. i didn't see him struggling with the injury per se. i saw him struggling with his game and it is due to the fact he couldn't work on the game because of injuries. i think he needs the next four months to get healthy and get his game sharp and he'll have a great year next year. i'm trying to do the same and hopefully we'll get that rivalry back next year. >> you have any advice for another left-hander, the commander in chief? he's been working on his golf game. >> you know i love the fact that our president is not only golfer but a left-handed golfer. awesome. and we had a chance to go to the white house about a month ago as the president's cup team and we spent a minute talking about some of his bunker play. that's been giving him a problem. it was a very simple alignment issue. i actually heard the following week he played a round and hit a great bunker shot and attributed it to our little tip which i'm very flattered that i was able to help. >> so phil mickelson is giving advice to the president of the united states. another lefty. >> only in golf. only in golf. >> it was good to finally meet phil mickelson in person and see, too, what these golfers do on the greens is what they do for the military and military families. big shoutout to all the mom that's came out for the shower. i think their husbands are deployed overseas. they wanted to focus on them too. >> great guy. >> yeah. >> you get any tips? >> no. just what he said about the president about the bunker shot. to lean forward and put your weight on the front foot. yeah. >> he's always over social media this morning. george is in our graen room. he's going to share the surprising and inspirati be tike," he gets a deeper look into his personal life with his husband brad. >> every time george says something serious about relationships, he always laughs immediately. >> what does that mean? >> i don't know. i think it's psychological. >> i find it amusing. >> no he'll say he gained weight over the decades. >> well that, is funny. i find it eminently amusing. >> well, maybe i don't. >> you don't? >> i'm sorry. >> i'm very sensitive about it. >> george is here this morning in a tremendous sports coat. when they came to you about this documentary, you were skeptical at first. you didn't commit right away. why? >> no. because we've had many approaches and we don't want a vanity project. so many actors have documentaries done that make them look more glamorous more intelligent, more wonderful. we wanted essentially to share the normality of our lives, my husband and i, because people have stereotype images of a same-sex marriage. or union. and so we wanted to accomplish that, the normality although there is a lot of craziness in your marriage. you're an actor, you know. the traveling around and schedules that we have to keep. so we wanted to do that. and we met with the documentarian many times. we had many discussions shared many meals. and we came to trust her thoroughly. and we gave her carte blanche. >> it's interesting, too, because in addition to the great moments where you're quibbling about weight, there is also a moment in the documentary where we see discrimination firsthand, your partner and trying to get an award in tokyo. what was that moment to share that with so many people? what was that like for you? >> it was very painful. it was a moment when i'm getting an award from the emperor of japan in the imperial palace and because this is before we got married, we were not married. and i think it was also the fact that we were same sex. there were others that were being honored from various parts of the world. and they had their responsespouses with them. and only brad, my partner at that time, had to stay on the bus that brought us to the imperial palace. i started my life with a horrific discrimination if you want to call it that. simply because we happen to look like the people that bomb pearl harbor harbor, we were rounded up and put in barb wire prison camps, machine guns pointed at us. search lights followed us when we made the night runs to the latrine. i grew up as a boy from 5 to almost 9. >> four years in an internment camp. >> four years. the duration of the war. but the worst part of it for us the kids was being released coming home. because we were absolutely penniless penniless. everything had been taken from us. our first home was on skid row in downtown los angeles. the hostility was still intense. my father's first job was a dishwasher in the china town restaurant. >> incredible story. you know so many of us know you and followed you because we watched star trek growing up and that character. you still have so many fans. you still embrace those fans. you have a huge social media following. >> yep. >> how did that happen? >> well it started with sci-fi geeks and nerds. one of my missions in life is to tell the story of the internment. i think we learn more from those chapters our history where our democracy faltered than from the many, many glorious chapter that's we have. >> is there a lot of that in the documentary? >> there is a lot of that in the documentary. we developed a musical on that chapter of american history. and the documentary chronicles that. and it also chronicles my star trek life. one of the gifts is my star trek professional colleagues have become my dear friends. and they're all in the documentary. and they followed the development of allegiance throughout. and we documented it in the documentary. >> well, great to finally meet new person. very exciting. thank you so much. >> thank you very much. good to be here. and it opens in select theaters friday. you can also find it on demand and on itunes. talk about living long and prospering, you're going to see why this man still loves his job after more than seven decades. that's next on "cbs this morning." huh, fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. everybody knows that. well, did you know words really can hurt you? 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(vo) ours is a world of passengers. the red-eyes. (daughter) i'm really tired. (vo) the transfers. well, that's kid number three. (vo) the co-pilots. all sitting... ...trusting... ...waiting... ...for a safe arrival. introducing the all-new subaru legacy. designed to help the driver in you... ...care for the passenger in them. the subaru legacy. it's not just a sedan. it's a subaru. the saying love what do you and you'll never work a day in your life is certainly true for herm an or hide goldman. he celebrate his 101st birthday sunday. just as impressive what the new jersey native has been doing for the last 73 years. he is a repairman for his lighting company. his only break was when he fought in world war ii. he loves the challenges that come with staying on the job decade after decade. >> one has to be set to do it in their heart and it has to be set to do it. it has to be in your genes. >> he still works four days a week and you can see right there he even drives himself to the office. >> oh, my gosh. i love him. good for him. loves his job. >> he doesn't look 101. >> no, he looks like he's in his 70s. that's great. >> that does it for us. tune into the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley tonight. we'll see you right back here tomorrow on "cbs this morning." -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com good morning, it's 8:55. time for some news headlines. a patient who may have ebola is in isolation in a sacramento hospital this morning. the patient is considered low risk according to the department of public health. the cdc is now doing blood tests to confirm whether the patient has the virus. a man is behind bars after crashing a car into a sidewalk cafe in sausalito. the chain reaction crash into fred's cafe happened during a police chase. four people had to go to the hospital. today at&t will announce plans to bring ultrafast internet service to the south bay. cupertino will be the first city in california to receive the broadband service called gigapower. at&t and google have been racing to set up the service nationwide. let's check in with lawrence with a look at the weather. clouds will break up. neat shot from the mount vaca cam. clouds over the top of the hills there. it's extended well onshore. it should begin to break up through the middle of the morning. lots of sunshine by the afternoon. still, we have a couple of patches of drizzle early on today. by the afternoon, some sunshine, temperatures running on the mild side. 60s and 70s inside the bay. we'll find 70s and 80s in some of the interior valleys as warm as 76 in napa and 67 degrees and partly cloudy in san francisco. next couple of days, high pressure does build in. i expect to see more temperatures warming up just a few degrees. then cooling back down slightly on saturday and sunday. we are going to check your "kcbs traffic" coming up. female narrator: the mattress price wars are on at sleep train. we challenged the manufacturers to offer even lower prices. now it's posturepedic versus beautyrest with big savings of up to $400 off. serta icomfort and tempur-pedic go head-to-head with three years' interest-free financing. plus, free same-day delivery, set-up and removal of your old set. when brands compete, you save. mattress price wars are on now at sleep train. ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ spokesperson: get a $1,000 turbocharged reward card with a new volkswagen turbo. why are we so obsessed with turbo? because we like giving you power but we also like giving you fuel efficiency. like the sporty jetta. and the turbocharged passat tdi® clean diesel. okay.. and the iconic beetle... and the powerful tiguan... okay you can't forget the cc... guys, this is going to take a while. avo: get a $1,000 turbocharged reward card on new 2014 turbo models or lease a 2014 jetta se for $169 a month after a $1,000 bonus. good morning from the traffic center still busy at the bay bridge toll plaza. metering lights are on and you can see traffic still very sluggish into the maze. busy off the eastshore freeway, as well. 30 minutes now to work your way westbound 80 from the carquinez bridge to the maze. elsewhere, san mateo bridge still stacked up a busy ride across the span there away from hayward into the peninsula. you can see traffic very busy at midspan. the golden gate not a bad ride. traffic sluggish on the southbound side of 101. eases up as you cross the bridge into san francisco. checking your drive times along the peninsula, north 101. we are seeing slow-and-go delays, 92 to 80 split. eastbound 92 slow from 280 to 101 and westbound 237 continues to be a very busy ride. have a wonderful day. wayne: real money. jonathan: it's a trip to europe! (screaming) wayne: you're freaking out, oh my god, you're freaking out! - the curtain! (gibberish) - i'm going to go for the big deal of the day! - let's make a deal, baby, let's make a deal, yeah! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal!" now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey everybody, welcome to "let's make a deal," i'm wayne brady, thank you so much for tuning in. who wants to make a deal? with the headdress the little head band. you, yes, ma'am, you. (cheering) hey, rebecca, nice to meet you. - nice to meet you. wayne: now, the thing is the reason i was hesitating and describing you six different ways... she's like "i wonder if it's me." you were pretty much dressed the only way you are. what would you describe your dress as? - like pocahontas, i guess colors of the wind.

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Transcripts For KPIX CBS This Morning 20140820

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beheading of james foley by an islamic extremist. >> militants say they executed foley in retaliation for u.s. air strikes in iraq. >> a nice of protests in ferguson briefly turning into a tense confrontation. >> authorities believe that they were successful. >> i believe there was a turning point made. >> in arizona, rising waters resulting in dramatic rescues after heavy monsoon-like rains. >> as much as 8 inches fell in some areas. >> it was like the beginning of watching noah or something. >> in california firefighters are gaining ground on a wildfire near yosemite national park. the fire scorched more than 300 acres of land. >> in the middle east more rocket fire. air strikes after peace talks failed. >> texas governor rick perry formally booked on felony charges. >> i'm going to fight this injustice with every fiber of my being, and we will prevail. >> a tense hostage situation in chicago. two officers were wounded. the suspects took six children. four have been released. >> beer drinkers beware. there could be something in your corona. the company is recalling batches of bottled beer. >> all that -- >> dash cam video shows a motor motorcyclist slam into a sedan. >> looks like a stunt. >> lance robler right up to you. >> good catch. >> and all that matters. >> the worker at a new jersey store offers real inspiration for staying on the job. >> yes, he's 101 years old. >> how long are you going to continue working? >> as long as i have the strength to do it i'll do it. >> on "cbs in morning." >> bob schieffer is here to take the challenge. >> heavens! >> this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. captioning funded by cbs almost to "c welcome to "cbs this morning." president obama today is expected to address a new and vicious threat from isis. u.s. officials believe the islamist terror group beheaded an american reporter and a second american hostage could be next. >> an online video from isis shows a man believed to be james foley with his head cut off. a message in english appears saying the execution is in retaliation for u.s. air strikes on isis forces in iraq. foley was captured in november, 2012, while covering a civil war in syria. a year earlier he appeared on cbs talking about another kidnapping when he was detained for 45 days in libya. >> foley's mother released a statement last night saying she has never been prouder of her son. diane foley called on the kidnappers to release other hostages saying like jim, they are innocents. they have no control over american government policy in iraq, syria or anywhere in the world. cbs news senior security contributor mike morell is in washington. he was deputy cia director when foley was taken, mike, good morning. >> good morning, norah. >> how do you think the u.s. will respond? >> so i think what isis is trying to do here, norah, is intimidate the united states into backing off of the attacks that we've done the last several weeks. and i think our response should be and our response will be to not do that. in fact we should -- we should pick up the pace here. the definition of terrorism, norah, is political violence. violence for political effect. so we should mark this date down because this is isis' first terrorist attack against the united states. >> mike you briefed president bush after daniel pearl was murdered in 2002. what was his reaction at the time and what are you expecting we hear from president obama when he speaks today? >> his reaction was what you would expect it to be. there was empathy for the family and friends of daniel pearl. there was disgust at the way the execution occurred. and there was reinforcement in his belief that the people we were dealing with were evil. and i wouldn't be surprised if president obama reacts exactly the same way. >> mike take us behind the scenes, since you've been in the national security apparatus, about what's going on the decision-making. if you look and say we're not going to show it it's far too gruesome, but there is that man in black on the tape. he speaks in english. does that suggest there might be westerners involved? what's the thinking behind the scenes? >> norah, we know that there are a large number of foreign fighters who have gone to syria and who have joined the fight for isis. they are both in syria and they're in iraq. a number of those are americans. a number of those are europeans who have passports where they do not need visas to get to the united states. so this is the main danger that isis now poses to the united states. isis could send those individuals back to the united states to conduct attacks. that is the number one thing we need to worry about. >> and isis mike says they're holding another american hostage. how does the u.s. handle that? >> we need to keep moving forward with our policy. i would suspect that isis may assassinate him. but we need to keep moving forward. we cannot let something like this stop us. >> mike morell thank you so much. >> you're welcome. and this morning iraq's foreign minister called isis savage and a threat to the world. he asked for international support as iraq's government tries to drive isis out. charlie d'agata is in erbil, a region still under threat from the militants who control much of northern iraq. charlie, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. to the iraqis the only way to remove that global threat is by defeating isis militants here but they made clear they cannot do it alone. we saw that for ourselves out at the dam. isis held it for almost two weeks. finally fought for five days facing kurdish forces iraqi forces and american air strikes before they were defeated. but we also saw the impact of those air strikes. isis vehicles tried to take cover under trees were completely destroyed and the reason why those craters nearby. now everybody is waiting for isis to regroup and attack again. in the meantime they're still holding large parts of territory in iraq including mosul and the longer they hold it the harder it is to take it back. jeff. >> charlie, thank you very much. in ferguson missouri another round of late-night protests met a forceful police response. officers arrested at least 47 people overnight and seized three handguns from demonstrators. community leaders are working hard to diffuse the violence and the top officer at the scene says the situation, he says is at a turning point. mark strassmann is in ferguson where attorney general eric holder meets this morning with local officials. mark, good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning. fewer protesters were out last night, which was overall better but hardly peaceful. no tear gas, no shots fired, no molotov cocktails. also no sign these protests are going away. >> hands up don't shoot. >> reporter: what began as a peaceful night of protest shifted into yet another street battle as protesters began launching bottles in the direction of officers. >> the criminals embedded themselves and hid behind media. they threw urine on officers and that's what caused officers to take action and begin to make arrests. >> those responsible were removed one by one. police used pepper spray to scatter the crowd but no rubber bullets were fired. >> those small steps are going to turn into giant steps. those giant steps are going to be great strides for this community. >> reporter: this on the eve of a visit from the nation's top law enforcement official u.s. attorney general eric holder. in an op-ed published in the "st. louis post dispatch" holder said the justice department intends to learn in a fair and thorough manner exactly what happened. but frustration has long since boiled over. >> we feel like animals. they were just throwing tear gas at us. please bring us justice down here when you come down. >> reporter: tommy pearson is a missouri state representative and long-time local pastor. >> when the crowd says no justice, no peace, in attorney general holder do they see justice? >> i think they see justice in him. after all, for us, we got our freedom through the federal government, not states. >> reporter: holder, the nation's first black attorney general, also addressed the issue of race which is at the heart of the ferguson protests. arrest patterns must not lead to disparity treatment under the law and police forces should reflect the diversity of the communities they serve. according to data from the missouri attorney general, blacks are three times more likely than whites to be stopped by police in ferguson and twice as likely to be searched or arrested. >> it's more than michael brown. when you compile sewage on top of people and you put your foot on their neck every single day and you take away their child and tell them you can't do nothing about it we're going to leave him out here like a carcass, people are going to react. >> reporter: these national guardsmen have joined the security presence because local and state police have been overwhelmed. later today a local grand jury will begin hearing evidence in the shooting death of michael brown. his family has scheduled his funeral for monday. >> okay mark thank you so much. holder also states in this morning's opinion piece that in some cases individuals from outside of ferguson are to blame for the unrest. one out of state protester was arrested for a third time overnight but st. louis county's numbers show 38 of the 52 people arrested monday night are from missouri, the remaining 14 come from other states. the seemingly aggressive mill tarization of ferguson prompted the pentagon to release a surplus of military equipment given to st. louis county. on the list seven humvees including two belonging to ferguson, three helicopters, 12 rifles and six pistols. another police shooting just a few miles from ferguson nearly boiled over on tuesday. st. louis police officers responded to a 911 call at a convenience store robbery. they confronted a 23-year-old black man with a knife and shot him to death. local residents swarmed the police chief as he tried to explain. >> calm down let's listen to him. >> hey, listen to me. let the chief talk. we're going to get the answer now. >> so this is what i heard from the witnesses -- >> be quiet! quiet! >> listen, man. listen, man. come on y'all. >> when the officers get there, he pulls out the knife. the officers got out of their car and didn't have their guns drawn but then the suspect pulled out the knife in what they said was an overhand grip. that's what i know so far. then he walked -- >> let him talk, man, let him talk. >> police say the man rushed toward the officers saying quote, "shoot me now." a witness claims the man also said "you'll have to kill me." two kids and two adults remain hostages in a chicago suburb. police in harvey illinois, say four children have already been released from this home. the drama began yesterday afternoon when police responded to a robbery call. one robber shot and wounded two officers. they're recovering this morning. negotiators are continuing talks with the two hostage takers. it is monsoon season in arizona and it sure looks like it right now. this morning people are bracing for more stormy weather and dangerous flooding. in the phoenix area emergency crews rescued drivers stranded in their cars on tuesday following torrential rains. they also helped people trapped in their homes surrounded by rushing water. christina estes of our affiliate kpho is in phoenix with more dramatic pictures. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. at one point yesterday 1 inch of rain fell in just 15 minutes. to give you some perspective that's what we're used to here in the phoenix area in the entire month. the flooding left many people stranded. as you'll see, led to some dramatic rescues. after nearly 5 inches of rain fell near phoenix, a surge of rushing water flooded roads and low-lying neighborhoods. when a barrier meant to hold back a nearby river failed it sent a wall of water in tracie tomlinson's home lifting it off its foundation and moving it more than ten feet. >> i got on the phone with 911 and called them right away. >> reporter: desperate for help she waved a white sheet out the window in hopes of attracting the attention of rescuers. >> i had thoughts about not making it but i was going to do whatever it took to try to get us out of there. >> reporter: emergency crews moved in to make an aerial rescue, but as the rain stopped, the water receded and they were able to guide tomlinson on foot to dry land. nearby nearby, another rescue team helped an elderly woman strapped in a small van struggling to pull her to safety through a rapidly moving current. >> suddenly the water came through. it was like the beginning of watching noah or something. >> reporter: a 15-mile stretch of the i-17 freeway was closed as it quickly turned into a river of mud, stranding many motorists. >> when i first started to go through, it wasn't that deep. maybe 6 to 8 inches. and then after getting a little further through, it quickly rose to probably i would say about 2 1/2 feet. >> reporter: the rain forced authorities to close or restrict traffic on nearly two dozen roadways and kaugsdcaused the evacuation of a mobile home park and one elementary school. >> since the river is over there and it got really flooded. and then the sidewalk got flooded so they moved us to the library. >> reporter: fortunately no one here in the west hurt during yesterday's flooding but we are in the middle of the monsoon season where we can see these fast-moving strong storms. more rain is in the forecast so we could see more flooding in the near future. >> all right, christina, thank you so much. a wildfire that forced evacuations near yosemite national park is under control this morning. the fire near oak hearst california, destroyed eight buildings. more than 1,000 people were forced to leave. the fire already burned one square mile. it's now 35% contained. several members of the grand jury that indicted texas governor rick perry say they're offended by the allegation their decision was politically motivated. perry was booked yesterday on charges of abuse of power, but the possible presidential candidate put the best face he could on while getting his mug shot. anna werner is at the travis county justice center in austin. anna, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the governor has hired a team of lawyers and plans to fight the charges, which he says are politically motivated. the scene was like a political rally. supporters cheering on the governor as he approached the court house. >> i'm going to enter this courthouse with my head held high knowing the actions that i took were not only lawful and legal, but right. >> reporter: the longest serving governor in texas was photographed and his fingerprints taken as he was booked on two felony charges. prosecutors say the governor's attempts to force travis county district attorney rosemary lehmberg lehmberg, a democrat to resign. last year she was pulled over for drunk driving. police found her blood alcohol level was over three times the legal limit. she later pleaded guilty. governor perry wanted her to resign. she refused so perry used his veto power to cut $7.5 million from her office's public integrity unit a move he defended in front of the courthouse. >> this indictment is fundamentally a political act that seeks to achieve at the courthouse what could not be achieved at the ballot box. >> reporter: but texas democrats say it's perry who's playing politics. >> they wanted to make sure that they could do whatever they want in austin. the only check against that authority is the public integrity unit's office. that's why they have been trying to shut down funding on this for years. >> reporter: perry, a potential 2016 contender, says he won't let the indictment slow him down. in the next few weeks he's scheduled for appearances in iowa, south carolina and new hampshire, all battleground states. on tuesday, his pac released this ad which highlights lehmberg's arrest video. it's called "setting the record straight" and asks supporters for donations. so what does a governor do after getting his mug shot taken? well, less than an hour after that governor perry posted on twitter that he was out grabbing some ice cream at a local stand. >> anna thank you so much. a new possible threat concerning the spread of ebola in the u.s. this morning. a woman is in a sacramento hospital held for possible exposure to the virus. hospital officials haven't said where or when the infection may have occurred. the cdc will test the patient's blood. results from another possible case of ebola in new mexico could come out today. israel and hamas are exchanging a barrage of rocket strikes after the cease-fire collapsed again. israel carried out some 60 air strikes on gaza targets after hamas fired rockets into israel on tuesday. hamas says the home of its military leader was targeted. his fate is unknown. israel withdrew its delegation from the cairo peace talks yesterday and called about 2,000 reserve soldiers back up for duty. army sergeant bowe bergdahl wants to get on with his life. that's according to his lawyer eugene fidel. he says the former taliban p.o.w. plans to leave the army and go to college once the investigation into his disappearance wraps up. critics claim bergdahl willingly left his base five years ago before he was captured. a report on the army probe is due out next month. massive landslides killed at least three dozen people this morning in western japan. torrents of mud crushed homes while people slept. several people are still missing this morning. a month's worth of rain fell in just 24 hours, about 9 inches. the mud knee deep in many areas and more rain is expected. >> incredible pictures. it's 7:19. ahead on "cbs this morning" the energy break through that's back firing. how solar power low clouds and fog moving well onshore this morning. a pretty strong sea breeze out there but not as damp as it was yesterday. still, some patchy drizzle outside. you see the clouds over the golden gate bridge right now in san francisco and russian hill. looks like as we head toward the afternoon, they are going to pull back to the coastline. we are seeing some showers in southern california. we are going to keep things dry for the most part. some of 70s and 80s inland. 60s and 70s around the bay? >> 60s at the coastline, and warmer toward the weekend. sponsored by target. expect more, pay less. outrage among the world's best athletes. >> ahead, how women in sock rer outrage among some of the world's best athletes. >> the news is back on "cbs this morning." stay tuned for your local news. this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. n. 0% apr financing on a bunch of models. annual and it's right now. they're having fun. you can get all kinds of deals. come on down. yeah, you better hurry in. you 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>> that's the real question. welcome back to "cbs this morning." charlie and gayle are off. coming up in this half hour a new controversy over solar power. is literally flaring up. birds are getting ignited and then falling from the sky. we're going to take you to the california desert for this crisis. china is going far beyond just saying no. we'll look at a nationwide drug crackdown. the latest casualties jackie chan's son. but first, we have the morning's headlines with ben tracy. we're going to begin with the "washington post" which takes a look at plummeting support for national educational standards. a new survey by education next which supports school reform finds only 53% of americans approve of the so-called common core. now that is down from 65% last year. less than half of all teachers say they support it. the survey also finds 80% of americans disapprove of our nation's public schools. usa today reports the national rifle association is going after former new york city mayor michael bloomberg. the nra created an anti-bloomberg ad campaign that kicks off today. bloomberg is a vocal gun control advocate who claims to spend $50 million of his own money on the effort. now the nra ads portray bloomberg as an elitist that is out of touch with average americans. and an nra official called him an airrrogant hypocrite who thinks knows what is best for people's lives. "the new york times" says car service uber is putting president obama's campaign manager in the driver's seat. david fluk is the new director. he plans to run communication effort there's like he would run a political campaign. the goal is to attract customers and impress regulators. now the private car service is facing pushbacks from taxi drivers unions as it rapidly expands. "the wall street journal" says the nfl has a message for any potential super bowl halftime performers. show us the money. a record $1151 115.3 million watched bruno mars shake his stuff last year. this year's performers are being asked to give league some of the money they make when they head back out on tour. now potential accounts including cold play katie perry, and rihanna. >> my guess is that's going to go over like a lead balloon. >> i would think. so maybe they can make a donation to charity instead of giving the nfl the money. >> if i was a performer, i would argue i want the same amount in time the commercial gets. how much you're getting for a commercial, pay me. >> is it $5 million a 170,000 sets of mirrors the size of garage doors called hilio stacks. >> how much power do you get from each one? >> this will fuel 140,000 california home. so effectively, one hilostack can power one california home. >> tom doyle is the ceo of nrg, the company behind this $2.2 billion solar xbroekt. it's now under fire because the heat it produces up to 900 degrees, is charring the feathers of birds flying through. often causing them to crash and die. workers on site call them streamers because of the smoke plume created when they ignite in mid air. in a report on avian mortality, federal investigators found the solar farms may act as a mega trap attracting insects which in turn attract insect eating birds which are then incapacitated. more than 500 birds have died at one plant and 1,000 more are expected to die every year at another. >> they found mortalities at all three solar technologies. and they found a wide range of bird species being killed. >> reporter: bird often have a hard time navigating traditional barriers such as airplanes and windows. wind farms kill more than 100,000 birds each year. but solar farms are a new obstacle. one solar company spent $22 million to protect and relocate hundreds of rare desert tortoises and is now worried about the birds. in a statement the company said "we are evaluating the use of humane avian deterrent systems similar to those employed by airports." other solar fields have plans for the california desert which is on a well known flight path for migrating birds, eagles and falcons. so right now there is no solution but the solar plants plan to experiment with everything from light, sound and even drones to try to scare the birds away so they can keep up on them. >> 900 degrees? >> 900 degrees. >> wow. thank you. this morning the son biggest anti-drug crackdown in two decades. >> reporter: china's state broadcaster released this video showing police inside the home of 31-year-old actor j.c. chan during the drug bust. chan who is wearing plaid says this has been here two years. what's the drug the official asked? marijuana. inside the house, they recovered a quarter pound of marijuana. chan's superstar father jackie chan famous for his action-packed films is also known here in china for standing up against drug abuse. he was the spokesperson for a chinese anti-drug group in 2009. earlier this summer china's president warned authorities to beware of the danger of drugs calling on them to adopt forceful measures to wipe them out. as the gap between rich and poor grows, chi vowed to crack down on everything from bureaucracy to hedonism. prostitution rings have been raided. a popular tv anchor has been detained amid suspicions of misconduct and in the last year and a half, more than a quarter million communist party members have been disciplined for everything from adultery to embezzlement. the anti-corruption campaign has gone to the top of government netting the former domestic security czar and one time top communist party official. the drug busts including the one targeting j.c. chan have focused on beijing where 7800 people have been caught in the both foreigners and chinese for drugs. >> thank you. a world cup battle on the field could soon be heading off the field. why some of the world's top i don't just make things for a living i take pride in them. so when my moderate to severe chronic plaque psoriasis was also on display, i'd had it. i finally had a serious talk with my dermatologist. this time, he prescribed humira-adalimumab. humira helps to clear the surface of my skin by actually working inside my body. in clinical trials, most adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis saw 75% skin clearance. and the majority of people were clear or almost clear in just 4 months. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal events, such as infections, lymphoma or other types of cancer have happened. blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions and new or worsening heart failure have occurred. before starting humira, your doctor should test you for tb. ask your doctor if you live in or have been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. tell your doctor if you have had tb, hepatitis b are prone to infections, or have symptoms such as fever fatigue, cough, or sores. you should not start humira if you have any kind of infection. make the most of every moment. ask your dermatologist about humira, today. clearer skin is possible. ♪ ♪ ♪ i think the sun might be shining ♪ ♪ just a little more bright ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ i think the stars might be hanging ♪ ♪ just a little more high ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ come on, love ♪ ♪ a new day is calling, and it feels so right ♪ [ female announcer ] with ingredients like roasted hazelnuts skim milk and cocoa, there's a whole lot of happy in every jar of nutella. spread the happy. what if there was a credit card where the reward was that new car smell and the freedom of the open road? 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(vo) the longest-lasting midsize sedan in its class. introducing the all-new subaru legacy. it's not just a sedan. it's a subaru. good morning from the traffic center. let's take you to conditions through the south bay. westbound 237 at matilda accident clearing still very slow-and-go as you work your way through there. north 101 also seeing some delays. north 101 slow-and-go through san jose as well as 280 northbound sluggish, gets a bit better through the peninsula a live look at west 237 into milpitas. you can see traffic very slow as you make that connector road there. that's a look at your morning drive. here's lawrence with the forecast. >> a lot of clouds gianna, just patchy drizzle not as wet as yesterday but out the door into san jose, you see partly cloudy skies. we are going to see a whole lot of sunshine by the afternoon except along the coastline. locked in with low clouds and fog there. 60s toward the beaches, mild inside the bay, 60s and 70s. and 70s and 80s inland. female narrator: the mattress price wars are on at sleep train. we challenged the manufacturers to offer even lower prices. now it's posturepedic versus beaut with big savings of up to $400 off. serta icomfort and tempur-pedic go head-to-head with three years' interest-free financing. plus, free same-day delivery, set-up and removal of your old set. when brands compete, you save. mattress price wars are on now at sleep train. ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ good morning to our viewers in the west. it is wednesday, august 20th, 2014. welcome back to "cbs this morning." real news ahead, including a testy governor chris christie. he swears new jersey's other boss is still a fan. >> mark this date down because this is isis' first terrorist attack against the united states. >> that video shows a man believed to be james foley with his head cut off captured while covering the civil war in syria. >> fewer protesters were out last night which was overall better but hardly peaceful. >> at one point yesterday, one inch of rain fell in just 15 minutes. the flooding left many people stranded. >> the governor has tired a team of lawyers and plans to fight the charges which he says are politically motivated. >> israel and hamas are exchanging a series of rocket attacks after the cease-fire is broken again. >> federal wildlife officials want to pause their expansion. >> chan is accused of something called accommodating drug users which is a more serious charge than drug consumption. for months players have protested the decision by feeifa arguing it would never allow synthetic fields for are a men's cup. >> that looks like you injured yourself. >> can you do a split like that? >> well when i used to drink. >> this morning's "eye opener@8" presented by panera bread. good morning, i'm norah o'donnell. isis says it beheaded 40-year-old american journalist james foley because the u.s. attacked its forces in iraq. in a graphic video showing the apparent execution, isis says president obama's actions will decide if another kidnapped american journalist will live or die. >> foley spent years covering wars in the middle east. he spoke with cbs news in 2011 after he was kidnapped for the first time and held for weeks in libya. he was kidnapped again in syria 21 months ago. earlier on "cbs this morning," we asked the former cia deputy director mike morrell how the u.s. should respond to foley's killing. >> we should pick up the pace here. the definition of terrorism is political violence violence for political effect. we should mark this date down because this is isis' first terrorist attack against the united states. >> president obama is expected to respond to foley's death later today. attorney general eric holder is on his way to ferguson missouri at this hour to talk with local officials and investigators looking into the police killing of michael brown. peaceful demonstrations flared up again late last night with dozens of protesters who wouldn't leave. officers chased them down arresting 47 people and seizing handguns. meanwhile, the st. louis county prosecutor's office says it will start presenting evidence to a grand jury this morning. that process could lead to criminal charges against the officer who shot michael brown. cbs news legal analyst jack ford is with us. good morning. grand jury evidence being presented. what do you think will happen? is. >> well, what happens is this. grand jury consists of 12 people and grand jurors listen to basically one side of a case. although the police officer has been invited to come and testify, if he chooses to. at the end of that, you have to remember, grand jury is not a trial jury. they don't decide guilty or not guilty. all they decide is is there probable cause to believe that a crime has been committed and that this defendant was involved in it. if they say yes, if 9 of 12 of them say yes, then charges are filed and then it would move on to the trial process. it is going to take probably a couple weeks. they're going to be very careful and deliberative about this. but you don't know what's going to. come out of this because we still don't know what each side has in terms of facts. >> "new york times" reporting officer wilson sustained an injury during this struggle in the car. how does that potentially impact the case? >> what it does is it gives some hard evidence for the police officer to justify his position saying, look i was defending myself. remember, the defense is self-defense. the shooting took place and the young man tragically died. question is whether he should be criminally responsible. remember george zimmerman very quickly showed the damage the injuries that he had to his head in the confrontation with trayvon martin. that became very significant ultimately for jurors when they decided that it was indeed self-defense. so does this mean yes, indeed self-defense will prevail? no. but it does give the police officer something to point to in terms of physical fact. >> i'm curious how you would argue on behalf of the police officer. you keep saying self-defense is the defense. we read an op sed in the "washington post" where an officer wrote in and said if i'm a cop, if you don't want to get hurt, don't challenge me. i think a lot of people are wondering is that a reasonable defense? >> when you talk about self-defense obviously depends on facts and circumstance here. there is no doubt that the shooting took place. no doubt that the man died. the question is what prompted it? was the young man the aggressor and the police officer had to act in self-defense? if that's the case then he has something he can argue. it will be interesting to see whether he will in front of the grand jury. he is given that ability. at some point in time your defense is self-defense you have to tell your story in some fashion or the other. the decision for his lawyer might be, do we tell it sooner rather than later, in the hopes of, if the grand jury does believe what he's saying there may be no charges coming out of. or do you wait if you get indicted, tell your story at a trial. one of the big issues here is when we will hear from the police officer as he offers up this defense of self-defense. >> jack ford for us thank you very much. governor chris christie showed who's the boss in a heated argument over bruce springsteen. at a local town hall meeting yesterday, a woman confronted the governor about his use of springsteen's music before the start of his public events. >> i was under the impression, i thought i heard that bruce asked that none of his music was played at your events because he didn't believe in your politics. >> no never did that. no, you're wrong. in fact i saw bruce just a week and a half ago. >> you were dancing with bon jovi maybe in the hamptons? >> no, that i was doing this weekend. i was dancing with jamie foxx. if you're going to be cute we should get the story right. no, listen. i know him and you're wrong. i understand you're now expressing your anger. you're now expressing your politics and your ox and that's fine. don't put it in mr. springsteen's mouth. put it in yours. i know and i've spoken to bruce an you're wrong. you're absolutely wrong. maybe, guys just when i leave, just so we can have this lady be a little calmer, let's play bon jovi on the way out. if you want to debate, run for governor and then i'll debate you. i'm not debating you nop. >> if you're going to be cute get the story right. >> for the rest of the town hall meeting the woman stood with a sign saying indict. >> she sounded like a reporter. >> but was she write? >> she was biased on one side yes, clearly. not a wall flower though. safe to say. ahead on "cbs this morning," women are launching businesses in record numbers. we'll look at the challenges they fac >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener @ 8 brought to you by panera. " brought to you by panera. most ad agency was love this free publicity. >> ice bucket bring it on! >> i haven't seen this ice bucket challenge. is this a new thing? it's new? it's brand new thing? a list actors spreading the challenge worldwide. we'll ask the editor of advertising agents and other agencies can strike ice cold gold. >> wow. >> yeah. that's next on "cbs this morning." 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[ male announcer ] new oscar mayer deli fresh bold. made with 100% turkey breast and real cajun spices. what if there was a credit card where the reward was that new car smell and the freedom of the open road? a card that gave you that "i'm 16 and just got my first car" feeling. presenting the buypower card from capital one. redeem earnings toward part or even all of a new chevrolet, buick, gmc or cadillac - with no limits. so every time you use it you're not just shopping for goods. you're shopping for something great. learn more at buypowercard.com the best part of coming together is how delicious it can be. hershey's s'mores, the unmistakable taste that reminds us that life is delicious. here we go. ready, bob? one, two, three! >> it's cold. >> it's really cold. >> like how cold? >> it is so cold. >> breaking news it is so cold. bob schieffer getting the cold shoulder at our affiliate wusa. the ice bucket challenge is making more than just a splash on social media, it's creating a jackpot bringing in about $23 million for the fight against als, lou gehrig's disease. other groups are trying to get in on that action and it could change the way we look at fund-raising and advertising. abby clausen is the editor of "advertising >> 2.4 million videos related to the ice bucket challenge. you look at a facebook feed these days and 70% of it is ice bucket challenges. >> that's what it feels like. >> seriously. >> surprised by this? >> i think everybody's surprised by it. i mean there's clearly some really key ingredients that went into making this a success. things that marketers will learn from. for example, it was simple. it wasn't over complicated. they weren't asking people do something that was really complicated yet it was real le fun to watch. so people got into it. fun to see your friends and celebrities get doused by a bucket of cold water. then thirdly, it was really social. inherently social. by tagging with your friends, issuing the challenge to them. it just spread like wildfire. >> you see lots of ad agencies trying to do sufficient that will go viral, then they fail. >> that's right. what's interesting about this i think, because we were just talking about how hard it is to predict viral success. what als did really successfully was they paid attention and they were listening. they didn't start the ice bucket challenge. but because they noticed it starting to take off they said okay, this is something we can use to our advantage. they got into it and really galvanized their members. now it's become synonymous with als. one of the things i think marketers can do a better job of is really pay attention to what's happening on social media and the conversations that are out there and saying what's our opportunity to get in here. >> that's a really smart point. yeah. >> when i was reading about this challenge, i also heard a term i've never heard up before. slacktivism. the idea that people may be doing these vie value videosral videos but actually not donating. >> i think we'll see a few spring-up. i think there is one around suicide prevention getting a pie in the face. but i think -- i'm sort of hoping that there will be something new that we won't see just a ton of rip-offs of this particular meme i guess. but it does come back to paying attention and figuring out what's the opportunity fobr your brand. the other thing here it is for charity. people don't want to be showing for are a marketer that's trying to sell them things. >> i'm also told bob schieffer has ice bucket challenged our cbs news news president david rhodes and also scott kelly. the ice bucket challenge continues. >> thank you. you can add one more time to the ice bucket brigade. george takei boldly went where a lot of people are going these days. this morning he's right here in studio 57 with the revealing new documentary. that's ahead right here on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by mercedes-benz. engineering some of the most advanced vehicles on the road today. corrects for lane drifting and if necessary it will even brake all by itself. it is a luxury suv engineered to get you there and back safely. for tomorrow is another fight. the 2015 m-class. see your authorized dealer for exceptional offers through mercedes-benz financial services. ♪ turn around! ♪ ♪ every now and then i get a little bit tempted ♪ ♪ by the chocolate all around ♪ ♪ turn around brian! ♪ ♪ this bar has protein oh yeah!♪ [ female announcer ] fiber one. ♪ ♪ ♪ hershey's spreads. bring the delicious taste of hershey's chocolate to anything - everything. with hershey's spreads, the possibilities are delicious. women are starting businesses faster than ever. close to 1300 a day. it is not easy. women often have to rely on their own money to get off the ground. we found one group hoping to turn their passion into profit. >> welcome to our company. we provide a curated shopping experience for the active woman. >> alice son doris has two minutes to pitch a company she's been building for four years. >> we have personalize the customer service that is the hallmark of our business. >> in 2010 doris left a career in recruiting to start pinks and greens.com, a shopping website for women's athletic ware. she wants her company to be a serious competitor in the $35 billion sporting goods industry. >> how hard is it to crack into this niche industry? >> i think it's difficult. you've got you know the really big players in the industry. we're starting a company from scratch. i started it a couple years ago in my one bedroom apartment. we completely drafted it entirely to this point. good pockets. >> doris says she spent more than $100,000 of her own money to launch pinks and greens and this year the company will sell more than $1.5 million of clothing. to continue growing, she needs more money. that's why she's pitching here. events like this one connects startups in need of money to experienced investors. it was a night created by women, for women. >> why are events like this so important? >> there's not that many of us. i go to the events and it's majority of men. >> that's because men still dominate american business. women run just 30% of all companies in the u.s. and when they start their own enterprises, women tip ukly don't start on a level playing field. on average, men launch companies with nearly twice as much money as women. >> i invest in women companies for one reason which i think i'm going to make more money. >> adam quinton came to this event as an investor. one of a few men in the room. he says the biggest challenge for women is that men tend to invest in other men. >> so if you got guys mainly investors and they're being recommended stuff by mostly other guys that's unconscience bias. >> increasing numbers of women are launching successful companies on their own. sarah blakely started the now billion dollar spanx line with her own $5,000 investment. and when carly roany started not.com, she wanted to bring the wedding industry into the bijtal age. today hermida company is worth more than $300 million. how much has changed for women when it comes to raising money for a company that's about women? >> i think the world is realizing that 80% of the purchasing decisions on the planet are made by women. companies founded by women could be a really amazing entry point to really building products that are going to speak to the market that is driving so much purchasing across the planet ultimately. we provide a boutique atmosphere. >> once you get in and they meet with you and understand exactly what it is that you're doing and your plan, i feel like that is the easy part. the hard part is getting, you know, your network. once you exhausted your personal network, it tauz time. >> and these women plan to prove the best network is the one you create. >> alice son from pinks and greens did not find out that night if she would be getting any additional invest. s. but she would are to meet win vestors again to advance any investment negotiations. they're truly about getting that first foot in the door. and that's the hardest part. >> raising money is still a big issue. i love hearing 1300 businesses created a day by women. >> go us. >> go women. >> go entrepreneur. >> you're pro woman. >> pro woman all the way. >> ahead, only on "cbs this morning," golfer phil mickelson on tiger woods, president obama and helping our troops. your local news is next. your realtime captioner is linda macdonald. good morning, everyone. it's 8:25. time for some news headlines. a patient is in isolation in a sacramento hospital this morning as blood is checked for the ebola virus. kaiser permanente sent out a short statement yesterday. we have a complete background on ebola including how you can get it on kpix.com. and today is the final opportunity to watch the 49ers practice at levi's stadium. the team is holding its last open practice at their new home from 4 to 7:30 p.m. the only way fans could go is if they had entered an online drawing last month. traffic and weather coming up in just a moment. stay with us. bulldog: if you're like me, you've been working like a dog all year. but don't camp out 'til labor day to reward yourself. mattress discounters labor day sale is ending soon! rest those tired bones on a queen size serta mattress and box spring set. right now, they're just $397. get 48 months interest-free financing on the entire tempur-pedic cloud collection. not to labor the point, but this sale ends soon. ♪ mattress discounters ♪ good morning from the kcbs traffic center. 880 very busy southbound slow- and-go through hayward had an earlier fatal accident that's cleared for at least an hour and a half but sluggish conditions continue. san mateo bridge also affected. north 880 slow as you work your way through oakland. here's a live look at the san mateo bridge. 30 minutes almost westbound as you work your way between 880 and 101. bay bridge metering lights are on. you're backed up into the maze slow coming off the eastshore freeway. and a new accident to report north 101 at tully lanes blocked slow north 101 as you work your way through san jose sluggish along the peninsula. that's traffic. here's lawrence. >> plenty of clouds around the bay area this morning out the door. it's not as damp as yesterday. we are seeing delays at sfo of about 45 minutes on arriving flights and that's due to the low clouds and fog. looking toward alcatraz, we have some cloudy skies there and the fog is extending well onshore. strong sea breeze overnight carries the clouds inland. just beginning to break up now. and as we head toward the afternoon we'll see more sunshine. that area of low pressure that brought us heavy drizzle yesterday now moving into southern california bringing them some showers. we are going to see some sunshine but mild temperatures inside the bay. plan on 72 in oakland, 79 in san jose, about 82 in livermore, and 76 degrees in the napa valley. 60s along the coastline. high pressure begins to build in tomorrow, temperatures warming up on thursday and friday. slightly cooler this weekend. in response to criticism of the treatment of killer whales sea world said it will build them a larger habitat. yeah. that's pretty good. yeah. when asked for comment willer whales said hay, you know what is a larger habitat? the ocean! >> that's actually funny. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up phil mickelson is one of the world's best golfers. he's not just focused on his game. he tells us about his support for the troops his rivalry with tiger woods and his advice for another lefty, president obama. and did you want even make fun of my glasses which is nice. >> i love your glasses. >> your glosses look great there. >> plus, what does it mean to be the king? we'll ask the man himself. he is in our toyota greenroom. hi, george. his new movie looks at his -- there you are. >> his rise to fame on star trek and a few role he might want to forget. first, ben tracy is here with a look at this morning's headlines. >> good morning again. let's check out the economic times. it rorseports that amazon.com will launch the drone delivery program not in the u.s. but in india. sources tell the newspaper that amazon will start its drone drops in india. the retailer has warehouse there's. amazon founder jeff base yoes demonstrated the drone to mr. charlie rose for the very first time. the drone service could start in india as soon as october. fans of the chocolatey hazel nut spread nutella may want to stock up. "the washington post" says there is a shortage of hazel nuts. turkey produced 70% of the hazel nuts. they've had bad weather there and prices doubled. the rising cost of nutella's other ingredients may force the price of nutella to go up. anyone do the nutella thing in the morning? >> not in the morning. >> it's a breakfast treat. the huffington post says a connecticut man faked his death to avoid his wedding. he metal ex-winchester while they were students at uconn. they were supposed to get married last friday. he confessed to the daily mail that he impersonated his parents called his bride to be and told her that he died. he says he got cold feet and didn't know what to do. my guess is if that was his solution, maybe she dodged a bullet. >> i thought the same thing. >> no pun intended. >> yeah. >> it seems extreme. >> seems extreme. >> just say you don't want to get married. >> "sports illustrated" is making history putting 13-year-old monet davis on the cover. she's the first little leaguer to have that honor. now we've been showing you the standout pitcher for a team in philadelphia that is making a run in the little league world series. monet is expected to pitch in tonight's game. they're playing las vegas. she is known for throwing a 70 mile per hour fastball and not taking any heat from the boys. she could become the first girl to play on a championship team. >> first of all, "sports illustrated" has the most fabulous photographers in the world. and this is a great photo of monet. look at her arm. look at how she throws that ball. 70 miles an hour. she's awesome. >> it's amazing she's not sure she wants to continue to play baseball. we all want her to continue playing baseball. >> i want to birdie for the brave charity. we sat down with mickelson just off the 18th fairway. ♪ >> what an incredible event today. military appreciation day here. ♪ >> it's really flattering and cool that we have a chance to honor our military. all citizens, i feel have the obligation to do something for this country. and making the lives of the men and women more enjoyable when they return, making their quality of life better making sure they know they're loved and appreciated, that's the greatest thing we can do as citizens. >> oh, my god. >> part of that appreciation for the men and women in uniform was a shower for 40 military moms and moms to be which i had the honor of hosting tuesday. it was thrown by the nonprofit organization operation shower in partnership with barclay's and birdies for the brave. >> there you go. >> military outreach program mickelson started in 2006 with his wife amy. do you think people understand the burden that is falling on our military families? >> it's very difficult to understand being a single parpt even though you have a spouse. when your husband or wife is gone for six or eight months on each deployment and you're going through pregnancy and the emotions hopefully you have family to support you. many times without your spouse that, is very difficult. >> family has always been front and center in mickelson's life. it was his father phil sr., a former air force fighter pilot who taught his son to love golf. during the 1999 u.s. open when amy was pregnant with the first child, he famously wore a pager ready to drop everything if she went into labor. >> didn't appear to be on. >> the couple suffered through health scares. mickelson battles arthritis and in 2009 amy was diagnosed with breast cancer. your family is so important to you. how is amy doing? i know she joins new this charity project. >> nora, amy just had her fifth year cancer free celebration july 1st. we're so excited. that's a huge milestone. things are going really well. really well. so we have been fortunate. we had a tough time there for a few years. but we've been very fortunate to be in a much better place now. >> what's your focus now in terms of golf? >> i realized the last few years how much i love the game of golf. >> you didn't know that before? >> well i think that you take things for granted but when it gets taken away you realize how much you enjoy it. and what i found is that when i was dealing with my own diagnosis of sore attic arthritis or when amy and i were going through her battle i found myself going out and playing a couple of holes and it was very therapeutic for me to gather my thoughts. and figure out some solutions to some problems and what have you. i feel like these next five years i'm physically in as good of shape i've ever ben been. i want to make the next five years the best five years of my career. >> it is winning a u.s. open or another masters? >> that is absolutely part of it. that is the final piece of the career grand slam would be a huge piece tore me. all the players have proven to be complete players. and that's the greatest honor i think in the history of the game to win all four major championships. i'm one leg shy. >> mickelson has come in second six times in the u.s. open including in 2002 when he lost to tiger woods. >> a lot of us watch golf watched this intense rivalry with you and tiger woods. that's been missing this year. >> we both have had an off year. he's been injured. i had struggles early on. it's been the worst year of my career. and it happens. >> is it painful to see the injuries he's had? >> it was painful for me to watch at the pga championship. i didn't see him struggling with the injury per se. i saw him struggling with his game and it is due to the fact he couldn't work on the game because of injuries. i think he needs the next four months to get healthy and get his game sharp and he'll have a great year next year. i'm trying to do the same and hopefully we'll get that rivalry back next year. >> you have any advice for another left-hander, the commander in chief? he's been working on his golf game. >> you know i love the fact that our president is not only golfer but a left-handed golfer. awesome. and we had a chance to go to the white house about a month ago as the president's cup team and we spent a minute talking about some of his bunker play. that's been giving him a problem. it was a very simple alignment issue. i actually heard the following week he played a round and hit a great bunker shot and attributed it to our little tip which i'm very flattered that i was able to help. >> so phil mickelson is giving advice to the president of the united states. another lefty. >> only in golf. only in golf. >> it was good to finally meet phil mickelson in person and see, too, what these golfers do on the greens is what they do for the military and military families. big shoutout to all the mom that's came out for the shower. i think their husbands are deployed overseas. they wanted to focus on them too. >> great guy. >> yeah. >> you get any tips? >> no. just what he said about the president about the bunker shot. to lean forward and put your weight on the front foot. yeah. >> he's always over social media this morning. george is in our graen room. he's going to share the surprising and inspirati be tike," he gets a deeper look into his personal life with his husband brad. >> every time george says something serious about relationships, he always laughs immediately. >> what does that mean? >> i don't know. i think it's psychological. >> i find it amusing. >> no he'll say he gained weight over the decades. >> well that, is funny. i find it eminently amusing. >> well, maybe i don't. >> you don't? >> i'm sorry. >> i'm very sensitive about it. >> george is here this morning in a tremendous sports coat. when they came to you about this documentary, you were skeptical at first. you didn't commit right away. why? >> no. because we've had many approaches and we don't want a vanity project. so many actors have documentaries done that make them look more glamorous more intelligent, more wonderful. we wanted essentially to share the normality of our lives, my husband and i, because people have stereotype images of a same-sex marriage. or union. and so we wanted to accomplish that, the normality although there is a lot of craziness in your marriage. you're an actor, you know. the traveling around and schedules that we have to keep. so we wanted to do that. and we met with the documentarian many times. we had many discussions shared many meals. and we came to trust her thoroughly. and we gave her carte blanche. >> it's interesting, too, because in addition to the great moments where you're quibbling about weight, there is also a moment in the documentary where we see discrimination firsthand, your partner and trying to get an award in tokyo. what was that moment to share that with so many people? what was that like for you? >> it was very painful. it was a moment when i'm getting an award from the emperor of japan in the imperial palace and because this is before we got married, we were not married. and i think it was also the fact that we were same sex. there were others that were being honored from various parts of the world. and they had their responsespouses with them. and only brad, my partner at that time, had to stay on the bus that brought us to the imperial palace. i started my life with a horrific discrimination if you want to call it that. simply because we happen to look like the people that bomb pearl harbor harbor, we were rounded up and put in barb wire prison camps, machine guns pointed at us. search lights followed us when we made the night runs to the latrine. i grew up as a boy from 5 to almost 9. >> four years in an internment camp. >> four years. the duration of the war. but the worst part of it for us the kids was being released coming home. because we were absolutely penniless penniless. everything had been taken from us. our first home was on skid row in downtown los angeles. the hostility was still intense. my father's first job was a dishwasher in the china town restaurant. >> incredible story. you know so many of us know you and followed you because we watched star trek growing up and that character. you still have so many fans. you still embrace those fans. you have a huge social media following. >> yep. >> how did that happen? >> well it started with sci-fi geeks and nerds. one of my missions in life is to tell the story of the internment. i think we learn more from those chapters our history where our democracy faltered than from the many, many glorious chapter that's we have. >> is there a lot of that in the documentary? >> there is a lot of that in the documentary. we developed a musical on that chapter of american history. and the documentary chronicles that. and it also chronicles my star trek life. one of the gifts is my star trek professional colleagues have become my dear friends. and they're all in the documentary. and they followed the development of allegiance throughout. and we documented it in the documentary. >> well, great to finally meet new person. very exciting. thank you so much. >> thank you very much. good to be here. and it opens in select theaters friday. you can also find it on demand and on itunes. talk about living long and prospering, you're going to see why this man still loves his job after more than seven decades. that's next on "cbs this morning." huh, fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. everybody knows that. well, did you know words really can hurt you? what...? jesse don't go! jesse...no! i'm sorry daisy, but i'm a loner. and a loner gotta be alone. heee yawww! geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more. jesse? (vo) ours is a world of passengers. the red-eyes. (daughter) i'm really tired. (vo) the transfers. well, that's kid number three. (vo) the co-pilots. all sitting... ...trusting... ...waiting... ...for a safe arrival. introducing the all-new subaru legacy. designed to help the driver in you... ...care for the passenger in them. the subaru legacy. it's not just a sedan. it's a subaru. the saying love what do you and you'll never work a day in your life is certainly true for herm an or hide goldman. he celebrate his 101st birthday sunday. just as impressive what the new jersey native has been doing for the last 73 years. he is a repairman for his lighting company. his only break was when he fought in world war ii. he loves the challenges that come with staying on the job decade after decade. >> one has to be set to do it in their heart and it has to be set to do it. it has to be in your genes. >> he still works four days a week and you can see right there he even drives himself to the office. >> oh, my gosh. i love him. good for him. loves his job. >> he doesn't look 101. >> no, he looks like he's in his 70s. that's great. >> that does it for us. tune into the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley tonight. we'll see you right back here tomorrow on "cbs this morning." -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com good morning, it's 8:55. time for some news headlines. a patient who may have ebola is in isolation in a sacramento hospital this morning. the patient is considered low risk according to the department of public health. the cdc is now doing blood tests to confirm whether the patient has the virus. a man is behind bars after crashing a car into a sidewalk cafe in sausalito. the chain reaction crash into fred's cafe happened during a police chase. four people had to go to the hospital. today at&t will announce plans to bring ultrafast internet service to the south bay. cupertino will be the first city in california to receive the broadband service called gigapower. at&t and google have been racing to set up the service nationwide. let's check in with lawrence with a look at the weather. clouds will break up. neat shot from the mount vaca cam. clouds over the top of the hills there. it's extended well onshore. it should begin to break up through the middle of the morning. lots of sunshine by the afternoon. still, we have a couple of patches of drizzle early on today. by the afternoon, some sunshine, temperatures running on the mild side. 60s and 70s inside the bay. we'll find 70s and 80s in some of the interior valleys as warm as 76 in napa and 67 degrees and partly cloudy in san francisco. next couple of days, high pressure does build in. i expect to see more temperatures warming up just a few degrees. then cooling back down slightly on saturday and sunday. we are going to check your "kcbs traffic" coming up. female narrator: the mattress price wars are on at sleep train. we challenged the manufacturers to offer even lower prices. now it's posturepedic versus beautyrest with big savings of up to $400 off. serta icomfort and tempur-pedic go head-to-head with three years' interest-free financing. plus, free same-day delivery, set-up and removal of your old set. when brands compete, you save. mattress price wars are on now at sleep train. ♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ spokesperson: get a $1,000 turbocharged reward card with a new volkswagen turbo. why are we so obsessed with turbo? because we like giving you power but we also like giving you fuel efficiency. like the sporty jetta. and the turbocharged passat tdi® clean diesel. okay.. and the iconic beetle... and the powerful tiguan... okay you can't forget the cc... guys, this is going to take a while. avo: get a $1,000 turbocharged reward card on new 2014 turbo models or lease a 2014 jetta se for $169 a month after a $1,000 bonus. good morning from the traffic center still busy at the bay bridge toll plaza. metering lights are on and you can see traffic still very sluggish into the maze. busy off the eastshore freeway, as well. 30 minutes now to work your way westbound 80 from the carquinez bridge to the maze. elsewhere, san mateo bridge still stacked up a busy ride across the span there away from hayward into the peninsula. you can see traffic very busy at midspan. the golden gate not a bad ride. traffic sluggish on the southbound side of 101. eases up as you cross the bridge into san francisco. checking your drive times along the peninsula, north 101. we are seeing slow-and-go delays, 92 to 80 split. eastbound 92 slow from 280 to 101 and westbound 237 continues to be a very busy ride. have a wonderful day. wayne: real money. jonathan: it's a trip to europe! (screaming) wayne: you're freaking out, oh my god, you're freaking out! - the curtain! (gibberish) - i'm going to go for the big deal of the day! - let's make a deal, baby, let's make a deal, yeah! jonathan: it's time for "let's make a deal!" now here's tv's big dealer, wayne brady! wayne: hey everybody, welcome to "let's make a deal," i'm wayne brady, thank you so much for tuning in. who wants to make a deal? with the headdress the little head band. you, yes, ma'am, you. (cheering) hey, rebecca, nice to meet you. - nice to meet you. wayne: now, the thing is the reason i was hesitating and describing you six different ways... she's like "i wonder if it's me." you were pretty much dressed the only way you are. what would you describe your dress as? - like pocahontas, i guess colors of the wind.

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