Transcripts For KPIX CBS This Morning 20150511

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there's nothing but a concrete slab. >> deadly storms slam millions. >> a reported tornado struck the town of van, texas. >> at least 20 homes damaged. >> the national guard using choppers to rescue people. >> outside of dallas -- >> the tornado roar there had lake city, iowa. >> there goes the school! there goes the school. a mississippi community is in mourning after two police officers were killed during a traffic stop. >> four people are now under arrest. >> tragedy for all americans. >> former president jimmy carter cut his visit to the south american nation of guyana short because he says he wasn't feeling well. >> apparent snub by the king of saudi arabia. >> some see it as a sign of displeasure over washington's efforts to negotiate a deal with iran. >> thousands of gallons of oil leaked from the indian point nuclear power plant into the hudson river when a transformer failed? >> the fear is always that one situation will trigger another. >> after meeting with pope francis, cuban president raul castro is so impressed he's considering returning to the church. >> a wild scene. you can see the choir there, and there they go. they just disappeared. at least eight singers were hurt. >> all that -- >> nice play. >> he bare handed the baseball with one hand and a baby attached to the chest. >> and all that matters. >> it was a night of peace, love, and prince in baltimore as thousands showed up for the singers rally for peace. >> on cbs "this morning." >> it was the 70th anniversary of the d-day festivities. russia went all out to mark the occasion. nothing projects a country's greatness like two heavily armed seals in berets. bravo bravo, russia. bravo. . welcome to cbs "this morning." as you wake up in the west powerful storms are blamed for two deaths in arkansas. that have state is in the bull's-eye of severe weather right now. twisters tore through the town of nashville, destroying homes. flash flooding also forced water rescues overnight. some people got trapped on top of their cars. >> in east texas, a suspected tornado injured more than two dozen people last night. the twister ripped apart homes in the town of van about 70 miles southeast of dallas. several people are still missing. vicente vicente arenas is there. good morning. >> reporter: the twister moved from south to north and you can see how it tore the roof off the house and blew its walls apart. this morning, there's debris scattered in the front yard. you can see how there are bricks on the street here. this was a twister that sent dozens of people to the hospital. nearly a third of van, texas, was damaged by the reported tornado. piles of debris, houses leveled and split open their insides completely destroyed. mike dewey and his family were home when it struck. >> we all hunkered down in the bathroom floor and the house got ripped off of us. we was out in the middle of all of it. we didn't have no protection. >> reporter: the weather didn't let up as crews assessed the damage in rainy, dark conditions. >> slow-moving storms rolled across the state sunday causing dangerous flooding. >> mama and baby mama and baby. >> reporter: a pregnant woman and a baby escaped dallas-area floodwaters with the help of a u.s. coast guard chopper. >> what was a little creek looks like right now a raging river. >> reporter: multiple rescues were prompted by an overflowing creek that swallowed everything inside. >> here comes another rescue. >> i don't do ferris wheels i don't do nothing like that and here they strap me in a harness and we're spinning and all i could see was water. >> reporter: sierra faulkner made it back to her house moments before a massive tree was uprooted in her front yard landing squarely on her family's pickup. >> front windows, back windows blew out. just a bunch of glass crushing. kind of like if a bomb were to blow up. >> reporter: it will take months to clean up the devastation left by the storm. meanwhile, the van independent school district has canceled classes today. its facebook page reads "prayers for our town." >> thank you, vicente. a tornado in iowa caused a big scare when it tore through a high school last night. >> there goes the school. i. >> about 100 people were inside the school in lake city on sunday when the twister ripped the roof off. nearly everybody was shaken up. >> it was really dark. it wasn't long, we did hear the roof come off and there was a change of pressure. i thought my ears were going to pop is what it felt like to me. >> the storm left a trail of destruction two blocks wide in lake city, that's northwest of des moines. subtropical storm ana is a tropical depression this morning, spinning over the eastern carolinas. ana made landfall three weeks before the start of the atlantic hurricane season. it's the earliest-named storm in decades. ana brought rain and strong winds to the carolinas over the weekend. it's expected to move through eastern virginia today and push out to the sea. take a look at this. mother's day was snowed out in parts of the northern plains. some areas of colorado nebraska, and the dakotas got more than a foot of snow. in denver, the colorado rockies had to shovel coors field on sunday before the home team lost to the dodgers. meteorologist scott padgett of our dallas-fort worth station ktvt is watching the severe weather. scott, good morning. >> good morning. what an active weekend with weather and we could see another active day today with the cold front making its way to this warm moist air. slight risk of severe storms from houston through parts of memphis and the ohio valley into cincinnati. even into michigan as the cold front works its way east. there's the potential of supercell storms with damaging tornados, wind damage threats, also maybe 60 mile per hour winds or high golf ball to baseball-sized hail. it covers a large area 416,000 square miles, nearly 57.5 million people affected as this cold front works its way eastward going through the day and the potential for severe storms through parts of louisiana into the afternoon hours. over on the west coast temperatures in the mid-60s as we go into this first day of the work week. not a bad day out west. >> thank you, scott. four people facing charges in the deaths of two mississippi police officers are due in court today. the community gathered last night for a candlelight vigil to remember the officers. they were gunned down saturday night after a routine traffic stop. anna werner is in hattiesburg, mississippi, with what happened. anna, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, this is the impromptu memorial set up for the two officers who were killed. one was a decorated officer of the year the other a proud newcomer to the force. it was about 8:30 saturday night when officer benjamin dean stopped a gold cadillac escalate for speeding. police say he had probable cause to search the vehicle and called for backup when he saw four people inside. 25-year-old rookie officer liquori tate arrived on the scene just before shots were fired. >> i was upstairs in my kitchen and we heard -- i heard six loud gunshots. >> reporter: dean and tate were rushed to a hospital and pronounced dead. >> they worked feverishly to try and save both. it just wasn't so. too much blood was lost. too much damage done. >> reporter: within four hours of the shooting, three suspects were arrested. a fourth 28-year-old cornelius clark, was apprehended sunday afternoon and charged with obstruction of justice. 29-year-old marvin banks and 22-year-old joni a callow way were charged with the murders. in custody, he declared his innocence. >> god knows i didn't do nothing. deen, a member of the canine unit and 2012 officer of the year leaves behind a wife and two children. the father of liquori tate took to facebook after learning of his son's death. he said "well, lord i had been praying it was all just a mistake. my baby i just need some kind of mercy right now." >> no parent wants to bury their child before them. and here we are on mother's day. it's a tragedy for all americans. it's a tragedy for our community. >> reporter: it's the first time in 30 years an officer has been killed in the line of duty here in hattiesburg. the city will be holding memorials for the two officers later today. >> anna thanks. an important summit of gulf arab leaders with president obama gets under way this week -- without a key player. saudi arabia says the king will stay home. word came just two days after the white house said he would attend. margaret brennan is at the state department with the growing arab concern about iran. margaret p good morning. >> reporter: good morning. saudi arabia insists this is not a snub but it is a disappointment for the white house. president obama had sought to personally reassure arab leaders about the upcoming nuclear deal with iran their long-time adversary. saudi arabia already frustrated with u.s. inaction in syria is also concerned that iran will carry out more attacks in the region if the u.s. is sanctioned as part of that deal. so the offset worries, the white house offered to sell them more weapons but stopped short of promising to military defend its arab allies. it will exact type of security pact they seek. now, the white house says there's no major disagreement and saudi arabia says well, the king needed to stay home to oversee a five-day cease-fire in its military campaign in yemen. but this cancellation also prompted the king of bahrain to pull out. now only two of the six arab monarchs invited by president obama will actually be meeting with him. now, their deputies will attend but the fact that the heads of state will not makes decision-making more difficult and it gives the summit far less diplomatic heft than the white house had hoped for. >> margaret thanks. it's a big deal. >> it is a big deal. the interesting thing, too, is he says he's staying home to oversee what's happening in yemen, a cease-fire in yemen. the two people most responsible for prosecuting that imminent attack are going to be in washington with the president. >> that's right. the two younger princes. >> crown prince and deputy crown prince. secretary of state john kerry flies to russia later today. he will meet with president vladimir putin. his first trip to russia since a crisis in ukraine began in 2013. a conflict over ukraine has damaged relations between washington and moscow. former president jimmy carter is back home in georgia after getting sick in south america america. mr. carter landed sunday in atlanta. you see him standing with a crew from our affiliate which followed the 90-year-old to guyana. he was set to observe national election there is today. the 39th president said a "virus" cut his trip short but his staff says he went straight back to work yesterday at the carter center. quite amazing, the former president there, 90 years old. still going strong. >> good to see he's okay. a commencement speech by first lady michelle obama offers a revealing look at her role in the white house. her address at tuskegee university provided the most candid remarks about how she's growing into the historic position. jan crawford is in washington with the emotional speech. jan, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, tuskegee is an historically black university in alabama that's been home to some of the nation's most prominent african-american pioneers and it was there before the school's newest graduating class that obama talked about how she's learned to ignore criticism as america's first african-american first lady. in her deeply personal speech michelle obama told new graduates she wasn't always the fully formed first lady that addressed them saturday. >> i had a lot of sleepless nights worrying about what people thought of me. >> reporter: she mentioned the persistent questions about her husband's citizenship, the fist bump with then candidate obama that was dubbed a terrorist fist jab which led to the controversial 2008 new yorker magazine cover an image obama said knocked her back a bit. then there were the critics who used racially charged language. >> cable news charmingly referred to me as "obama's baby mama." >> reporter: she told the graduates they would have to learn to ignore the criticism. >> the road ahead is not going to be easy. it never is especially for folks like you and me. >> reporter: she said she and the president know what it's like when people look past them seeing just a fraction of who they really are. >> the people at formal events who assumed we were the help. and those who have questioned our intelligence our honesty, even our love of this country. >> reporter: but she said for others the experiences can be so much worse. >> those nagging worries that you're going to get stopped or pulled over for absolutely no reason. >> reporter: alluding to the uprisings in baltimore and ferguson, she said while those problems are rooted deep that's no excuse to give up. >> to succumb to feelings of despair and anger only means that in the end we lose. . trisha rose, who heads the center for the study of race and ethnicity at brown university says obama's message can have a big impact. >> this saturates our world. don't think i am so lofty to be above this mistreatment. and on the other hand she's saying even with all of that there are some ways to continue to fight and to hold on to what you believe in. >> reporter: mrs. obama also talked about feeling invisible, that as hard as she tried, you know, you don't matter. those were things she said that were explored in ralph ellison's iconic 1953 book "invisible man." she pointed out to the new graduates that ellison was one of the my pioneers who got their start at tuskegee and went on to greatness. >> jan, thanks. that's a speech worth reading from beginning to end. everyone should take a look at that. thank you, jan. a new report is adding to the controversy surrounding the clinton foundation. new york city new york magazine says the clintons put pressure on a charity watchdog. they wanted charity navigator to remove the foundation from a watch list. he says the clintons tried to strong arm the group by contacting a board member. the article also says clinton advisors urged the foundation to appoint a republican as co-chair to inflate them from partisan attacks. clinton foundation officials accuse charity navigator of being unfair. we have reached out to the foundation for comment bus gotten no response. prince gave a concert in baltimore and told a crowd of thousands that the system is broken. ♪ purple rain purple rain ♪ the so-called rally for peace after the death of freddie gray was a three-hour show. prince performed his hits plus several encores. the set list included the new song "baltimore." ♪ does anybody hear us pray ♪ >> the lyrics include the lines "does anybody hear us pray for michael brown and freddie gray peace is so much more than the absence of war." the streaming service title carried a live audio stream of the concert's first hour. prince says a portion of the proceeds would support baltimore youth charities. this morning cuban president raul castro is considering rejoining the catholic church. he met with pope francis at the vatican yesterday. he says he wanted to thank the pope personally for the vatican's role in reestablishing diplomatic relations between the united states and cuba. allen pizzey shows us the church's role in the talks. >> reporter: it wasn't water into wine but pope francis may have turned cuban president raul castro back into a believer. speaking after their meeting at the vatican, the communist leader said "if the pope continue this is way, i will go back to praying and go back to the church." adding "and i'm not joking." but it may have been this hand shake that won the cuban leader over, the end of 50 years of isolation between washington and havana was engineered by the vatican. the key building block was exchanging five cuban spies imprisoned in the u.s. for american contractor alan gross who was being held in a cuban jail. pope francis told president obama that improving relations with cuba would have broad benefits for washington throughout latin america. and dispatched cuban cardinal jaime ortega to sound out raul castro. then using the ruse of a speech at georgetown university to get him to washington without arousing suspicion, cardinal ortega was spirited into the white house to speak directly with the pope. senator patrick leahy was involved from the earliest stages. >> i think both cubans and the u.s. could say, okay, we agree with pope francis, it's time. >> reporter: cuban and american negotiators met twice in the secure confines of vatican city and at least nine times in ottawa and toronto. francis took no public credit but was no doubt more than pleased at adding another member to his faithful flock. for cbs "this morning," allen pizzey vatican city. cleanup crews this morning are trying to contain thousands of gallons of oil that leaked into the hudson river. a transformer fire on saturday at new york's indian point nuclear power plant sent the black smoke billowing to the sky. oil in the transformer seeped into a holding tank. the fluid then entered the river through a discharge drain. ing aist have -- activists are calling for the plant to shut down after a series of mishaps. stunning claims about the death of osama bin laden. pulitzer prize winner seymour hearst says he was killed with the help of the pakistanis. insider michael mortar morrell is here. we'll ask morrell who briefed the president that day about these new claims. plus revelations from his own new book. first it is 7 clinton >> announcer: this national weather report sponsored byty ta. let's go places. some celebrities are keeping their lawns nice and wet during california's stop in for lunch and tap, swipe, and go. chili's. fresh is happening now. your allergies bring more 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outburst. and on "cbs this morning" tomorrow morning, a woman says a movie company good monday morning everyone, it's 7:26. i'm frank mallicoat. here's what's happening right now. two fire stations will close for good in eastern contra costa county. in the fire protection district there. one is in brentwood, the other is in knightsen and last november voters rejected a special partial tax to keep the stations open. they will shut down at 8:00 this morning. crucial game four for the warriors tonight. golden state needs a victory to tie their series with memphis. the warriors need to bounce back from another poor shooting night in game three on saturday. they had tough weekend after tonight the series will come back home to oakland for game five on wednesday. traffic and weather some rain in our forecast ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ told ya you could do it. 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(girl) piece of cake. ♪ (announcer) love. it's what makes a subaru a subaru. good morning, getting a check of the morgan hill commute. still slower than usual after the early morning crash northbound everything is now all clear and all lanes are back open and you can see the delays from tenant. a live look at the san mateo bridge. it has reopened and reopened a good hour at least ahead of schedule. and westbound 92 is just your usual slow traffic out of hayward with the drive time 22 minutes between the east bay and the peninsula. richmond-san rafael bridge is slow on afro from the richmond parkway. that's kcbs traffic. here's roberta. we have delays now at sfo on some arriving flights up to 0 minutes due to -- 50 minutes due to areas of low clouds and patchy fog and even a little bit of light drizzle associated with that marine layer. 43 degrees in santa rosa to 54 degrees in the inland areas and later today, a cool day. 50s, 60ed few low 70s a stage collapsed under a choir over the weekend. the choir was singing when you see the group dramatically disappear from view. eight people were hurt. two in serious condition. no word yet on what caused the stage to give way. there was a lot of weight on that stage. it's always scary to see that happen. welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up this half hour a new warning on the attack of 9/11. mike morell is in studio 57 this morning with the growing concern of isis to strike inside the u.s. plus this new book that give as fresh perspective to the cia's fight. plus the drought-shaming trend is targeting the lush lands of celebrities' homes. that story's ahead. it's time to show you this morning's headlines. the ceo of oim production company con co-philip spoke with maria bartolo mow today. he said he thinks prices will be lower and more volatile in the next if you'refew years. lance says his company is reducing by 30% this year from last year. "the new york times" has a follow-up on nail salon workers. reporter wrote the article and was in studio 57 on friday. the new rules for salon workers are effective. >> three people in the salon said how many hours do you work and how are you paid. it was fascinating to watch that in action. new jersey's "star-ledger" said the jets took $377,000 from taxpayers to salute national guards soldiers. the honors appeared to be a gesture but they paid 14 nfl homeland security secretary john kerry says lone wolf attacks by isis could strike at any moment. he's giveing us a new look. he served as deputy director until 2013. he briefed president obama before the raid. on 9/11 he was traveling with pretty bush when he learned of the attacks. he's now senior cbs contributor. his new book is "the great war of our time," the cia's fight against terrorism. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. it's good to be here. >> let's talk about your sense of how big it is and what could it be. >> so i think it's growing every day. i think the statement by jeh johnson is a reflection of that. i think what the administration is trying to do is trying to set expectations for the american people. they're basically saying there's going to be another attack and we need to understand that when it happens. >> beyond understanding what do we have to do? >> we have to do whatever we can to stop guys who went to iraq and syria from coming back to the united states and we have to try to get a better han dal on the self-radicalization that's taking place with these loerch wolfs. >> you write they have a very successful social media cain that campaign. >> it's madison avenue quality. it's very difficult to shut it down because of the nature of the internet. if you shut it dune over here it pops up over here. >> you're concerned about another 9/11 scale attack. after everything we've learn and changed after 9/11 you think something like that scale could happen again? >> one of the things i talk about in the book, one of the keelyy lessons, you have to keep the pressure on them. you make it very difficult for them to ploot, to plan to attack. bauks they're worried about their own security. as soon as you take the pressure off, they start read building. we've seen that over and over and over again. >> we want to talk about your book, the great war of our sometime and more about this but also seymour hirsch has published a publication saying the obama administration has not been clear with us. there was a single source he said, who got assistance from pakistani officials, that osama bin laden was held captive, he was not living there alone, and that the body was not exposed. >> it's all wrong. every sentence i was reading was wrong. the source that hirsch talked to has no idea who the source is. >> do you know who this person is? >> i have no idea but the person was not close to what happened. the pakistanis did not know. i talked to them about making a decision. they made a decision not to tell the pakistanis. the pakistanis were furious with us. the president sent me to pakistan after the raids to start smoothing things over. >> it was suggested that it was the same pakistani official that got $25 million. >> not true. >> let me turn to what's in the news also today because the president trying to ghoesh yat with iran. there's a big arab summit that's plan and after the white house publicly saying that the kyung of saudi arabia was coming to the meeting we learned from the saudis that he's not coming. is this a snub? >> i think we need to be a little careful with why he's not coming. it's possible in the next 24 to 48 hours it's a health reason. we have to be careful. having said that it's absolutely that the sunni arab states are deeply frustrated with the united states over our policy and fundamentally, they are more concerned, more afraid of iran than they are of al qaeda and isis and they want -- they want our total support in their struggle against iran. iran wants to be the regional hedge monnic power and they're pushing back against us. they want our support. >> what sit they want that they're not doing? >> they want us to put as much pressure on the iranians as we possibly can. >> but they want a defense path and they want the f-35 which we're not going to give them. >> yeah. >> you take us totally behind the scenes, that you were one of the few people that knew exactly when it was going to happen, how it was going to half. i finished the book and thought what a badass mike morell is and you're a regular humble sort of guy. was very impressed. one of the reasons you wrote this book is you want to understand the cia and we do not understand the cia. >> there are a number of myths out there about the industry. one myth is a jack ryan myth with ke do everything. and the other is maxwell smart. everything we touch falls apart. and the other is a jason smith. all of those are wrong. the truth is these are incredibly dedicated people trying to do the right thing for the country. they get many many things right and like many organizations they get things wrong. >> you talk about it. >> it was interesting to read about. one of the questions that many people have still is how did we get the intelligence wrong on iraq and specifically saddam hussein's alleged ties to al qaeda and the weapons of mass destruction. what did we get wrong? >> we got that wrong. he's res.t.a.r.t.ing his nuclear weapons program. we were wrong on all three of those. on iraq and al qaeda, we said there is no length. and we were right about that. >> but you say secretary powell has expressed chagrin, that he went out there, made that case not only to you, but to the world, and he has said no one from the intelligence community has ever ever apologized to that. >> yes, i did, in the book. here's a man with an incredible reputation, well deserved over a long period of time. he went out there, made this case, and we were wrong and this has been on him in a sense for a very long period of time. so i wanted the apologize. >> he said it will be the first line in his obituary in terms of what had happened there. he spent several days at langley. >> yes i did. >> how could you not knowing that he went out there under the full glare. >> i was not a senior official at the time. i was kind of mid level. it wasn't up to me to apologize. >> i'm not asking you, mike. somebody should have apologized. >> i think so. >> before that what was his reaction to the apology? >> i sent him that chapter. he called me and he was deeply preesh ya tish of the apology. >> all right. very interesting reading, mike. >> yeah. >> talk about timely too. you're on the cover of "usa today" "above the fold." >> how many presidents did you serve? >> six. three democrats, three republicans. >> thank you very much. some of the in my bakery, i see customers every day. but some days, i felt like all they saw was my acne, not me. i couldn't believe i still had acne. so i went 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take one look at these celebrity mansions and you'll see a stark contrast to the green grass inside the properties versus outside. they're doing so surrounded by lush lawns despite the dirt dry land right next door. >> wealthier people use a lot more water. we saw overall 50% is used on outdoor irrigation. >> reporter: kim kardashian and kanye west spend a lot of time on the red car peat but this is the green garden property they call home. chloe uses a lot of water keeping up her lawn as well. the same goes for estates of jessica lopez,w jennifer lopez, jessica simpson, and barbra streisand. >> you have to understand this is a crisis and you're going to have to participate and play your part. >> we reach out to the celebrity owners through representatives but none'ed questions about water use. many of these are in the water district which says nearly 70% of the water it serves is used outdoors primarily for land skabing. next month the district will start enforceing its new mandate by 36th and residents who use fresh water on their lawn could face a $500 fine. >> the fines are not the answer to the question. the answer to the question is getting everybody to participate in conserving water. >> we really need a lot of leadership from popular cultural leaders who say we're going to change our behavior in order to make it safe for other people to do the same. >> for "cbs this morning," carter evans. >> message delivered again. the pollen is so bad this year that some people who have never had allergies will be suffering. we'll show you what to expect and how to find relief. plus yellowstone tourists learn to share the road as the >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. camrys are so reliable. yeah... and you gotta love that bold new styling. here you go. whoa! wow. those balloon towers don't make themselves. during toyota time, get 0% apr financing for 60 months on a bold 2015 camry. offer ends june 1st. for great deals on 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pain and protect my joints from further damage. this is humira giving me new perspective. doctors have been prescribing humira for ten years. humira works for many adults. it targets and helps to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers including lymphoma have happened, as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. talk to your doctor and visit humira.com this is humira at work introducing lunch at outback every bloomin' day! hurry in for all your outback favorites. plus new aussie tacos, new savory ribeye melt and our delicious burgers. over 70 lunch combinations starting at just $6.99. it's lunch at last every day at outback. allergies can distract you. so when your symptoms start, doctors recommend taking non-drowsy claritin every day of your allergy season. with claritin, you get powerful, non-drowsy relief 24 hours a day, day after day. which is important because with fewer symptoms to distract you you can focus on the extraordinary things you do every single day. live claritin clear. every day. good monday morning everyone, it's 7:56. i'm frank mallicoat. here's what's happening right now. due to the drought, east bay mud is pulling water from the upper sections of the parody reservoir. as east bay mud spokeswoman tells us it's completely safe to drink. caltrans plans to evict a camp of homeless people in the south bay as soon as today. neighbors in the area upset about all the trash and all the debris and the smell. the camp is near the capital auto mall in san jose. traffic and roberta says a little good morning. here's a live look at the conditions right now in oakland. if you're traveling northbound it's just beginning to slow near the oak ox maybe a little further nod -- oak ox and maybe a lawsuit -- oakland coliseum and maybe a little further north. here's a live hack at a little farther south through hayward. the northbound 88 # commute is rial grinding down to almost a halt as you can see approach highway 92. a wreck there is blocking at least one lane. airheads up there. and also here's a tweet from kcbs traffic. menlo park southbound 101 at willow. a four car crash blocking the number two lane as traffic backing up beyond marsh now. that is kcbs traffic. here's roberta. hey good morning everyone. low clouds and fog even a little bit of drizzle this morning. causing delays at sfo up the 50 minutes on some arriving flights. here's the scene looking out towards san francisco. currently in santa rosa it's 46 degrees with about a quarter mile visibility in some pockets due to fog. we have only partial coastal clearing today and mid 50s. rather coolish around the bay upper 50s to 60s. 74 degrees your outside number today. it's rather cool week ahead with a chance of ♪ good morning, to our viewers in the west. it's monday, may 11 2015. welcome back to "cbs this morning." more real news ahead, including general stanley mcchrystal in studio 57. he shows his counterterrorism strategy to fight isis and how his ideas on leadership can help solve your company's problems. first a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. the twister tore through the small town last night. this was a twister that sent dozens of people to the hospital. >> slight risk of severe storms from houston up through memphis, ohio valley cincinnati, even into michigan. subtropical storm ana is a tropical depression this morning spring over the eastern carolinas. this is the impromptu memorial set up for two officers killed warren was a decorated officer of the year. the other, a proud newcomer. saudi arabia insists this is not a snub president obama sought to reassure arab leaders about the nuclear deal. michelle obama talked about how she's learned to ignore criticism as america's first african-american first lady. tell us is any of this true? >> it's all wrong. i started reading the article last night. i got a third of the way through and i stopped because every sentence i was reading was wrong. 1.5 remaining. james, for the win, it's gone! lebron james at the buzzer. >> this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 is presented by walgreens. i'm charlie rose with gayle king and nora o'donnell. two people are dead in arkansas powerful storms stretched through the region. needing over night in nashville. an apparent tornado hurt more than two dozen people in van texas, southeast of dallas. 30% of the town was damaged, and this morning, many other areas in texas are flooded out. one person died south of dallas. national guard is rescuing stranded people, including two who got stuck in their pickup truck. >> isis has gained an edge using social media to recruit and direct new attacks. but what if the u.s. and its allies could fight back by incorporating what isis does best. general mcchrystal, leading the joint special operations task force in iraq and after gap stan. >> instead of running every decision by a general, his approach emphasized sharing information and empowering those under him to act quickly. in a new book "team of teams new rules for engagement for a complex world." general stanley mcchrystal joins us at the table, and we're glad to have you here. we want to hit the news of the day. michael morel was here he talked about a concern of a large-scale 9/11 attack. it's not a question of if it's when it's going to happen. do you think we're doing enough to stop it? >> i think we're doing a lot but problem is we tend to work in silos and we tend not to connect the pieces together. that's the story of 9/11 and the challenge of those threats is pulling the pieces of the puz until a single picture. >> we thought we corrected that after 9/11 what happened? >> well organizations ten to drift apart, plus inside organizations people tend to get into their desk, cubeicalcubical, office and information is hard to share. wikileaks makes people more cautious, if i share information, i might get in trouble, if i don't get share information, whoever got in trouble not sharing information? >> what worries you the most about what's going on? >> the fact that we are focused on isis as the problem, and i think that isis is a problem. but i think it's really a symptom of a much greater problem. i think if you think of the region as a body that has hiv-aids isis is that little disease that comes in when the immune system of the region has been weakened so much by instability and lack of a political narrative. so in reality, if isis went away tomorrow, we'd have a huge problem still in that part of the world. so if we don't look at the fundamental problems then isis or son of isis or grandson of isis will be a problem for years and years to come. >> you say really the biggest challenge isn't often the enemy but the environment that we're working in and that covers many, many areas. >> when we were in iraq in 2004 i had this extraordinary task force of superbly equipped and exquisitely trained small teams. that's what we were best at and we were losing. what we found was, it was not al qaeda in iraq it was not al zarqawi as a huge lead though he was effective. what we found was an environment in which information pass sod fast and things interconnected so much that complexity hit a point where you couldn't operate in discrete teams to have an effect. you had to create a network that was organic in its ability to adapt. that's what al qaeda did. they didn't do it consciously, they did it austically. >> what do you mean by team of teams? >> team of teams really takes a small team that you're familiar with, where people finish each other's sentences and have common trust and purpose but try to scale that. sud will i, beyond 100 people it's hard. people in other organizations you mistrust because you don't know them culture's different, background's different weep have to pull the team of teams, think of the united states government the different parts or parts inside department of defense or anywhere, you've got to create linkages across those that create the same kind of that inside a small team you're so familiar with exists in a big team. it's really hard. it takes something we call shared consciousness, a radical level of transparency start to build information so you push down decision making through what i'd call empowered execution. you are arming the people at lowest levels to use their best judgment because now they have context actual understanding of what they have to do. >> you talk about how important it is to adapt. the plane crash in 1978 they ran out of gas, compared to what sully did when he landed the plane, the boston marathon bombing with the doctors that had to adapt, and then the killing of osama bin laden. in each case things did not go according to plan but people had to adapt. that's what you said we all have to keep in mind. >> right. in the military one of the great actions no plan survives first contact. you do detailed operations orders and they never execute as you planned. so you've got to build in the idea it's always going to be different, if you're not planning adapt. yet our structures aren't that way. we check lists, we give orders and say do this but then the situation changes, they're there, far from you, in a position, do i do what i was told, use my best judgment? if we don't get a culture where they're informed by information and empowered to use best judgment, we fail. >> best judgment is the way to go. >> we have to remember that on "cbs this morning." use your best judgment. >> general mcchrystal, great to have you at the table. congratulations on the book. >> thanks so much. an atlanta principal under fire for what some call racist remarks during her school's graduation last week. the principal tried to get the audience's attention before the valedictorian spoke. >> you people are being so rude to not listen to this speech. it was my fault that we missed it in the program. look who's leaving, all black people. >> she was upset to see so many people step out. she later apologized for her moment of frustration. >> i apologize to everyone in attendance there. the statement was not made as a racist remark. i'm sorry for what i said, like i said the devil was in the house. >> she has received hate mail and death threats since the video started spreading. still don't get what happened. i don't either. >> what she was talking, people started to leave and she was saying people, don't leave but in the course of trying to get everybody to stay she said look, it's only the black people who are leave, which at that point everybody got up and left. but she said things before leading up to that remark that sort of angered people, it was more than just that comment. >> got it. >> she was not having a good day. the devil was in the room she says. she's a trainer to the stores but tracy anderson's exercise empire's doing some stretching of its own. see how she's taking on the this morning's "eye opener" at 8:00 sponsored by walgreens, at the corner of happy and healthy. the ladies of "the talk" back in new york back to studio 57. julie chen sharon osbourne sheryl underwood and issue shah tyler join us. see how motherhood in broadway playing a big role on "cbs this morning." week's show that's ahead on "cbs this morning." before fibromyalgia, i was active. i was a doer. then the chronic, widespread pain slowed me down. my doctor and i agreed that moving more helps ease fibromyalgia pain. he also prescribed lyrica. for some patients, lyrica significantly relieves fibromyalgia pain and improves physical function. with less pain, i feel better. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worsening depression or unusual changes in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling or blurry vision. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. fibromyalgia may have changed things. but with less pain, i'm still a doer. ask your doctor about lyrica. what is that? it's you! it's me? alright emma, i know it's not your favorite but it's time for your medicine, okay? you ready? one, two, three. [ both ] ♪ emma, emma bo-bemma ♪ ♪ banana-fana-fo-femma ♪ ♪ fee-fi-fo-femma ♪ ♪ em-ma ♪ very good sweety, how do you feel? good. yeah? you did a really good job, okay? [ female announcer ] to nurses everywhere, thank you from johnson & johnson. how much protein does your dog food have? 18%? 20? introducing nutrient-dense purina one true instinct with real salmon and tuna and 30% protein. support your active dog's whole body health with purina one. hey america, still not sure whether to stay or go to your people? ♪ well this summer, stay with choice hotels twice and get a $50 gift card you can use for just about anything. go you always have a choice. book now at choicehotels.com ♪ >> in our morning rounds, new way to work out by staying in nearly 83 million americans say they were not active last year. that is the highest number since 2009. streaming workout classes could turn things around. get online training for a fraction of the price at gyms or boutique sessions. how big names in fitness are finding a virtual foll >> reporter: when tracy anderson trains her clients she makes them sweat. her studios are kept at 86 degrees, her philosophy is lighter weights, more rechlt ps and unconventional movements. >> part of my entire mission statement is to create balance where there's imbalance in people's bodies. >> reporter: anderson's roster of elite clients earned her title of celebrity trainer, it's the cost of her classes, $900 a month that gave her a reputation. >> being so in the public eye, you've heard people say, she's inaccessible, meant for a certain tier. >> i have taken that beating a thousand times over. one thing i wish that people would take note of is that as long as i've had expensive gyms i've had dvds under $20. hi, i'm tracy anderson. >> reporter: after 160 dvds, anderson has become even more accessible. catering it to those who don't want to leave the house. since december anyone with an internet connection and stream one of her classes for $90 a month. >> you don't need a home gym. you've got a home gym right on your mobile phone. >> reporter: shape magazine's deputy editor mary anderson says streaming workouts are one of the fastest growing trends in the fitness industry. >> apps to download select any workout routine you want from any trainer in the world. >> reporter: of the 54 million americans who belong to a gym, less than half use their membership consistently. compare that to digital workouts or fitness app downloads that increased 87% faster than other apps overall. video streaming increased by 60% last year alone. >> i hope you're ready to sweat. >> reporter: why fitness chains like crunch are going online. >> down lift. >> reporter: why women like jennifer rapp started working out at home, in addition to her gym membership. >> i don't ever do classes, i find the times restrictive. so this is just an easy way for me to get in the weightlifting and other types of classes, yoga, which i love on my own schedule. >> reporter: some sites like mary helen bowers ballet beautiful charge a fee others are streaming classes for free. tracy anderson says she has always disliked the title celebrity trainer. she says streaming is the next step in her overall goal. >> anything that gets people moving and gets people you know, at least working out, is -- is -- is a positive thing. we just launched, they get excited by workout wednesday, it's like excited. it has a nickname workout wednesday, t.a. real time it's got a hashtag. >> reporter: vainita new york. >> i have her tape you do that you work out. >> still doing it. >> i said, i have some of her tapes. once you do it it's really hard. but she's really good. >> all right. stock up on tissues, in new york central park with bad news for your nose. >> it's being called the pollen tsunami. experts explain why this year's allergies are so bad and how they could stay that way for generations. that's next on "cbs this morning." >> announcer: cbs morning rounds sponsored by gill add, proud sponsor of hepatitis awareness month. sponsor f hepatitis awareness month. you've tried to forget your hepatitis c. it's slow moving, you tell yourself. i have time. after all there may be no symptoms for years. no wonder you try to push it to the back of your mind and forget it. but here's something you shouldn't forget. hepatitis c is a serious disease. if left untreated, it could lead to liver damage and potentially even liver cancer. if you are one of the millions of people with hepatitis c you haven't been forgotten. there's never been a better time to rethink your hep c. because people like you may benefit from scientific advances. advances that could help cure your hep c. visit hepchope.com or call to talk to a hep c educator who can help answer your questions and work with you to create a personalized plan to prepare you for a conversation with your hep c specialist. is there an elk in your bed? with sleep number, now there's an adjustment for that. only at a sleep number store. save $500 on the memorial day special edition mattress with sleepiq technology. know better sleep with sleep number. just can't seem to escape... another sneeze attack... you may be muddling through allergies. don't get caught off guard. try zyrtec® dissolve tabs. powerful allergy relief, now in a tablet that starts dissolving instantly. zyrtec® dissolve tabs. muddle no more™. allergy experts are warning of a pollen tsunami. that doesn't sound fun. one of the biggest pollen hot zones in the country spans the northeast. jericka duncan is right in the middle of it in new york misery. right in the middle of central park. good morning. >> reporter: good morn, gayle. in fact, where we're standing has a high pollen concentration and it's only expected to increase throughout the week. the culprit for all of this pollen, the trees. blooming flowers and budding branches means spring is in the air and so is the pollen. it's it's everywhere collecting on the ground and clumping on cars. he says there's so much pollen even people who have never had allergies are suppering. >> this particular season we're bombarded with phone calls with people experiencing allergies for the very first time. not only allergy but pollen triggered as eded as many wheezing. people who have never had it before. >> reporter: normally pollen releases in spring but the long brutal winter delayed that. for allergy suffers, it's the perfect pollen storm. >> right now we have birch, palm maple. if you're sensitive, you're going to feel it. >> reporter: it's not just the northeast. pollen counts are at medium to high levels. roxanne lives in tulsa, oklahoma. she said she recently suffer one of the worst allergy attacks she's ever had. >> i was miserable. full of allergies. i couldn't talk, i could. believe. >> unfortunately relief for those may not come any time soon. climate change is causing allergy seasons to start earlier and last longer and that by 2040 pollen counts will be more than twice the levels they were in 2000. >> no matter where you are whether you're in a city town suburbs, pollens are here to stay. they're rising. you need to be ready for this pollen storm and have a game plan in place. >> reporter: now there are some things you can do to lessen the severity of symptoms. wear sunglasses when you're outside. wash your face and your eyes before you go to sleep so the pollen doesn't get in your bedding. of course whelp all else fails call the doctor. >> good advice. charlie, you have a little tick your throat. >> a little cold. >> where did you get the cold from? >> i think i got it from her last week. >> do you want to share, you two? >> next time we'll take a break and good morning everyone, it's 8:25 on your monday, time for some had had loins, i'm mall -- headlines, i'm frank mallicoat. caltrain added a sixth car the cars today. that means 150 more seats more standing room during peak times a little more convenient. ridership has grown to more than 60,000 riders on the average weekday and it's getting easier now. governor brown expected to release his updated budget with a $3 billion surplus this week. he's expected to ask for more of that money to be set aside for a rainy day and public schools, community colleges, are at the top of his list. [baseball crowd noise] ♪ ♪ [x1 chime] ♪ ♪ [crowd cheers] oh! i can't believe it! [cheering] hi, grandma! ♪ [♪♪] ♪ i'm gettin' out ♪ ♪ i'm gettin' out ♪ ♪ i'm gettin' out ♪ ♪ gonna have a look around ♪ ♪ now is the time ♪ ♪ i started flyin' ♪ ♪ both feet off of the ground ♪ ♪ head in the sky ♪ ♪ eyes open wide ♪ ♪ happy to look around ♪ good morning, getting a check of bay bridge you know it's clearing out early way early you can see the metering lights are still on but the back ups only at that time middle of parking lot -- only to the middle of the parking lot. east shore freeway 37 minutes the bridge to the maze. to the altamont pass, and it remains heavy on southbound 680 leaving pleasanton out of the sunol grade. here's the dublin pleasanton area and most of the traffic is a little further east, we of course also have reduced services oakland and b.a.r.t. over the weekend. everything is on time. that's kcbs traffic and here's roberta. it's live. it's our kpix 5 weather camera looking out towards the transamerica pyramid. good morning everybody. look at the clouds. it's a very deep marine layer, very summer-like. and it's got our temperatures down this morning. 46 degrees in areas of fog in santa rosa. later today, partial coastal clearing only in the 50s. bay side with partly cloudy skies. 50s, 60s and we'll call it partly cloudy inland with highs barely into the low 70s. we will turn cooler on tuesday and wednesday then introduce a chance of rain showers moving back in the bay area forecast on thursday and on friday. that will set the stage for high pressure to rebuild back into the bay area over the weekend. that's a look at your extended forecast. we'll be right back. it's a little bit after lunchtime on the 25th of april. we're in the upper part of base camp. there are tubs of people out of their tents now. there was a huge cloud that came down from this side of base c morning. >> hi. >> reporter: sharon osborne shows us what prompted her emotional mother's day message. that's ahead. time to show you this morning morning's headlines around the road. a subway worker was fired for praising two police officers were shot. "brady bunch" actress begged them to give her character a job. so they made her a real estate agent. a chinese billionaire treated 64 of his workers to a trip to france. they were booked for the four-day trip. employees even attended a parade. the trip was to celebrate the company's 20th anniversary. isn't that a nice gesture? >> that's awesome. chris licht, les moonves, are listening. throwing it out there. >> a weekend in paris. a look at the nation's deadly avalanche on mt. everest. >> that was huge. a powder blast. in an attempt to see the avalanche. >> that's jim davidson. he spoke three days after the avalanche. he was at the so-called camp when there. there he connected with friends and fellow climber john. the photographer captured these images. both climbers just returned to the united states and we welcome them to studio 57. thank you so much for being here. >> you're alive. we're so glad. we're so glad. >> are you ready to go back? >> yeah, i'd go back in a second, i think. >> why? you've already done it. >> i think mountains are my passion and i think it's just a place i really have a connection to really. it's nepal always a hole. >> that was your second time. >> yeah. i was really fortunate to summit in 2012 and to return was really more emotional and more of a connection again to the mountains and to the people of nepal sneechb jim, nepal. >> jim. you didn't say. and your wife is in the green room. >> i'll keep that in mind. i would go to see the mountains and the sherpas. i may go back. i'll give it some thought. >> describe what it was like. >> it was the incredible shaking of the glacier at first. then it went from the ski mountain climber to the scientist side of it understanding it and seeing this giant wall of white come down from the amphitheater. that was really scary. >> the last time you were here -- we talked to you shortly after it happened. you were by telephone and i asked you what is it like when you feel you're going to die. i'll ask you the same question to you. >> i was at camp one. when the earthquake happened we had avalanches. it was cloudy coming at us. we couldn't see. when we came out of the tents i thought there was a chance we were not going to survive it. but you try by posing on layers of coats and avalanche beacons. you're still trying to optimize your survival even though in the last few seconds it's high. >> in that circumstance i heard the avalanche was coming so i put on my avalanche beacon and turned it on so they'd find me alive or find me if i passed away and put on a hat and coat so you'd survive a little better. you try to increase your chance as little bit. >> i have no desire to die but i don't want to dietary feed. was terror what you felt when you were standing there seeing and hearing what you were hearing? >> i think i would say extreme anxiety. of course, you're afraid to die not quite terror because that can sort of immobilize you but try to push through the terror to try to find a way to improve your chance a little bit. >> the scary part of it was the fact that it was really foggy. normally on a clear day you could see where it was coming from. instead the giant roar comes from all around where weather we were in base camp or camp one. you had no idea until it was almost on you and then when you saw it getting that close -- >> the roar is the roll of snow. >> snow and ice and especially on the base camp there was this big sur rat that collapsed and hit the side of the glacier and a giant air mass came across the base camp. it wasn't your typical avalanche. basically an intense air blast that obliterated tents. it was like a scene from the debris where you have debris and churches of tents and tent poles and rocks getting rocked everywhere. >> tell us about your evacuation. >> we were pin dound for 48 hours because the ropes had disappeared. literally our whole route disappears under collapsed ice. ee subsequentually they realized there may be a storm coming and we need to get helicopter in and get the roughly 140 climbers. it was a two-minute ride to decent 2,600 feet like a three-dimensional spiral. >> why did you want to go there? >> i wanted to go there to learn about myself, my fellow climbers and human capacity. it's a mental challenge as well as a spiritual challenge. i learned probably more about humanity and the people around me by being inspired how tenacious the medical crew was and the climbers and sherpas in base camp and how resilient they were, watching people rebuild their houses and having a good spirit about it. i didn't learn as much from climbing the mountain but from the people around me. >> and as resilient as you two are. it's a very scary thing that you boenlt survived. >> it's a test of yourself and your teammates and you learn a lot about yourself in the process. >> thank you for being here. i'm glad you're both safe. next the ladies of "the talk," they're here they're back in studio 57. guess what? they just won another emmy. we'll get an update on sara gilbert's new baby and the guest in new york including one -- >> -- that they may recognize. my name is rene guerrero. i'm a senior field technician for pg&e here in san jose. pg&e is using new technology to improve our system, replacing pipelines throughout the city of san jose, to provide safe and reliable services. raising a family here in the city of san jose has been a wonderful experience. my oldest son now works for pg&e. when i do get a chance, an opportunity to work with him it's always a pleasure. i love my job and i care about the work i do. i know how hard our crews work for our customers. i want them to know that they do have a safe and reliable system. together, we're building a better california. our favorite prince harry is on tour and may be catching the royal baby bug. he spoke about wanting kids of his own. >> i don't think you can force these things. it will happen when it happens. of course, i would love to have kids right now but there's a process one goes through. tours like this is great fun. hopefully i'm doing right by myself. it would be a great to have someone else next to me to share the pressure, but, you know time will come. whatever happens happens, i guess. >> yes, there is a process to making a baby. >> he's clear on that. >> i know some ladies who might help him with the process. >> a lot of volunteers. >> the ladies of the hit cbs daytime show i don't think they can help with the process. they're taken. >> cheryl. >> cheryl. >> they recently won a daytime emmy award for their righting. julie chen cherry, sharon osborne. how about that billionaire who sent all of his employees to paris. i wonder if you have any clout that you could mention it next time you see him. >> are you proposing the same number of cbs employees or just you and me? you and me i might be able to swing that. >> just this table and, of course, sara gilbert. >> yes. sara gilbert, she's already had the baby, a little boy. she's at home recovering. >> he's growing so fast every day. she'll be back in a few weeks. but you know what? with nursing and traveling with a newborn we said you need to take care of baby and stay home. we will hold down the fort. and that is why, gayle, you're coming to help us out on this friday show. >> i'm very excited. looking forward to it. >> what day? >> friday. >> friday. >> but you tape it every day, so you won't miss it. charlie's got it covered. you guys were here. you were talking about mother's day. you were talking about mother's day and the celebration. you went yesterday. tell us what you did. >> leslie and i brought our 5-year-old charlie to the whitney museum. oh, my goodness. >> the new whitney downtown. >> we went to brunch there and walked around the museum and went to central park because i started an annual mother's day tradition which is always getting charlie's sketch drawn by one of those central park artists. >> every year? >> every year. we started it last year. >> sharon i have to say this about you. your daughter kelly wrote this about you. like all teenage girls i had this ridiculous fear of growing up and being just like you. why have i been fighting the inevitable for so long. you're the most beautiful, kind generous loving, and let's not forget and the best part you are my mom. that's in letters to my mom. what a touching thing for a daughter to say about a mother. the mother/daughter conflict can be very strong. >> very strong. i think it's something that we all go through, i want to be my own person i'm not my mom, i have my own views. i think it's her turning 30 and also me being of an age where i accept her for what she is she accepts me. it's kind f like our relationship is in a whole different stage right now. >> their phases change and they're supposed to. >> did you know gayle's to two kids surprised her for mother's day. they both flew it. >> they said they weren't going to be able to make it and i had a bit of an attitude and said i would speak about it on monday. >> shame? >> i was going to speak about it on monday. >> so they knew. >> let me ask this. you guys have so much success where people get around the table and talk. what's special and different and why the talk? >> you know we know we're fortunate that we have a unique relationship and you know how it is when you're building a show. some of it is ail cami magic, it doesn't always work. we've definitely been lucky. the other thing we have for our show, there are so many shows about women that are conflict-driven and about kindness. it's as if it's a game and everybody has to win at the expense of everybody else and i think we really feel like we're a team. we treat each other like teammates. we respect each other. we can turn it into something without being damaging and it's a joy to come to work every day and i think that comes across on the show. they feel that they're a part of a show that's clab rah tish and fun. >> stanley mcchrystal was here talking about teams. he said sometimes you have make a decision that's best for the group. you have to make a decision that's best for the group. >> absolutely. i think we appreciate each other's. s and thoughts. we kind of entertain, enlighten, and empower as one voice with the audience. >> the other thing is you can finish each other's sentences which you guys can do. >> i was dying to jump in and finish her thought to answer charlie's original question. because we don't do that we're also interested in hearing what the others have to say i think that's a big pierce of why our show works. >> speaking of it because we have to get to this bite. kevin frazier, who's co-hosted on the show did an interview with saysy houston where she's talking for first time about her granddaughter bobbi kristina who remains in the hospital. >> we go to the hospital every day and pray you know. i talk to her because she can still hear you know. i rub her hand, whatever, you know, and what not. my daughter-in-law and my son, you know we do what we can do. the rest -- we can't do about it. that's all up to him. we know nothing about his plan. >> that's right. >> absolutely. she's going to wait on god. she's waiting for god to speak. i like the fact that they're doing things as a fably. that bobby is involved the father, and you've got the daughter-in-law and sissy and the family. that's the only thing you can do, you know. the doctors can do the best they can, but if you parade up and you know that god will speak you wait for god to speak and you accept his answer. >> and we know that prayer works. >> amen. >> thank you girls. we'll see you later on. >> we'll see you later on. >> ya yay. >> what to wear, what to wear. you can see the shoal at 4:00 p.m. eastern, 1:00 p.m. eastern. check your local listi that does it for us. for news any time anywhere watch it on our ♪ ♪ ♪ it took tim morehouse years to master the perfect lunge. but only one attempt to master depositing checks at chase atms. technology designed for you. so you can easily master the way you bank. good morning, we're getting a check of the brake. and -- bay bridge. you know it's been clearing out early. around 8:30 and you can see it's still stacked up to the middle of the parking lot the metering lights are on. but where'd all the commuters go? it actually looks pretty good right now for this time of the morning heading into the city. they're not on the san mateo bridge. the bridge opened ahead of schedule a little bit after this weekend's closure. westbound 92 ♪ ♪ ♪ you're only young once. unless you have a subaru. (announcer) the subaru xv crosstrek. symmetrical all-wheel drive plus 34 mpg. love. it's what makes a subaru a subaru. jonathan: it's a new jet ski! - what? wayne: oops! - (screams) wayne: you don't know me you're not my mama. you're not my mom! tiffany: oh my god! jonathan: it's a trip to jamaica! - ahh! wayne: lord have mercy. you've got the big deal of the day! - i'm gonna pick door number one! 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. how is everybody doing today? let's make a deal. one person, let's go. the clown, the clown come on over here, clown. hey, lisa the clown. how are you doing? - hi. wayne: where are you from, lisa? - i'm from montrose, california.

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