Transcripts For WOIO CBS This Morning 20161017 : comparemela

Transcripts For WOIO CBS This Morning 20161017



>> they have a launch to retake mosul from the united states. >> the time for victory has come. >> the battle for mosul begins. >> us defense secretary ash carter calling this a divisive moment. >> another thing he is saying the election is rigged. is that a responsible thing for a candidate to say? >> the american people are getting awful tired of this two-on-one fight with many of half of her work for her every day. >> let's talk about the hacked e-mails that the clinton shared with john podesta. >> i don't give any credence to the dumped documents because i don't even know if they are accurate. >> no power to thousafor thousae pacific northwest. >> vandals fired upon a gop office in north carolina. >> this is a story that >> some bills fans is void their displeasure with colin kaepernick's -- >> china launched its newest space mission. two astronauts blasted off a dock. >> a car flies off the road and good samaritans help pull everyone to safety. >> all that. >> bart and homer made television history with its 600th >> dodgers win 1-0 and split the first two games of this nlcs in chicago. >> >> and all that matters. >> donald trump calls the parody at "snl" a hit job. >> i helped a kid in 1992, named kevin mcallister find a hotel lobby down the hall and to the lechlt. >> wikileaks released all of these e-mails from hillary's campaign and no one is talking about them because the trump stuff is so much more hacker julian assange would do more damage than "access hollywood"'s billy bush? announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. welcome to "cbs this morning." the fire bombing of a republican headquarters in north carolina is raising fears about political violence in the final weeks of the presidential campaign. pictures showed the extensive damage caused by the ta it happened overnight saturday. no one was hurt. >> now, the offices is in hillsborough, northwest of durham and jeff pegues, good morning. >> reporter: the fbi and the atf have joined local police in this investigation. so far, no suspects have been named as campaign offices around that fiercely competitive battleground state have been asked to step up security. emotions you feel when you see something like this today. >> reporter: no one was inside the gop headquarters in orange county during the overnight attack. official say a bottle filled with flamable liquid was thrown through the office's front window, burning furniture and signs inside. on the outside of a nearby wall is spray painted swastika with the words nazi republicans leave town or else. >> or else! or else what? that's what we all wonder. we will not be intimidated. we will not be scared. we are not going anywhere. officials are calling the violence an act of political terrorism. democratic presidential nominee hillary clinton who recent polls show her leading in the battleground state condemned the attack and calling it horrific and unacceptable. donald trump blame the trump on clinton supporters sweeting clinton and dams in north carolina just firebombed our office in orange county because we are winning. >> the objective of terrorism is to intimidate and scare people. and our volunteers have been coming through all day long and we know that it's on their mind but they are not going to give up. >> reporter: the democratic leaning county scored lopsided wins for president obama in 2012 and 2008. gop officials in the state say they have not received any threats of violence prior to this attack. >> t it may be a liberal county, but it is not a violent county. >> reporter: in a sign of unity, a go fund me campaign page has started by democrats and it is already raised more than $13,000 to help reopen the office. gayle? >> thank you very much, jeff. the election is now just 22 days away and donald trump is accusing the, quote, clinton machine and media of a the white house. the latest tracker poll shows hillary clinton six-point lead 46 to 40% across three battleground states. the two were tied in those states a month ago. trump's repeated claims of a rigged election are even drawing objections from his own running mate. major garrett is covering the trump campaign. >> reporter: donald trump once run as a strong man in this race. now he is the victim. be said on all sides by hillary clinton's campaign, a conspiring media, lying women who accuse him of sexual now, local officials aelg volunteers apparently eager to rig this election. trump sees villains everywhere, leaving the explaining to surrogates, like his running mate. >> donald trump has made it clear he categorically denies those allegations. >> reporter: republican vice presidential couldn't mike pence defended donald trump against numerous allegations of sexual in the national cumedia. >> reporter: trump said women with stories made it all up. >> lies, lies. no witnesses. no nothing. all big lies. >> reporter: to trump, it's not a question of his character. but an indictment of media recklessness which he laid out in a twitter onslaught this weekend. the election is absolutely rigged by the dishonest and distorted media pushing crooked hillary but also at many polling >> listen. what i said is nothing compared to what bill clinton has done, okay? >> reporter: trump also chafed at "saturday night live" portrayal of him calling it a hit job and linking it to the, quote, media rigging election. >> november 8th. this is it. we are going to either win or we are going to have a whole different country. >> reporter: and declined to stand by trump's allegations that the election is already tarnished. >> look. we will respect the outcome of i don't think any american should ever attempt to make any other american nervous in the exercise of their franchise to vote. >> reporter: if phantom claims of election tampering were not enough, trump introduced another spector. clinton on some sort of drug therapy. >> i think we should take a drug test prior to the debate. because i don't know what is going on with her! but at the beginning of her last debate, she was all pumped up at the beginning ant was like, oh, take me down! she could barely reach her car. >> reporter: back to the issue of voter fraud. it is extremely rare and errors that do arise commonly from clerical error or bad data matching. a center found the average american is more likely to be struck by lightning than emimpersonate somebody at the polls. >> hillary clinton is ahead by 51 to 36%. that is a ten-point gain in one month. nancy cordes is covering the clinton campaign and she has more of those poll numbers. >> reporter: good morning. the swing among women has been so pronounced that clinton is now gaining on trump even among republican women. the catalyst, it seems, was that 2005 "access hollywood" video and 70 percent of women found it offens morning clinton compares trump to some of the screen's most famous bullies. >> she ate like a pig. >> you're so stupid. >> how stupid are the people in the country? get him out of here! >> reporter: in a new ad clinton campaign is arguing trump is a bad -- >> who do you mean that all of those bullies? >> reporter: the latest cbs news battleground tracker finds voters question clinton's e-mails posted by wikileaks shows she has different motives in private than in public. vice president argued sunday clinton is being held to unfair expectations. >> i find myself choking up. everybody looks at me and say, he's a good father and a decent guy. she chokes up and says something, you know, for whatever reason that she is playing the woman, card, man. this is the way -- >> reporter: over the weekend a top house republican raised a new of a private e-mail server as secretary of state. the fbi gave congress more details about its investigation and congressman jason chaffetz sees evidence of a quid pro quo. he says the documents show under secretary of state patrick kennedy contacted a fbi official in 2016 to dispute the classification level on one of clinton's benghazi related e-mails which had just been marked secret. fbi official asked kennedy about a longstanding request for additional fbi slot, u.s. missions overseas. the documents indicate kennedy offered a trade and lower classification level in the change for the fbi slots. in a statement the fbi says it looked into it and the classification of the e-mail was not changed and there was never a quid pro quo. the state department denies the quid pro quo as well. they have been very open about the fact they did f clinton's e-mails in the way they were classified. they didn't believe that the information was as sensitive as the fbi and intelligence officials did. from a political perspective, charlie, the higher the classification level, the worse it looked that clinton stored those e-mails on her private server for years. >> thanks, nancy. gerald seib of "wall street journal," pleased to have you back. >> thank you. >> what do you think the campaigns at this point in time? >> i think to excite his base to the maximum extent possible and, in the process, try to drive down hillary clinton's vote and keep his base up and drive her swing voter support down. >> and -- policy? >> basically, that is right. i thinker strategy is a little harder to figure out right now, because she has kind of moved between going on the attack with donald trump, engaging with him on his term, and also trying to sort of like go positive and rise above, as she says. i think the interesting question this week ist strategy for each of them? i think he sticks with the -- i think she drives above that now and higher and positive or stick in the fight. >> is there anything in the wikileaks e-mails you find surprising or on damaging to her? >> i think surprising to her is the tone with the goldman sachs bankers. she says one thing in public and in private is cozier with them. >> didn't want to come out at the time? >> yes. >> the "wall street journal" has hillary clinton up 11 points nationally. now a discussion about whether her team with expand the electoral map. do you expect they will fight in georgia, arizona, utah? >> well, they are going to fight in utah because it's the most bizarre state or the most republican state may go independent or democrat this ye the campaign about whether georgia and arizona are worth fighting over. i think there is more of an inclination to fight in arizona but a temptation or at least try in georgia. g. has a big african-american population and if you could energize that vote for hillary clinton it might be within reach but georgia is the charlie brown football and looks tempting to democrats and pulled back at the end. >> given that donald trump is trying to suggest that the election is rigged, is there a thought that they need to win doubts -- >> one of the interesting findings in our poll even people who support hillary clinton are not particularly optimistic about hillary clinton victory. what the country would be like, whether it could be governed that way. i think winning big would at least help her create a bigger mandate if that is the way they want to think about it. having watched campaigns over the years campaigns are reluctant to count how largely the victory is going to be and they are happy to have a win at all and i don't think carried away with expanding >> do you expect any surprises? >> if you said we should not expect surprises this year, you would be wrong by every turn. thousands of more wikileaks documents. i don't expect there is something shocking and stunning in those but who really knows? i think the biggest question the way each of them choose to finish this out. is it scorch the earth for donald trump? probably. is it high for hillary clinton? i think we will find out on wednesday a lot more. >> thank you. the final presidential debate is on wednesday night. vegas, along with major, nancy, john dickerson and bob schieffer and coverage begins at 8:00 eastern time on cbs. american war planes and special forces are backing thousands of iraqi and kurdish fighters and they are moving on mosul. isis seized the iraqi city more than two years ago. holly williams is on the front line and joins us. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. these ksh trying to retake the main road into mosul which is in that direction over there. just after dawn this morning, we were with them as they broke through the front line and then tanks and armored vehicles moved into this area which is being controlled by isis now for over two years. the kurds have light arms and artille artillery. we have seen isis respond this morning with a suicide car bomb, and was then eventually blown up. over the last few days, pro government iraqi forces have moved in position around the outside of mosul and they include the iraqi army, kurdish fighters, and extreme militia men. the u.s. coalition is also involved in this fight and there are around 6,000 u.s. service members currently here in iraq. over the last few days, we have seen video of them emerging from insideul be u.s. coalition air strikes! down! u.s. coalition air strikes inside the city. it's thought that there are between 3,000 and 5,000 isis fighters inside mosul and that they have laid splos to protect themselves. for is siis is the jewel of the quick or on easy. holly williams, cbs news, just east of mosul. >> holly williams on the front line in iraq. secretary of state john kerry warns that russia and syria's government could face new economic sanctions over the war in syria. air strikes continue to hit the city of aleppo. weekend cease-fire talks failed to reach an agreement. video shows a child being saved from a building yesterday. elizabeth palmer is in aleppo where she learned about crude weaponry that is causing so much destruction. elizabeth, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the siege of eastern aleppo, which is slowly choking the life out of almost half the city, is so painfully drawn out because neither side is strong enough to win decisively, nor weak enough to be forced to capitulate. one missile has become a trademark, the opposition fighters in aleppo. homemade. in a neighborhood recently recaptured soldiers who didn't want to be identified took us into a basement of a ruined building. this is a factory? everywhere there were piles of parts to build a simple bomb. cooking gas canisters sawed in half were packed with explosives and mounted on crude tail fins. the result isn't pretty, but it's lethal. it's not filled with explosives, though, right? the rockets were launched and aimed, sort of, through an ordinary piece of steel pipe. the syrian army, too, has improvised weapons like the by now infamous barrel bombs. but put crude weapons in the hand of poorly trained and overstretched fighting forces on both sides of this grinding war here in aleppo taken the syrian army to advance about 800 yards to the white building over there and all around misery for civilians who are trapped in a war they didn't ask for and now have no power to end. and the fact that no promise of a cease-fire came out of the talks between the u.s. and russia this weekend is a further blow to people who have lost almost everything. >> elizabeth palmer reporting from inside syria, thank you. the pacific northwest is cleaning up this morning from a series of damages storms. in oregon 80-mile-an-hour winds whipped the coast and homes were ripped across and knocked out power to thousands but the storms were not as bad as some forecasts had predicted. a famed black bear who walked on his hind legs is reportedly killed during a legal hunt. ahead, the outcry over the how several people tried to protect him. first, it's time to check your local weather. >> samantha: good morning to you, and happy monday. also, happy first day of summer, at least that's what it feels like, right? 76 midday, 82 at 3:00. that is 20 degrees above average and 82 is also your record high for today set back in 1953. i'll be interested to see if we can tie or break it today. we'll go with a fore f decreasing cloud cover throughout the day, a lot of hacked e-mails allegedly show hillary clinton's campaign chairman was warned about a character problem. >> ahead, other clinton campaign secrets reveal a wikileaks document. >> on "cbs this morning." the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." announcer: this portion of "cbs this m toyota. let's go places! ?don't try to change me in any way? ?oh? ?don't tell me what to do? ?just let me be myself? ?that's all i ask of you? the new 2017 corolla with toyota safety sense standard. ?you don't own me? toyota. let's go places. one dark chocolate rises above the rest lindt excellence created by our master chocolatiers pure, rich, darkly intense... made like no other crafted elegantly thin to reveal complex layers of flavor experience excellence with all your senses and discover chocolate beyond compare try lindt excellence with a touch of sea salt. t that doesn't stop my afib from leaving me at a higher risk of stroke. that'd be devastating. i took warfarin for over 15 years until i learned more about once-daily xarelto... a latest generation blood thinner. then i made the switch. xarelto? significantly lowers the risk of stroke in people with afib not caused by a heart valve problem. it has similar effectiveness to warfarin. warfarin interferes with vitamin k and at least six blood clotting factors. xarelto? is selective targeting one critical factor for people with afib currently well managed on warfarin, there is limited information on how xarelto and warfarin compare in reducing the risk of stroke. like all blood thinners, don't stop taking xarelto without talking to your doctor, as this may increase your risk of a blood clot or stroke. while taking you may bruise more easily, and it may take longer for bleeding to stop. xarelto may increase your risk of bleeding if you take certain medicines. xarelto can cause serious, and in rare cases fatal bleeding. if you have had spinal anesthesia while on xarelto watch for back pain or any nerve or muscle related signs or symptoms. do not take xarelto if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. tell your doctor before all planned medical or dental procedures. before starting xarelto tell your doctor about any conditions, such as kidney, liver or bleeding problems. to help protect yourself from a stroke, ask your doctor about xarelto. there's more to know. xarelto. psh psh lunch is ready! campbell's spider-man soups. made for real, real life. thanks mom your first week? long. it'll get better. i'm at the edward jones office, like sue suggested. thanks for doing this, dad. so i thought it might be time to talk about a financial strategy. (laughing) you mean pay him back? knowing your future is about more than just you. so let's start talking about your long-term goals... multiplied by 13,000 financial advisors. it's a big deal. >> tia: good morning. i'm tia ewing. breaking news this morning in the murder of a 15-year-old boy working at his family's restaurant, mr. hero in cleveland height. a suspect is in custody and they made the arrest not long ago. we're working to get more information about this. look for the updates on the free cleveland 19 mobile news app. for a look at the warm here's meteorologist sam roberts. sam. >> samantha: the big story today is the heat. temperatures in the 60s this morning. about 76 midday, and then an afternoon high today of 82. that's 20 degrees above average, and it's actually the record for today set back in 1953. we'll have decreasing clouds, very breezy as well, and we're going to do it all over again tomorrow. 84 in the afternoon with rain moving in at night. weather, guys, by the end of the ? mr. trump, we received a lot of questions online about the audiotape that was released last week of you bragging with sexually assaulting women. >> what i said is nothing compared to what bill clinton has done, okay? he has abused women. four of those women are here >> bill, how could you? how will i go on with the debate? no, i'll never be able to remember some figures now! oh, donald, no! get real! i'm made of steel. this is nothing. hi, girls. >> martha, she is going to silence these women but they need to be protected and their voices heard. >> what about all of the women accusing you of sexual assault? fire. i like the hillary clinton character, hi, girls, not hi tramp tramps. donald trump says time to retire the boring show and alec baldwin stinks. >> donald trump was watching. >> yes. lauren michaels is saying, keep it coming. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? that was "saturday night live's" take on the second presidential debate. more campaign news in this half hour. a closer l from inside hillary clinton's campaign. what thousands of new documents from wikileaks reveal about clinton and her advisers' private deliberations. growing backlash over the death of a famous black bear. pedals was known for walking like a human. ahead, the controversy surrounding the legal hunt for the creature. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "usa today" reports on a record rate for high school graduations nationwide. public school seniors received diplomas in 2016. president obama will highlight the results today in a speech at a washington, d.c. school. "wall street journal" says batteries used in sam sung's recalled galaxy note 7 phones were tested in their own lab. samsung says the all about results have no problems with the phone. samsung is the only manufacturer other cell phone makers use third-party labs. the phone is banned on you will u.s. flights due to the hazard. "time" says that more than 170 countries in rwanda agreed to reduce hydrocarbons in air conditi it's the most important step we could take to the warming of our planet. britain says 21 nigerian girls met with their parents after freed by kidnappers. the girls were released by boko haram group. they were seized more than two years ago. the government says it's now negotiating for the release of nearly 200 girls kidnapped. so happy to see they are back and now let's get the rest of them. "the new york times" says hillary clinton's inner circle built a web of private and personal interest in haiti when she was secretary of state. cheryl mills helped a south korean garment maker open a factory in haiti and the founder is a clinton foundation owner. julianna goldman shows what the reveal about clinton and her team. >> reporter: good morning. the release of these apparent e-mails which cbs has not independently verified, continues to expose opaque aspects of hillary clinton's campaign including how it's dealt with issues that have made her most vulnerable as a candidate. the thousands of hacked e-mails reveal how some of those closest to hillary clinton worried early on about the fallout from her use of private e-mail servers while secretary of in august 2015, a new york adviser wrote to john podesta saying the following. >> i would think that a speech so great that you got paid so much money for, you would like to share it with the american people. against clinton for not releasing her paid closed door speeches to wall street banks. in leaked transcripts of remarks that clinton delivered to goldman sachs employees in 2013 she says she had had great relations with wall street and suggesting the dodd frank reform bill was, quote, for political reasons. in another speech clinton said you need a public and private position to be a neat the e-mails show how her campaign grappled with the political ramifications of clinton changing her stance on the controversial keystone pipeline. >> i don't think it's in the best interest of what we need to do to combat climate change. >> reporter: roughly two weeks before opposing the keystone pipeline in 2015 clinton said activists took get a life while in a meeting with the building trade union. >> wikileaks just came out with has seized on the wikileaks dump, in part, trying to deflect from the recent sexual assault allegations against donald trump. >> without donald trump out there stepping on this story, we probably would be talking about the clinton e-mails more, but that doesn't mean that their effect on voters would be bigger. >> reporter: ucla political science professor lynn fabric says with the newly release of e-mails it's unlike to influence >> i think everything we have learned and have learned and might learn tomorrow from these e-mails fall into the category of what people already thought they knew about hillary clinton. >> reporter: the apparent e-mails highlight the number of people surrounding the clinton's vying for influence and also infighting, including a scathing criticism of sidney bloomen that is all from john podesta himself. the e-mails from wikileaks is accurate and latest indication that russia is trying to destabilize the election. a service man in the u.s. navy faces charges hf ace pickup flew off a san diego bridge and killed four people in a park below. the driver and eight people on the ground were hurt. witness video captured the pickup flipped on its side as people rushed to help. rid charged with manslaughter and dui. 49ers quarterback colin kaepernick started his first nfl game since he started his national anthem pro test. you hear the fans booing there in buffalo, new york, yesterday, on kaepernick's first play. befoe the game, he kneeled with two san francisco teammates during the national anthem. outside the stadium, some and others raised their 50s but some fans inside were less supportive. one reportedly threw a bottle at kaepernick who wore a t-shirt showing muhammad ali before and after the game. ed he didn't even notice the bottle. >> if they did, they didn't have very good aim. but, you know, i had some bills fans before the game come up and say they support me but, you know, at the end of the day, i'm going to continue to fight for what i'm fighting for. >> kaepernick struggled on the field and the bills trounced the 49ers 45-16. a black bear that became famous for walking on its hind legs has apparently been killed by a hunter. ahead the state officials defend the killing of black bears in their habitat. take us with you on the go. subscribe to our new "cbs this morning" podcast. you'll get the news of the day and extended interviews and podcast originals. you can find them on itunes and apple's podcast app. i'm hall of famer jerry west and my life is basketball. but that doesn't stop my afib from leaving me at a higher risk of stroke. that'd be devastating. i took warfarin for over 15 years until i learned more about once-daily xarelto... a latest generation blood thinner. then i made the switch. xarelto? significantly lowers the risk of stroke in people it has similar effectiveness to warfarin. warfarin interferes with vitamin k and at least six blood clotting factors. xarelto? is selective targeting one critical factor of your body's natural clotting function. for people with afib currently well managed on warfarin, there is limited information on how xarelto and warfarin compare in reducing the risk of stroke. like all blood thinners, don't stop taking xarelto without talking to your doctor, to stop. xarelto may increase your risk of bleeding if you take certain medicines. xarelto can cause serious, and in rare cases fatal bleeding. get help right away for unexpected bleeding, unusual bruising or tingling. if you have had spinal anesthesia while on xarelto watch for back pain or any nerve or muscle related signs or symptoms. do not take xarelto if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. tell your doctor before all planned medical or dental procedures. before starting xarelto tell your doctor about any conditions, such as kidney, liver or bleeding problems. from a stroke, ask your doctor about xarelto. there's more to know. xarelto. more "sit" per roll. can last longer than those bargain brands. so you get more "life" per roll. bounty. the long-lasting quicker picker upper. everyday millions of women worldwide trust tena with their bladder matters. leaks, odor and moisture. tena lets you be you ? taste the many sides of brookside. smooth dark chocolate outside. exotic fruit flavor inside. brookside. for all your sides. brookside. now that karen's taking osteo bi-flex, ...and high levels of humiliation in her daughter. in just 7 days, your joint comfort can be your kid's discomfort. there is growing outrage this morning over the apparent killing of a famed black bear in new jersey. the bear known as pedals became famous for walking on its hind legs. fans believe the animal was killed last week by a hunter with a bow and an arrow during a legal hunt. the state all for six days to help deal with the growing bear population. jamie yuccas is in oak ridge, new jersey, where the bear was often spotted just walking around the neighborhood. >> reporter: good morning, gayle. pedals was a frequent visitor to this neighborhood for years but quickly gained a devoted following beyond new jersey. that means when people learned of his apparent death, they were crushed. >> he looks like he is missing the front paw. >> reporter: for years, pedals celebrity in northern new jersey. >> that is a bipedaled bear. >> reporter: pedals got his name from walking on two feet apparently from injuries to both front paws and frequently be seen roaming the new jersey suburbs but fans were devastated to hear about his death. >> to the immediate area, he was like a mascot, you know? they loved him. >> reporter: lisa rose first broke the news on so >> well, we have made a lot of friend. a couple of hunting buddies of ours. you know? they were friends. they were hunters and one of them was in line with this bear and, you know, he told -- he told us that he saw him, so it was enough for us. we believe him. >> reporter: wildlife officials have not confirmed pedals death. but the announcement on the fan page, which was taken down after the comment section became combative was enough to draw the controversial shootings of harumba the gorilla and cecil, the lion. pedals killing has been met with outrage. >> every time i think about it it makes me sick to my stomach. horrible. >> reporter: why? >> he is an innocent bear and minding his own business and searching for food. >> reporter: 500 bears were killed in the recent new jersey black hunt and they say is necessary in controlling the state's bear population. estimated at 3,000 bears. >> it just takes one person that doesn't care if he alive or dead or that thinks that it would be funny to kill an icon. it's just not. >> reporter: fans of pedals had raised more than $20,000 to build a special enclosure at a wildlife sanctuary. wildlife officials tell us that they will release photos of an injured bear that was killed early this week. but without any dna samples, it may be impossible to know that >> i keep hoping against hope that it wasn't pedals and i know it's legal. i understand that. but there is just something about knowing that the bear was -- this particular bear was defenseless. >> black bears are very dangerous. >> that is true but i'm thinking pedals was walking. i just don't think of him hurting anybody. he had become a mascot in the neighborhood. they did not appear to be afraid of him but you're right, normally they very dangerous animals. i get it. >> president clear choice. ahead of tonight's appearance with stephen colbert and which snacks he thinks is best for america. what is colbert wearing? >> i don't know. mustache? >> he is -- >> a very bad mustache! >> samantha: good morning to you, and happy monday. also, happy first day of summer, at least that's what it feels 76 midday, 82 at 3:00. that is 20 degrees above average and 82 is also your record high for today set back in 1953. i'll be interested to see if we can tie or break it today. we'll go with a forecast for decreasing cloud cover throughout the day, a lot of sunshine out there this announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by harvoni. are you ready? i don't want to live with the uncertainties of hep c. or wonder whether i should seek treatment. i am ready. because today there's harvoni. a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. harvoni is proven to cure up to 99% of patients... ...who've had no prior treatment. it transformed treatment as the first cure that's... ...one pill, once a day for 12 weeks. certain patients... ...can be cured with just 8 weeks of harvoni. tell your doctor if you've had a liver transplant, other liver or kidney problems, hiv, or any other medical conditions, and about all the medicines you take including herbal supplements. taking amiodarone with harvoni may cause a serious slowing of your heart rate. common side effects of harvoni may include tiredness, headache and weakness. i am ready to put hep c behind me. i am ready to be cured. are you ready? 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ahead, what voters about nbattleground states are telling us about that. you're watching "cbs this morning." we will be right back. you inherit lots of traits from your family. my ancestor, lady beatrice, introduced the elizabethan ruff. great-grandfather horatio went west during the gold rush. and aunt susan was a a world champion. and their double chin. now, i'm going to do something about it. kybella? is the first of its kind injectable treatment that destroys fat under the chin, leaving an improved profile. kybella? is an fda-approved non-surgical treatment for adults with a moderate amount of fullness... or a bit more. don't receive kybella? if you have an infection in the treatment area. kybella? can cause nerve injury in the jaw resulting in an uneven smile or facial muscle weakness, and trouble swallowing. tell your doctor about all medical conditions, have had or have medical conditions in or near your neck or have bleeding problems. tell your doctor about all medicines you take. the most common side effects are swelling, bruising, pain, numbness, redness, and areas of hardness in the treatment area. find a doctor at mykybella.com hi my name is tom. i'm raph. my name is anne. i'm one of the real live attorneys you can talk to through legalzoom. don't let unanswered legal questions hold you up, because we're here, we're here, legal help is here. >> brian: the tribe takes the 2-0 series to toronto tonight. trevor bouwer had to get ten stitches in his pinky. let's hope it holds up during bouwer says it's not a problem for the release. you can see what coach francona had to say about the injury on the cleveland 19 mobile app. here's our meteorologist sam roberts with our forecast. hey, sam. >> samantha: good morning. if you're just rolling out of bed, we have decreasing clouds in the forecast for today, so expect a lot of sunshine this afternoon. of course, the big story, the temperature. our high today is 82. that is 20 degrees above average, and it is a record high. the record today is 82 set back in another record high possible tomorrow, 84 degrees is what we'll go. no rain around here until tomorrow night, then again on wednesday night a little bit of a better chance during the day, ? it is monday, october 17th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? there is more real news ahead, including donald trump's campaign impact on the travel industry. peter greenberg shows us how trump's rhetoricld his businesses, including a new hotel right near the white house. first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> kurdish fighters are trying to retake the main road into mosul at which is in that direction. donald trump once ran as the strong man in this race. now he is the victim, ed on a-- said on all sides. >> clinton is gaining on trump >> the e-mails expose the aspects of clinton's campaign which have made her most vulnerable as a candidate. >> are you expecting any surprises? >> if you said we shouldn't expect surprises, we would be wrong every turn, right? even by definition, i don't know what they are. >> 33 yarder to win the game, which he does. what a comeback. and what a dispiriting loss for >> third opini-parties are touc about that attack. >> it's just -- it's just horrible! why would you even say that? >> okay, gary. just relax a little bit. you've already undercut your credential as a serious candidate by wearing a yellow tie with jeans! come on, gary. you're running for president, >> i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. the firebombing of a north carolina republican office is being called political terrorism by local party leaders. pictures show how the building was heavily damaged by fire overnight saturday. the atf and fbi have joined local police in the investigation. no one was hurt. hillary clinton condemned the attack calling it horrific and unacceptable. no suspect has been identified. donald trump tweeted, quote, animals representing hillary clinton and carolina just firebombed our office in orange county because we are winning. donald trump insists the campaign is stacked against him. >> hillary is running for president in what looks like, to many people, a totally rigged election. >> on twitter, trump blamed the media and hillary clinton and even brought up tampering at the polls. he tweeted, quote, the election is absolutely being rigged by the dishonest and distorted media pushing crooked hillary sat. house speaker paul ryan's office said in a statement, our democracy relies on confidence in election results and the speaker is fully confident that the states will carry out this election with integrity. paul ryan is the highest elected republican in the country. this year, the brennan center for justice reviewed elections that had been, quote, meticu meticulousicameticul meticulously studied for voter fraud and between 0.00004% and 0.0009%. the report said more likely that an american will be struck by lightning that he will impersonate another voter at the polls. >> that means it's very low, huh? 00000! >> i had to make sure i got all of the zeros right! >> you got it. >> not likely to happen. the fbi is giving a congressional committee more details from its investigation private e-mail servers as secretary of state. the committee chairman jason chaffetz says he sees evidence of a deal. he says fbi documents show state department undersecretary patrick kennedy e-mailed a bureau official. he disputed the classification level on one of clinton's benghazi related e-mails. >> in a reply the fbi official asked kennedy for more space for employees assigned at missions overseas. fe statement the fbi investigated the classification of the e-mail was not changed and never a quid pro quo. >> a tracker poll shows hillary clinton is six points ahead of hillary clinton in the 13 battleground states. cbs news election director is here at the table to discuss. anthony, how are you? >> i'm really good. >> do you think the "access hollywood" tape had a lot to do with this jump? >> you see a dramatic swing in five points among women a month ago and now that is 15 points. that is a huge swing. so it is really her whole lead now is attributable to that movement among women. and if you look at the number who say they feel that donald trump does not respect women, that is 7 in 10. coming out of the -- >> is this the largest gender divide we have seen? >> we are on the way to that. once you get into double digits and see shea is 65%, you are in for a history rick divide. >> the last gender divide was the largest in the last election. you have 6 out of 10 independent women saying they find this tape offensive so independent women are shifting as well. >> exactly right. it's independent women and republican women too. a group donald trump can ill afford to stop losing. they have dropped. and i'll tell you among the offensive who aren't now voting for trump, they say they would not now consider him so a little bit walled off in that respect. >> so it's a vote against trump rather than for her? her likability, has it changed? >> it really hasn't. where she is having some difficulty still is with the release of the wikileaks e-mails. voters are saying, the majority feel she has a different set of views in private than she expresses in public. and so her honest and worthy tell the truth numbers haven't moved. >> donald trump has a lot of support within the republican party. you look at the headlines in the republican establishment seems to be getting on a life boat to desert him. but the numbers show he still has big support, does he not? >> he does. quarters of republicans say they want the party to stand behind him. but look. throughout the primaries, his voters have been solid and they haven't much cared what the party establishment has to say. >> isn't it also true, though, romney amongst republicans? >> oh, yes. he needs to be in the mid-90s and women won't consider him it looks like it's going to be very hard for him to get there. >> anthony, thank you. >> thank you. donald trump has mixed business in politics in his run for president. ahead, pete greenberg will show us how some of trump's words on the campaign trail have sent shock waves to the hospitality industry. >> samantha: all right, norah, thank you so much. let's take a live what an absolutely gorgeous start, 67 and a south wind and there's a little cloud cover out there. no doubt about that. we are dry now, and i think these clouds are breaking up through the day. so don't expect a totally overcast day. there will be sunshine out there midday and into the afternoon. big story today and tomorrow, the heat, 82 on monday, 84 kings of leon's rise to success with songs -- ? you somebody somebody like you ? it almost ruined the band. how could that be? ahead, the group tells anthony mason how one of the lowest points in their career helped them refocus. you're watching "cbs this morning." we will be right back. eyes open? good. because it's here. cue the confetti. approved to treat the signs and symptoms of dry eye. so give your eye doctor a ring, and your eyes just might thank you. one drop in each eye, twice a day. the most common side effects of xiidra include eye irritation, discomfort or blurred vision when the drops are applied to the eyes, and an unusual taste sensation. to help avoid eye injury or contamination of the solution, do not touch the container tip to your eye or any surface. remove them before using xiidra and wait for at least 15 minutes before placing them back in your eyes. are you ready to do something about your dry eyes? talk to your doctor about xiidra. we invited women to a spa to test a new body wash. dish soap. you may not feel it, but some body washes can conta . this is dove. 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[ gears stopping ] when your pain reliever stops working, your whole day stops. try this. but just one aleve has the strength to stop pain for 12 hours. tylenol and advil can quit after 6. so live your whole day, not part... feel a cold sore coming on? only abreva can heal it in as few as two and a half days when used at the first sign. it penetrates deep and starts to work immediately to block the virus and protect healthy cells.. don't tough it out, knock it out, fast. mother in-law with a keen sense of smell... glad bag, full of trash. what happens next? nothing. only glad has febreze to neutralize odors for 5 days. guaranteed. even the most perceptive noses won't notice the trash. be happy. it's glad. donald trump presidential campaign could have a lasting impact on his businesses. a recent survey by "travel weekly" found 60% of travel agents have not been recommending trump branded hotels and resorts as much since the billionaire ran his run for president. travel editor peter greenberg is at trump's hotel in washington, d.c. with more. me is the newest property in the trump travel portfolio here in washington, d.c. the hotel is on pennsylvania avenue and housed in the historic post office and blocks from the white house and blocks from the capitol and may be the one property in the trump business that may be the most vulnerable for consumers voting with their wallets. >> building on pennsylvania avenue the old post office. >> reporter: donald trump made it clear from day one of his presidential bid he would be mixing business and ti >> we are just opening up on pennsylvania avenue, right next to the white house. so if i don't get there one way, i'm going to get to pennsylvania avenue another. >> reporter: his new hotel in washington, d.c. is just part of trump's travel portfolio that includes several u.s. hotels and 17 golf clubs and a winery and a hotel management and licensing business that exports the trump director. >> get enough media attention over the last 12 month so fantastic for me. >> when mexico sends its people -- >> reporter: but some of trump's comments throughout the campaign has sent shock waves through the hospitality industry. >> they are krig crbringing cri >> reporter: they removed the trump names from all of his brochures and websit. brand used to be an asset and now a liability. >> reporter: this chefs pulled their restaurants from the d.c. hotel. >> it's like a magnet. when you're a star, they let you do it. >> reporter: arnie wiseman of "travel weekly" says the leaked videotape of trump making lewd comments about women in 2005 may be a tipping point for agents who book hotels. overwhelmingly women. travel decisions are made overwhelmingly by women. we surveyed our readership recently and she said that 50% of their clients are pro actively saying don't put me in a trump hotel. >> reporter: trump paints a different picture. during a june disposition for one of two lawsuits he filed in reaction to the chefs pulling out of his hotel, he was asked about the impact as presidential bid has had on his business. >> i don't think it's had one example, where it's actually been very positive, is in florida, mar-a-lago, the manager told me recently, boy, it is actually the best year we have ever had at mar-a-lago. i was looking at the numbers. i said, what do you attribute this to? ed the campaign. >> reporter: "forbes" editor dan alexander said revenues at trump golf courses were up the last year but in other areas the response has been mixed. >> some of his partners in middle east he has licensing his comments. on the flip side we have talked to some of his partners in places like the philippines say more notoriety into asia and bring in more people so they are excited about it. >> reporter: the stakes are high at the hotel in washington, d.c. the trump family and their partners have poured $200 million in renovating the old post office to a 263-room luxury hotel. nearly 200 million dollar lease with the being with the u.s. government and it runs for 60 years. >> of all the rumors there are corporations or travel companies booking away from you guys. have you seen that at all? >> no. it's higher than what i've seen in a trump hotel. it's always going back to business. >> reporter: what you're telling me now, at least in the hotel business, business trumps politics? >> business trumps politics. >> reporter: or maybe not. industry insiders tell me that government because he substantially overpaid for the deal and competitors like hilton and marriott dropped out. in fact, marriott told cbs they actually crunched the numbers and based on the trump deal they couldn't figure out how anybody could make a profit on this. cbs news did reach out to the trump organization for comment. we received none. one final piece of irony here. i'm sure they didn't plan it but right next to the trump hotel on pennsylvania headquarters of the internal revenue service. >> interesting to see how this will have an impact on his businesses. >> it looks like the hotel turned out beautifully. i love the line business trumps politics. we will see. >> trophy projects are always irresistible to donald trump, mar-a-lago being one. >> this is certainly good real estate. "rolling stone" magazine goes to court today for a conversation. ahead the challenge for. who claims she was portrayed as a villain in a retracted story about sexual assault. you're watching "cbs this morning." ? ? ? ? can you say i love it? ? ? oh love it? ? ? can you say hey? ? ? hey! ? ? ? wooh ooh ? ? wooh ooh ? ? sing sing, baby baby i love you. oh yes.? ? ooooh oooh.? ? every little thing. ? ? ooooh oooh.? does your child need help with digestive balance? try align junior probiotic. so she can have a fraction dominating... status updating... get 24/7 digestive support with align junior. i spent many years as a nuclear missile launch officer. if the president gave the order we had to launch the missiles, that would be it. i prayed that call would never come. [ radio chatter ] self control may be all that keeps these missiles from firing. [ sirens blearing ] i would bomb the [ beep] out of them. i want to be unpredictable. i love war. the thought of donald trump with nuclear weapons scares me to death. hand-dipped, with real milk is the only way to make a milkshake. you can't trust machines. now, how come? once i got a machine-made shake from some other place, and it clanked and clunked and spit out a glop into my glass. and do you know what it was made of? artificial turf? what? no! powder! what? get half-price fall milkshakes between 2:00 and 5:00 during happy hour. only at steak 'n shake. be ? "rolling stone" magazine goes to trial today over account of sexual assault at the university of virginia. the 2014 article told the story of jackie a student who claimed fraternity party and became a national investigation but investigations cast doubt on jackie's version of the event. "rolling stone" issued a retraction after the case was looked into and now the magazine is sued and believes she was cast into the article as a villain. rikki klieman is here. this former dean is now suing for over 7.5 million dollars. what is the case she has? >> her case, like other cases, involving "rolling stone"'s article iii cases. one got tossed. the other one is going to be brought next year by the fraternity that says it was defamed. nicole irma was the dean of students and cast as the villain here and named 31 times in this article and looked at as someone who discouraged this jackie from reporting a rape, that even said university's reputation was more important than jackie's complaint. >> right. the story was she alleged this horrible rape and the school didn't back her up? >> correct. what happened here is this judge has ruled that dean aramo, this plaintiff, is now considered a public figure for a limited purpose. what does that mean in plain english? >> just to back up here. the dean aramo said she did help jackie, righ jackie and did not discourage her, that all of this is false. everything alleged about her is false, that she was sympathetic, that her job was, in fact, to protect alleged sexual assault victims, that she did encourage her to go to the police. but when you are looking to prove defamation, if you're a private person, meaning that no one has ever really heard about you and that you get named in an article, all you have to show is that the publication was negligent in what it said about here, the judge has ruled that nicole framo is a dean and political -- >> is this like new york versus sullivan? >> exactly correct. new york time verse sullivan the public figure and liability. >> why does she qualify as a public figure? >> because she was the face of the university for sexual assault controversies. in this limited person, she was the person who was put up there and that, therefore, she is the with actual malice and they acted knowing or they should have known what they had was -- >> malice? >> the best evidence of the malice is that there was no investigation of this particular allegation at all, including not even looking to the boys who were accused. >> she is still at the school and she is fighting back. >> she is fighting back big her. the nation's am tallylind. i st my sighin ahanian. ifou're tallylind, com. >> samantha: good morning to you, and happy monday. this is another live look outside. we're still socked in with cloud cover. you're out towards the east right now. 67 is where we stand, and we have a south wind but clouds break up through the day, and with that sunshine and that south wind i do expect us to get into record high territory today. that is the record set back in 1953. so we are going to be well above average by about 20 degrees. expect increasing sun, decreasing clouds, and no rain on our maps for today. we should be dry until tomorrow night. if you're loving the warmth, well, we get to do it all over again tomorrow. here's your full seven-day. i'm going to go 84 tomorrow. that is also a record. we get just a little bit cooler by the middle of the week, but end. week that more seasonable air ? we are hearing from the diver who survived this terrifying encounter with a great white shark off mexico. remember this video? we showed it to you last week, how the shark burst into an underwater diving cage and came out on top. minutes later, the diver calmly roseth little golf clap. his experience helped him react very quickly. >> honestly, if you see it, everything happened so fast! so don't have time to get frightened. >> i don't know. chan says despite the close call he went back in the cage the next day because he trusted his team that much. wow. that is somebody who really trusts their team! i don't know. i think i would have had time to >> what do they say about one time, two time? >> survival training. >> and you need a new wet suit too! that was a scary thing! >> yeah. they don't have depends under water! >> not yet! welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, you must be so proud, right? >> charlie? don't you just love us? some days, you say i would never have this conversation anywhere else. >> charlie is like, why do i have to sit here? how to get your own home. ali webb, there she is! ahead her tips and tricks for all types of hair and what she sees for the future of her blowout empire. >> a band on fire. band of three brothers and a cousin, they released a new album. guess who spoke with them. anthony mason. he talked to them about their struggle to handle the intense time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "usa today" reports on a new rule taking effect today that lifts restrictions on cuban cigars. now americans can purchase the items in any country they are sold but they must be solely for personal consumption. online purchasers in rnot allowed. >> britain's financial times saysal has discussed a possible trump tv network after the election. jared kushner, approached another company. the conversation was reportedly brief and has not progressed since then. the financial times says they may be thinking how to capitalize the plort of trump's campaign if he loses the election. in the past, trump has denied that he wants to start his own reports on a dramatic i couldn't of a man from a burning car. bystanders formed a human chain in palm bay to pull out the trapped driver. another vehicle. at least six people linked arms to drag this man up an embankment. he was pulled out just before the flames took over his car. the driver is expected to be okay and thank goodness for the kindness of strangers! target is pulling clown masks from its stores nationwide. this comes after the crazy clown craze which includes threats of violence made on social media. target says it is withdrawing the masks out of sensitivity for the issue at hand. the "l.a. times" says police have a new way to tackle parking offense. the barnicle clamps over a car's windshield so offends cannot see where they are going unlike the wheel clamp boot. it can be installed with less sound that tries when someone drives by leaning out the side window. >> we learn something new here every day. >> drybar is the largest blow dry hair chain in the nation and found ali webb opened the first one in 2010. no cuts, no color, just blowouts. its locations give more than 1 million blowouts a year! the 66 salons in six states and one in vancouver, canada. she shares her tips for getting the perfect blowout at home and we are pleased that ali has decided to come back to the table. ?> thanks for having me. >> you say tips at home. i personally don't believe people even if they read the book can do and this hot me, do i felt compelled to do a book about the burning questions that women have. it's not replacing getting a full blowout by a profession or drybar. it gives you tips and tricks and you know we struggle with everything. there is something in there i never knew you could section your hair. >> you say men don't get it but all women get it. doesn't matter how good you look, if you have great shoes and makeupnd hair didn't look good, it ruins the look. >> how many people come for this? >> like a lot of men and my brother thaw it was for events. women come on monday and tuesday and don't have to worry about it a couple of days. they come all day, all night. we are open seven days a week and we never close and we are busy all the time. >> you're open seven days a week? >> yes. million in revenue. first, is that correct? >> yes. >> things are looking good. yes. >> talk about how your family said don't brag about money. you should say yes, we are doing great! >> well, you know. >> more significantly over what you did last year? >> yes. the business is really, really growing. i think that -- we did tap into this area that really was very on tap which is why we opened drybar because two bad choice in the marketplace and n and we have a full product line. really just -- so much growth and opportunity. >> this is what somebody said about drybar. i haven't been there but i know you do black women too. we should point that out. right when your walk in you're greeted friendly by someone at the fronts desk and offer you tea and champagne and all of the stylist are fun and quirky and not like a is notty and stuffy salons. >> that is amazing. i've worked in salons and i know what feels like and it's competitive and cut throat. drybar -- >> you wanted experience. >> i wanted it to feel high-end but women to come in and feel like people were nice to them and treated them well. my parents had their own business growing up. so my brother and i grew up in that steatmosphere. you bend over backwards to make the customer feel great. >> you went to beauty school to learn how to do it? >> i did. i went to beauty >> you're not allowing the rest of us to get any questions in. >> i'm fascinated by this! okay, jump in. >> i think that what you were ahead of, which is the mobile beauty business or the on-demand beauty business. >> that's how i started. >> right. how do you see that as a growth industry when people are looking at this investors and others in terms of the change in which the way people are spending money on beautiy and on-demand beauty? on-demand and how i started a mobile blow dry business. over the years we have offered mobile as well but it's like women love to come in and goat out of their house an hour and you come in and get out of the the house. >> an escape. >> it is. >> what does the experience cost them? >> it's $45. most hair salons will up-charge you for curls, flat iron. 's down to your butt, it's still the same price. >> i have one more thing to say. because you don't have people look in a mirror which i think is interesting. they are looking at tvs because you want the big reveal. i want to see what is happening while somebody is doing their hair in case i have some suggestions. >> you can. we can turn you around. but the idea was -- that really came from my mobile business because i was doing women's hair in their living room. so they didn't have a mirror. what would happen after i was done and i had it to the point i tell me what to do, they would run into the bathroom and there was this big, like oh, my god! then that is what we try to re-create in drybar. >> your new book is here. >> anything else, gayle? >> no, i'm done. i'm done. >> we have fun here, can you tell. >> i like it. >> her new book "the drybar guide for a crisis for a band early in their career. >> you said you didn't like the name. did they have another name for you? >> they wanted us to be the follow-up brothers. >> you put your foot down and said no way? >> we said we are going to be the king band of leons and they said that is the worst name monday. we have a lot of clouds out there right now. it's about 67 degrees, so it's very warm for this time of year in the morning. i think we'll see more and more sun breaking out throughout the day. lots of sunshine this afternoon, and the big story, of course, is the temperatures. highs today top out at about 82. that's 20 degrees above average and it's also the record high for today. we're going to do it all over again tomorrow. ? ? you know i could use somebody someone like you ? >> reporter: kings of leon has won three grammy awards, including record of the year back in 2010 for that hit song you just heard. now the song is back at the top of the charts. the band released a new album itunes this morning! this is the first release in three years from the southern rock sensation. the band became a household name with hits like "sex on fire" and "radioactive." anthony mason visited the band members in nashville. >> one of the successful rock acts of the past decades, kings of leon was on top of the world in 2011 when everything seemed to unravel. now with their seventh album "walls" the kin regain their crown. ? >> reporter: in search of a new sound, kings of leon recorded their latest album with a new producer in a new city. you wanted to go somewhere different. why? >> we just felt like there was a spark there that we needed to ? ? your sex is on fire." >> reporter: kings of leon caught fire behind their hit "sex on fire" in 2008 is a family band. the three follow brothers, lead singer caleb and naij nathan on drums and jared on bass and leon on guitar. where did your first love of music come from? >> our dad was a traveling minister so church music was part of our lives, caleb and i. >> reporter: he and caleb were signed to a recording deal in 2002. they wanted to name themselves for their grandfather leon but their manager had a different idea. >> we said we are going to be kings of leon and they said that is the worst band name ever. they said you're sabotaging your the bomb about our cousin and little brother gentleman they brought in then 15-year-old jared and 17-year-old matthew. >> they were, like, do they play? and we said, we just bought jared a bass today. he is learning. and they said, well, what about moout? i said, well, he played a thin lizzie song over the phone from mississippi, sounded pretty good, so. >> reporter: the kings of leon grew up quickly. >> jared and mt became men. like, on the road while we were touring. >> nathan still tries to order for us at dinner and stuff like that. >> there is a point when the younger brother fights back and did that change the balance of the band? >> we started pretty early on. you know, things would come to a vote, which i still don't like that. >> reporter: you don't like votes? >> no. >> reporter: the band broke first in britain where their third album, because of the look. >> i went into a bar one night and someone came up to me, what are you, somebody kings of leon want to be? i said like, yes, yes, i am. it was crazy. we would leave london having played sold-out shows and, like, getting recognized at the airport, and then we would get home and our mom would be there to pick us up! ? someone like you ? >> reporter: but their fourth album would break them worldwide. only by the night sold more than 8 million copies. but success brought greater pressure. and some fans accused them of selling out. >> even though you try not to read all of that stuff, you start to hear it and it starts to kind of weigh on you a little bit. >> reporter: in 2011, caleb, notoriously walked off stage in the middle of a concert and the kings cancelled the rest of their u.s. tour. mentally, where were you? >> ready for a break. >> exhausted. >> unemployed. >> frazzled. >> if we hadn't done that, i don't think we would be talking about our seventh album right now, you know? >> reporter: is it easier to get through that when you guys are all family? >> family. it's a double-edged you get over it a lot easier, too. ? when the walls come down ? when the walls come down ? >> reporter: the music press is already calling this the kings comeback year. >> i think we might have lost sight of why we wanted to be in the band in the first place and play music. >> reporter: that new single waste a moment just hit number one on billboard's adult alternative chart and first time on that chart they have done that in nearly six years. on the rebound. >> that is awesome. >> i like caleb's mumbling. >> reporter: if you're an interviewer, you don't like that so much. >> i like the way he sings. but in this latest album, it's different. >> reporter: he has one of the greatest voices in rock 'n' roll. >> no king of leon there. how tall are y? how do we measure greatness in america? the height of our skyscrapers? the size of our bank accounts? no. it's measured by what we do for our children. the values we pass on. i've spent my life fighting for kids and families and it will be my mission to build a country where our children can rise as high as their dreams and hard work take them. not debt. and an economy where every young american can find a job that lets them start a family of their own. we face big challenges, but we can solve them the same way families do. working together. respecting one another. and never giving up. i want our success to be measured by theirs. i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. that does it for us. >> blow dry, anybody? i love my mom. my mom. i love my kids. my kids. my job. taking care of everybody. everyday. my mom. my kids. my job. yes. when i'm at work. when i'm at home. i could just really use some help sometimes. hey we hear you. that's why aarp helps family caregivers... with resources and connections to experts to help make your life easier to manage. because we get it. if you don't think "this is right for me" >> samantha: it's good to see you again on this morned. we start off at 8:55 with a check at what's happening with satellite and radar. i have a lot of clouds out there, but there are breaks in the clouds. we will see sunshine. it's just going to take a little while. it will be later in the day. there's also a little light drizzle out there. nothing of significance, and it's not going to pour on you i think any drizzle or light rain we see would be confined to the early morning hours by 10:00, 11:00 we should be done with any moisture that's out there. speaking of moisture, it will feel humid today. here is your planning forecast. look at that. 82 this afternoon, and that is not only 20 degrees above average, but it's a record for today. it hasn't been that warm on this date since 1953. it's been a while since we saw mid-october, but we are going to be seeing it today and tomorrow. twenty four meals under four dollars! just like in 1934! four dollars was a lot in those days. that can't be right. no, i was there! back then, you not only got to choose from 24 meals under four dollars, you also got a shave, a shoeshine and a new suit. used to be called "steak 'n shake 'n shave 'n shoeshine 'n suit." they even put it on the sign! 'til it broke. is that a steak 'n shake suit? get 24 meals for under four dollars. >> announcer: today on rachael ray! can gretta & peter get this fashion high school room decluttered? >> seriously. look at my one finger. >> go gumbo. and, supergirl, and this hearty supper is 5 ingredients away. and now are you ready for ... rachael? ? ? [ cheers and applause ] ? ? >> rachael: all righty. welcome everybody! [ applause ] >> rachael: you know, everybody in our show today could legitimately wear a cape. we have one actor who wears a cape as a superhero on tv. and we have two people that i think deserve capes because of how good they are at their profession.

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Transcripts For WOIO CBS This Morning 20161017

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>> they have a launch to retake mosul from the united states. >> the time for victory has come. >> the battle for mosul begins. >> us defense secretary ash carter calling this a divisive moment. >> another thing he is saying the election is rigged. is that a responsible thing for a candidate to say? >> the american people are getting awful tired of this two-on-one fight with many of half of her work for her every day. >> let's talk about the hacked e-mails that the clinton shared with john podesta. >> i don't give any credence to the dumped documents because i don't even know if they are accurate. >> no power to thousafor thousae pacific northwest. >> vandals fired upon a gop office in north carolina. >> this is a story that >> some bills fans is void their displeasure with colin kaepernick's -- >> china launched its newest space mission. two astronauts blasted off a dock. >> a car flies off the road and good samaritans help pull everyone to safety. >> all that. >> bart and homer made television history with its 600th >> dodgers win 1-0 and split the first two games of this nlcs in chicago. >> >> and all that matters. >> donald trump calls the parody at "snl" a hit job. >> i helped a kid in 1992, named kevin mcallister find a hotel lobby down the hall and to the lechlt. >> wikileaks released all of these e-mails from hillary's campaign and no one is talking about them because the trump stuff is so much more hacker julian assange would do more damage than "access hollywood"'s billy bush? announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. welcome to "cbs this morning." the fire bombing of a republican headquarters in north carolina is raising fears about political violence in the final weeks of the presidential campaign. pictures showed the extensive damage caused by the ta it happened overnight saturday. no one was hurt. >> now, the offices is in hillsborough, northwest of durham and jeff pegues, good morning. >> reporter: the fbi and the atf have joined local police in this investigation. so far, no suspects have been named as campaign offices around that fiercely competitive battleground state have been asked to step up security. emotions you feel when you see something like this today. >> reporter: no one was inside the gop headquarters in orange county during the overnight attack. official say a bottle filled with flamable liquid was thrown through the office's front window, burning furniture and signs inside. on the outside of a nearby wall is spray painted swastika with the words nazi republicans leave town or else. >> or else! or else what? that's what we all wonder. we will not be intimidated. we will not be scared. we are not going anywhere. officials are calling the violence an act of political terrorism. democratic presidential nominee hillary clinton who recent polls show her leading in the battleground state condemned the attack and calling it horrific and unacceptable. donald trump blame the trump on clinton supporters sweeting clinton and dams in north carolina just firebombed our office in orange county because we are winning. >> the objective of terrorism is to intimidate and scare people. and our volunteers have been coming through all day long and we know that it's on their mind but they are not going to give up. >> reporter: the democratic leaning county scored lopsided wins for president obama in 2012 and 2008. gop officials in the state say they have not received any threats of violence prior to this attack. >> t it may be a liberal county, but it is not a violent county. >> reporter: in a sign of unity, a go fund me campaign page has started by democrats and it is already raised more than $13,000 to help reopen the office. gayle? >> thank you very much, jeff. the election is now just 22 days away and donald trump is accusing the, quote, clinton machine and media of a the white house. the latest tracker poll shows hillary clinton six-point lead 46 to 40% across three battleground states. the two were tied in those states a month ago. trump's repeated claims of a rigged election are even drawing objections from his own running mate. major garrett is covering the trump campaign. >> reporter: donald trump once run as a strong man in this race. now he is the victim. be said on all sides by hillary clinton's campaign, a conspiring media, lying women who accuse him of sexual now, local officials aelg volunteers apparently eager to rig this election. trump sees villains everywhere, leaving the explaining to surrogates, like his running mate. >> donald trump has made it clear he categorically denies those allegations. >> reporter: republican vice presidential couldn't mike pence defended donald trump against numerous allegations of sexual in the national cumedia. >> reporter: trump said women with stories made it all up. >> lies, lies. no witnesses. no nothing. all big lies. >> reporter: to trump, it's not a question of his character. but an indictment of media recklessness which he laid out in a twitter onslaught this weekend. the election is absolutely rigged by the dishonest and distorted media pushing crooked hillary but also at many polling >> listen. what i said is nothing compared to what bill clinton has done, okay? >> reporter: trump also chafed at "saturday night live" portrayal of him calling it a hit job and linking it to the, quote, media rigging election. >> november 8th. this is it. we are going to either win or we are going to have a whole different country. >> reporter: and declined to stand by trump's allegations that the election is already tarnished. >> look. we will respect the outcome of i don't think any american should ever attempt to make any other american nervous in the exercise of their franchise to vote. >> reporter: if phantom claims of election tampering were not enough, trump introduced another spector. clinton on some sort of drug therapy. >> i think we should take a drug test prior to the debate. because i don't know what is going on with her! but at the beginning of her last debate, she was all pumped up at the beginning ant was like, oh, take me down! she could barely reach her car. >> reporter: back to the issue of voter fraud. it is extremely rare and errors that do arise commonly from clerical error or bad data matching. a center found the average american is more likely to be struck by lightning than emimpersonate somebody at the polls. >> hillary clinton is ahead by 51 to 36%. that is a ten-point gain in one month. nancy cordes is covering the clinton campaign and she has more of those poll numbers. >> reporter: good morning. the swing among women has been so pronounced that clinton is now gaining on trump even among republican women. the catalyst, it seems, was that 2005 "access hollywood" video and 70 percent of women found it offens morning clinton compares trump to some of the screen's most famous bullies. >> she ate like a pig. >> you're so stupid. >> how stupid are the people in the country? get him out of here! >> reporter: in a new ad clinton campaign is arguing trump is a bad -- >> who do you mean that all of those bullies? >> reporter: the latest cbs news battleground tracker finds voters question clinton's e-mails posted by wikileaks shows she has different motives in private than in public. vice president argued sunday clinton is being held to unfair expectations. >> i find myself choking up. everybody looks at me and say, he's a good father and a decent guy. she chokes up and says something, you know, for whatever reason that she is playing the woman, card, man. this is the way -- >> reporter: over the weekend a top house republican raised a new of a private e-mail server as secretary of state. the fbi gave congress more details about its investigation and congressman jason chaffetz sees evidence of a quid pro quo. he says the documents show under secretary of state patrick kennedy contacted a fbi official in 2016 to dispute the classification level on one of clinton's benghazi related e-mails which had just been marked secret. fbi official asked kennedy about a longstanding request for additional fbi slot, u.s. missions overseas. the documents indicate kennedy offered a trade and lower classification level in the change for the fbi slots. in a statement the fbi says it looked into it and the classification of the e-mail was not changed and there was never a quid pro quo. the state department denies the quid pro quo as well. they have been very open about the fact they did f clinton's e-mails in the way they were classified. they didn't believe that the information was as sensitive as the fbi and intelligence officials did. from a political perspective, charlie, the higher the classification level, the worse it looked that clinton stored those e-mails on her private server for years. >> thanks, nancy. gerald seib of "wall street journal," pleased to have you back. >> thank you. >> what do you think the campaigns at this point in time? >> i think to excite his base to the maximum extent possible and, in the process, try to drive down hillary clinton's vote and keep his base up and drive her swing voter support down. >> and -- policy? >> basically, that is right. i thinker strategy is a little harder to figure out right now, because she has kind of moved between going on the attack with donald trump, engaging with him on his term, and also trying to sort of like go positive and rise above, as she says. i think the interesting question this week ist strategy for each of them? i think he sticks with the -- i think she drives above that now and higher and positive or stick in the fight. >> is there anything in the wikileaks e-mails you find surprising or on damaging to her? >> i think surprising to her is the tone with the goldman sachs bankers. she says one thing in public and in private is cozier with them. >> didn't want to come out at the time? >> yes. >> the "wall street journal" has hillary clinton up 11 points nationally. now a discussion about whether her team with expand the electoral map. do you expect they will fight in georgia, arizona, utah? >> well, they are going to fight in utah because it's the most bizarre state or the most republican state may go independent or democrat this ye the campaign about whether georgia and arizona are worth fighting over. i think there is more of an inclination to fight in arizona but a temptation or at least try in georgia. g. has a big african-american population and if you could energize that vote for hillary clinton it might be within reach but georgia is the charlie brown football and looks tempting to democrats and pulled back at the end. >> given that donald trump is trying to suggest that the election is rigged, is there a thought that they need to win doubts -- >> one of the interesting findings in our poll even people who support hillary clinton are not particularly optimistic about hillary clinton victory. what the country would be like, whether it could be governed that way. i think winning big would at least help her create a bigger mandate if that is the way they want to think about it. having watched campaigns over the years campaigns are reluctant to count how largely the victory is going to be and they are happy to have a win at all and i don't think carried away with expanding >> do you expect any surprises? >> if you said we should not expect surprises this year, you would be wrong by every turn. thousands of more wikileaks documents. i don't expect there is something shocking and stunning in those but who really knows? i think the biggest question the way each of them choose to finish this out. is it scorch the earth for donald trump? probably. is it high for hillary clinton? i think we will find out on wednesday a lot more. >> thank you. the final presidential debate is on wednesday night. vegas, along with major, nancy, john dickerson and bob schieffer and coverage begins at 8:00 eastern time on cbs. american war planes and special forces are backing thousands of iraqi and kurdish fighters and they are moving on mosul. isis seized the iraqi city more than two years ago. holly williams is on the front line and joins us. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. these ksh trying to retake the main road into mosul which is in that direction over there. just after dawn this morning, we were with them as they broke through the front line and then tanks and armored vehicles moved into this area which is being controlled by isis now for over two years. the kurds have light arms and artille artillery. we have seen isis respond this morning with a suicide car bomb, and was then eventually blown up. over the last few days, pro government iraqi forces have moved in position around the outside of mosul and they include the iraqi army, kurdish fighters, and extreme militia men. the u.s. coalition is also involved in this fight and there are around 6,000 u.s. service members currently here in iraq. over the last few days, we have seen video of them emerging from insideul be u.s. coalition air strikes! down! u.s. coalition air strikes inside the city. it's thought that there are between 3,000 and 5,000 isis fighters inside mosul and that they have laid splos to protect themselves. for is siis is the jewel of the quick or on easy. holly williams, cbs news, just east of mosul. >> holly williams on the front line in iraq. secretary of state john kerry warns that russia and syria's government could face new economic sanctions over the war in syria. air strikes continue to hit the city of aleppo. weekend cease-fire talks failed to reach an agreement. video shows a child being saved from a building yesterday. elizabeth palmer is in aleppo where she learned about crude weaponry that is causing so much destruction. elizabeth, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the siege of eastern aleppo, which is slowly choking the life out of almost half the city, is so painfully drawn out because neither side is strong enough to win decisively, nor weak enough to be forced to capitulate. one missile has become a trademark, the opposition fighters in aleppo. homemade. in a neighborhood recently recaptured soldiers who didn't want to be identified took us into a basement of a ruined building. this is a factory? everywhere there were piles of parts to build a simple bomb. cooking gas canisters sawed in half were packed with explosives and mounted on crude tail fins. the result isn't pretty, but it's lethal. it's not filled with explosives, though, right? the rockets were launched and aimed, sort of, through an ordinary piece of steel pipe. the syrian army, too, has improvised weapons like the by now infamous barrel bombs. but put crude weapons in the hand of poorly trained and overstretched fighting forces on both sides of this grinding war here in aleppo taken the syrian army to advance about 800 yards to the white building over there and all around misery for civilians who are trapped in a war they didn't ask for and now have no power to end. and the fact that no promise of a cease-fire came out of the talks between the u.s. and russia this weekend is a further blow to people who have lost almost everything. >> elizabeth palmer reporting from inside syria, thank you. the pacific northwest is cleaning up this morning from a series of damages storms. in oregon 80-mile-an-hour winds whipped the coast and homes were ripped across and knocked out power to thousands but the storms were not as bad as some forecasts had predicted. a famed black bear who walked on his hind legs is reportedly killed during a legal hunt. ahead, the outcry over the how several people tried to protect him. first, it's time to check your local weather. >> samantha: good morning to you, and happy monday. also, happy first day of summer, at least that's what it feels like, right? 76 midday, 82 at 3:00. that is 20 degrees above average and 82 is also your record high for today set back in 1953. i'll be interested to see if we can tie or break it today. we'll go with a fore f decreasing cloud cover throughout the day, a lot of hacked e-mails allegedly show hillary clinton's campaign chairman was warned about a character problem. >> ahead, other clinton campaign secrets reveal a wikileaks document. >> on "cbs this morning." the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." announcer: this portion of "cbs this m toyota. let's go places! ?don't try to change me in any way? ?oh? ?don't tell me what to do? ?just let me be myself? ?that's all i ask of you? the new 2017 corolla with toyota safety sense standard. ?you don't own me? toyota. let's go places. one dark chocolate rises above the rest lindt excellence created by our master chocolatiers pure, rich, darkly intense... made like no other crafted elegantly thin to reveal complex layers of flavor experience excellence with all your senses and discover chocolate beyond compare try lindt excellence with a touch of sea salt. t that doesn't stop my afib from leaving me at a higher risk of stroke. that'd be devastating. i took warfarin for over 15 years until i learned more about once-daily xarelto... a latest generation blood thinner. then i made the switch. xarelto? significantly lowers the risk of stroke in people with afib not caused by a heart valve problem. it has similar effectiveness to warfarin. warfarin interferes with vitamin k and at least six blood clotting factors. xarelto? is selective targeting one critical factor for people with afib currently well managed on warfarin, there is limited information on how xarelto and warfarin compare in reducing the risk of stroke. like all blood thinners, don't stop taking xarelto without talking to your doctor, as this may increase your risk of a blood clot or stroke. while taking you may bruise more easily, and it may take longer for bleeding to stop. xarelto may increase your risk of bleeding if you take certain medicines. xarelto can cause serious, and in rare cases fatal bleeding. if you have had spinal anesthesia while on xarelto watch for back pain or any nerve or muscle related signs or symptoms. do not take xarelto if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. tell your doctor before all planned medical or dental procedures. before starting xarelto tell your doctor about any conditions, such as kidney, liver or bleeding problems. to help protect yourself from a stroke, ask your doctor about xarelto. there's more to know. xarelto. psh psh lunch is ready! campbell's spider-man soups. made for real, real life. thanks mom your first week? long. it'll get better. i'm at the edward jones office, like sue suggested. thanks for doing this, dad. so i thought it might be time to talk about a financial strategy. (laughing) you mean pay him back? knowing your future is about more than just you. so let's start talking about your long-term goals... multiplied by 13,000 financial advisors. it's a big deal. >> tia: good morning. i'm tia ewing. breaking news this morning in the murder of a 15-year-old boy working at his family's restaurant, mr. hero in cleveland height. a suspect is in custody and they made the arrest not long ago. we're working to get more information about this. look for the updates on the free cleveland 19 mobile news app. for a look at the warm here's meteorologist sam roberts. sam. >> samantha: the big story today is the heat. temperatures in the 60s this morning. about 76 midday, and then an afternoon high today of 82. that's 20 degrees above average, and it's actually the record for today set back in 1953. we'll have decreasing clouds, very breezy as well, and we're going to do it all over again tomorrow. 84 in the afternoon with rain moving in at night. weather, guys, by the end of the ? mr. trump, we received a lot of questions online about the audiotape that was released last week of you bragging with sexually assaulting women. >> what i said is nothing compared to what bill clinton has done, okay? he has abused women. four of those women are here >> bill, how could you? how will i go on with the debate? no, i'll never be able to remember some figures now! oh, donald, no! get real! i'm made of steel. this is nothing. hi, girls. >> martha, she is going to silence these women but they need to be protected and their voices heard. >> what about all of the women accusing you of sexual assault? fire. i like the hillary clinton character, hi, girls, not hi tramp tramps. donald trump says time to retire the boring show and alec baldwin stinks. >> donald trump was watching. >> yes. lauren michaels is saying, keep it coming. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? that was "saturday night live's" take on the second presidential debate. more campaign news in this half hour. a closer l from inside hillary clinton's campaign. what thousands of new documents from wikileaks reveal about clinton and her advisers' private deliberations. growing backlash over the death of a famous black bear. pedals was known for walking like a human. ahead, the controversy surrounding the legal hunt for the creature. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "usa today" reports on a record rate for high school graduations nationwide. public school seniors received diplomas in 2016. president obama will highlight the results today in a speech at a washington, d.c. school. "wall street journal" says batteries used in sam sung's recalled galaxy note 7 phones were tested in their own lab. samsung says the all about results have no problems with the phone. samsung is the only manufacturer other cell phone makers use third-party labs. the phone is banned on you will u.s. flights due to the hazard. "time" says that more than 170 countries in rwanda agreed to reduce hydrocarbons in air conditi it's the most important step we could take to the warming of our planet. britain says 21 nigerian girls met with their parents after freed by kidnappers. the girls were released by boko haram group. they were seized more than two years ago. the government says it's now negotiating for the release of nearly 200 girls kidnapped. so happy to see they are back and now let's get the rest of them. "the new york times" says hillary clinton's inner circle built a web of private and personal interest in haiti when she was secretary of state. cheryl mills helped a south korean garment maker open a factory in haiti and the founder is a clinton foundation owner. julianna goldman shows what the reveal about clinton and her team. >> reporter: good morning. the release of these apparent e-mails which cbs has not independently verified, continues to expose opaque aspects of hillary clinton's campaign including how it's dealt with issues that have made her most vulnerable as a candidate. the thousands of hacked e-mails reveal how some of those closest to hillary clinton worried early on about the fallout from her use of private e-mail servers while secretary of in august 2015, a new york adviser wrote to john podesta saying the following. >> i would think that a speech so great that you got paid so much money for, you would like to share it with the american people. against clinton for not releasing her paid closed door speeches to wall street banks. in leaked transcripts of remarks that clinton delivered to goldman sachs employees in 2013 she says she had had great relations with wall street and suggesting the dodd frank reform bill was, quote, for political reasons. in another speech clinton said you need a public and private position to be a neat the e-mails show how her campaign grappled with the political ramifications of clinton changing her stance on the controversial keystone pipeline. >> i don't think it's in the best interest of what we need to do to combat climate change. >> reporter: roughly two weeks before opposing the keystone pipeline in 2015 clinton said activists took get a life while in a meeting with the building trade union. >> wikileaks just came out with has seized on the wikileaks dump, in part, trying to deflect from the recent sexual assault allegations against donald trump. >> without donald trump out there stepping on this story, we probably would be talking about the clinton e-mails more, but that doesn't mean that their effect on voters would be bigger. >> reporter: ucla political science professor lynn fabric says with the newly release of e-mails it's unlike to influence >> i think everything we have learned and have learned and might learn tomorrow from these e-mails fall into the category of what people already thought they knew about hillary clinton. >> reporter: the apparent e-mails highlight the number of people surrounding the clinton's vying for influence and also infighting, including a scathing criticism of sidney bloomen that is all from john podesta himself. the e-mails from wikileaks is accurate and latest indication that russia is trying to destabilize the election. a service man in the u.s. navy faces charges hf ace pickup flew off a san diego bridge and killed four people in a park below. the driver and eight people on the ground were hurt. witness video captured the pickup flipped on its side as people rushed to help. rid charged with manslaughter and dui. 49ers quarterback colin kaepernick started his first nfl game since he started his national anthem pro test. you hear the fans booing there in buffalo, new york, yesterday, on kaepernick's first play. befoe the game, he kneeled with two san francisco teammates during the national anthem. outside the stadium, some and others raised their 50s but some fans inside were less supportive. one reportedly threw a bottle at kaepernick who wore a t-shirt showing muhammad ali before and after the game. ed he didn't even notice the bottle. >> if they did, they didn't have very good aim. but, you know, i had some bills fans before the game come up and say they support me but, you know, at the end of the day, i'm going to continue to fight for what i'm fighting for. >> kaepernick struggled on the field and the bills trounced the 49ers 45-16. a black bear that became famous for walking on its hind legs has apparently been killed by a hunter. ahead the state officials defend the killing of black bears in their habitat. take us with you on the go. subscribe to our new "cbs this morning" podcast. you'll get the news of the day and extended interviews and podcast originals. you can find them on itunes and apple's podcast app. i'm hall of famer jerry west and my life is basketball. but that doesn't stop my afib from leaving me at a higher risk of stroke. that'd be devastating. i took warfarin for over 15 years until i learned more about once-daily xarelto... a latest generation blood thinner. then i made the switch. xarelto? 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taste the many sides of brookside. smooth dark chocolate outside. exotic fruit flavor inside. brookside. for all your sides. brookside. now that karen's taking osteo bi-flex, ...and high levels of humiliation in her daughter. in just 7 days, your joint comfort can be your kid's discomfort. there is growing outrage this morning over the apparent killing of a famed black bear in new jersey. the bear known as pedals became famous for walking on its hind legs. fans believe the animal was killed last week by a hunter with a bow and an arrow during a legal hunt. the state all for six days to help deal with the growing bear population. jamie yuccas is in oak ridge, new jersey, where the bear was often spotted just walking around the neighborhood. >> reporter: good morning, gayle. pedals was a frequent visitor to this neighborhood for years but quickly gained a devoted following beyond new jersey. that means when people learned of his apparent death, they were crushed. >> he looks like he is missing the front paw. >> reporter: for years, pedals celebrity in northern new jersey. >> that is a bipedaled bear. >> reporter: pedals got his name from walking on two feet apparently from injuries to both front paws and frequently be seen roaming the new jersey suburbs but fans were devastated to hear about his death. >> to the immediate area, he was like a mascot, you know? they loved him. >> reporter: lisa rose first broke the news on so >> well, we have made a lot of friend. a couple of hunting buddies of ours. you know? they were friends. they were hunters and one of them was in line with this bear and, you know, he told -- he told us that he saw him, so it was enough for us. we believe him. >> reporter: wildlife officials have not confirmed pedals death. but the announcement on the fan page, which was taken down after the comment section became combative was enough to draw the controversial shootings of harumba the gorilla and cecil, the lion. pedals killing has been met with outrage. >> every time i think about it it makes me sick to my stomach. horrible. >> reporter: why? >> he is an innocent bear and minding his own business and searching for food. >> reporter: 500 bears were killed in the recent new jersey black hunt and they say is necessary in controlling the state's bear population. estimated at 3,000 bears. >> it just takes one person that doesn't care if he alive or dead or that thinks that it would be funny to kill an icon. it's just not. >> reporter: fans of pedals had raised more than $20,000 to build a special enclosure at a wildlife sanctuary. wildlife officials tell us that they will release photos of an injured bear that was killed early this week. but without any dna samples, it may be impossible to know that >> i keep hoping against hope that it wasn't pedals and i know it's legal. i understand that. but there is just something about knowing that the bear was -- this particular bear was defenseless. >> black bears are very dangerous. >> that is true but i'm thinking pedals was walking. i just don't think of him hurting anybody. he had become a mascot in the neighborhood. they did not appear to be afraid of him but you're right, normally they very dangerous animals. i get it. >> president clear choice. ahead of tonight's appearance with stephen colbert and which snacks he thinks is best for america. what is colbert wearing? >> i don't know. mustache? >> he is -- >> a very bad mustache! >> samantha: good morning to you, and happy monday. also, happy first day of summer, at least that's what it feels 76 midday, 82 at 3:00. that is 20 degrees above average and 82 is also your record high for today set back in 1953. i'll be interested to see if we can tie or break it today. we'll go with a forecast for decreasing cloud cover throughout the day, a lot of sunshine out there this announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by harvoni. are you ready? i don't want to live with the uncertainties of hep c. or wonder whether i should seek treatment. i am ready. because today there's harvoni. a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. harvoni is proven to cure up to 99% of patients... ...who've had no prior treatment. it transformed treatment as the first cure that's... ...one pill, once a day for 12 weeks. certain patients... ...can be cured with just 8 weeks of harvoni. tell your doctor if you've had a liver transplant, other liver or kidney problems, hiv, or any other medical conditions, and about all the medicines you take including herbal supplements. taking amiodarone with harvoni may cause a serious slowing of your heart rate. common side effects of harvoni may include tiredness, headache and weakness. i am ready to put hep c behind me. i am ready to be cured. are you ready? 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ahead, what voters about nbattleground states are telling us about that. you're watching "cbs this morning." we will be right back. you inherit lots of traits from your family. my ancestor, lady beatrice, introduced the elizabethan ruff. great-grandfather horatio went west during the gold rush. and aunt susan was a a world champion. and their double chin. now, i'm going to do something about it. kybella? is the first of its kind injectable treatment that destroys fat under the chin, leaving an improved profile. kybella? is an fda-approved non-surgical treatment for adults with a moderate amount of fullness... or a bit more. don't receive kybella? if you have an infection in the treatment area. kybella? can cause nerve injury in the jaw resulting in an uneven smile or facial muscle weakness, and trouble swallowing. tell your doctor about all medical conditions, have had or have medical conditions in or near your neck or have bleeding problems. tell your doctor about all medicines you take. the most common side effects are swelling, bruising, pain, numbness, redness, and areas of hardness in the treatment area. find a doctor at mykybella.com hi my name is tom. i'm raph. my name is anne. i'm one of the real live attorneys you can talk to through legalzoom. don't let unanswered legal questions hold you up, because we're here, we're here, legal help is here. >> brian: the tribe takes the 2-0 series to toronto tonight. trevor bouwer had to get ten stitches in his pinky. let's hope it holds up during bouwer says it's not a problem for the release. you can see what coach francona had to say about the injury on the cleveland 19 mobile app. here's our meteorologist sam roberts with our forecast. hey, sam. >> samantha: good morning. if you're just rolling out of bed, we have decreasing clouds in the forecast for today, so expect a lot of sunshine this afternoon. of course, the big story, the temperature. our high today is 82. that is 20 degrees above average, and it is a record high. the record today is 82 set back in another record high possible tomorrow, 84 degrees is what we'll go. no rain around here until tomorrow night, then again on wednesday night a little bit of a better chance during the day, ? it is monday, october 17th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? there is more real news ahead, including donald trump's campaign impact on the travel industry. peter greenberg shows us how trump's rhetoricld his businesses, including a new hotel right near the white house. first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. >> kurdish fighters are trying to retake the main road into mosul at which is in that direction. donald trump once ran as the strong man in this race. now he is the victim, ed on a-- said on all sides. >> clinton is gaining on trump >> the e-mails expose the aspects of clinton's campaign which have made her most vulnerable as a candidate. >> are you expecting any surprises? >> if you said we shouldn't expect surprises, we would be wrong every turn, right? even by definition, i don't know what they are. >> 33 yarder to win the game, which he does. what a comeback. and what a dispiriting loss for >> third opini-parties are touc about that attack. >> it's just -- it's just horrible! why would you even say that? >> okay, gary. just relax a little bit. you've already undercut your credential as a serious candidate by wearing a yellow tie with jeans! come on, gary. you're running for president, >> i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. the firebombing of a north carolina republican office is being called political terrorism by local party leaders. pictures show how the building was heavily damaged by fire overnight saturday. the atf and fbi have joined local police in the investigation. no one was hurt. hillary clinton condemned the attack calling it horrific and unacceptable. no suspect has been identified. donald trump tweeted, quote, animals representing hillary clinton and carolina just firebombed our office in orange county because we are winning. donald trump insists the campaign is stacked against him. >> hillary is running for president in what looks like, to many people, a totally rigged election. >> on twitter, trump blamed the media and hillary clinton and even brought up tampering at the polls. he tweeted, quote, the election is absolutely being rigged by the dishonest and distorted media pushing crooked hillary sat. house speaker paul ryan's office said in a statement, our democracy relies on confidence in election results and the speaker is fully confident that the states will carry out this election with integrity. paul ryan is the highest elected republican in the country. this year, the brennan center for justice reviewed elections that had been, quote, meticu meticulousicameticul meticulously studied for voter fraud and between 0.00004% and 0.0009%. the report said more likely that an american will be struck by lightning that he will impersonate another voter at the polls. >> that means it's very low, huh? 00000! >> i had to make sure i got all of the zeros right! >> you got it. >> not likely to happen. the fbi is giving a congressional committee more details from its investigation private e-mail servers as secretary of state. the committee chairman jason chaffetz says he sees evidence of a deal. he says fbi documents show state department undersecretary patrick kennedy e-mailed a bureau official. he disputed the classification level on one of clinton's benghazi related e-mails. >> in a reply the fbi official asked kennedy for more space for employees assigned at missions overseas. fe statement the fbi investigated the classification of the e-mail was not changed and never a quid pro quo. >> a tracker poll shows hillary clinton is six points ahead of hillary clinton in the 13 battleground states. cbs news election director is here at the table to discuss. anthony, how are you? >> i'm really good. >> do you think the "access hollywood" tape had a lot to do with this jump? >> you see a dramatic swing in five points among women a month ago and now that is 15 points. that is a huge swing. so it is really her whole lead now is attributable to that movement among women. and if you look at the number who say they feel that donald trump does not respect women, that is 7 in 10. coming out of the -- >> is this the largest gender divide we have seen? >> we are on the way to that. once you get into double digits and see shea is 65%, you are in for a history rick divide. >> the last gender divide was the largest in the last election. you have 6 out of 10 independent women saying they find this tape offensive so independent women are shifting as well. >> exactly right. it's independent women and republican women too. a group donald trump can ill afford to stop losing. they have dropped. and i'll tell you among the offensive who aren't now voting for trump, they say they would not now consider him so a little bit walled off in that respect. >> so it's a vote against trump rather than for her? her likability, has it changed? >> it really hasn't. where she is having some difficulty still is with the release of the wikileaks e-mails. voters are saying, the majority feel she has a different set of views in private than she expresses in public. and so her honest and worthy tell the truth numbers haven't moved. >> donald trump has a lot of support within the republican party. you look at the headlines in the republican establishment seems to be getting on a life boat to desert him. but the numbers show he still has big support, does he not? >> he does. quarters of republicans say they want the party to stand behind him. but look. throughout the primaries, his voters have been solid and they haven't much cared what the party establishment has to say. >> isn't it also true, though, romney amongst republicans? >> oh, yes. he needs to be in the mid-90s and women won't consider him it looks like it's going to be very hard for him to get there. >> anthony, thank you. >> thank you. donald trump has mixed business in politics in his run for president. ahead, pete greenberg will show us how some of trump's words on the campaign trail have sent shock waves to the hospitality industry. >> samantha: all right, norah, thank you so much. let's take a live what an absolutely gorgeous start, 67 and a south wind and there's a little cloud cover out there. no doubt about that. we are dry now, and i think these clouds are breaking up through the day. so don't expect a totally overcast day. there will be sunshine out there midday and into the afternoon. big story today and tomorrow, the heat, 82 on monday, 84 kings of leon's rise to success with songs -- ? you somebody somebody like you ? it almost ruined the band. how could that be? ahead, the group tells anthony mason how one of the lowest points in their career helped them refocus. you're watching "cbs this morning." we will be right back. eyes open? good. because it's here. cue the confetti. approved to treat the signs and symptoms of dry eye. so give your eye doctor a ring, and your eyes just might thank you. one drop in each eye, twice a day. the most common side effects of xiidra include eye irritation, discomfort or blurred vision when the drops are applied to the eyes, and an unusual taste sensation. to help avoid eye injury or contamination of the solution, do not touch the container tip to your eye or any surface. remove them before using xiidra and wait for at least 15 minutes before placing them back in your eyes. are you ready to do something about your dry eyes? talk to your doctor about xiidra. we invited women to a spa to test a new body wash. dish soap. you may not feel it, but some body washes can conta . this is dove. 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[ gears stopping ] when your pain reliever stops working, your whole day stops. try this. but just one aleve has the strength to stop pain for 12 hours. tylenol and advil can quit after 6. so live your whole day, not part... feel a cold sore coming on? only abreva can heal it in as few as two and a half days when used at the first sign. it penetrates deep and starts to work immediately to block the virus and protect healthy cells.. don't tough it out, knock it out, fast. mother in-law with a keen sense of smell... glad bag, full of trash. what happens next? nothing. only glad has febreze to neutralize odors for 5 days. guaranteed. even the most perceptive noses won't notice the trash. be happy. it's glad. donald trump presidential campaign could have a lasting impact on his businesses. a recent survey by "travel weekly" found 60% of travel agents have not been recommending trump branded hotels and resorts as much since the billionaire ran his run for president. travel editor peter greenberg is at trump's hotel in washington, d.c. with more. me is the newest property in the trump travel portfolio here in washington, d.c. the hotel is on pennsylvania avenue and housed in the historic post office and blocks from the white house and blocks from the capitol and may be the one property in the trump business that may be the most vulnerable for consumers voting with their wallets. >> building on pennsylvania avenue the old post office. >> reporter: donald trump made it clear from day one of his presidential bid he would be mixing business and ti >> we are just opening up on pennsylvania avenue, right next to the white house. so if i don't get there one way, i'm going to get to pennsylvania avenue another. >> reporter: his new hotel in washington, d.c. is just part of trump's travel portfolio that includes several u.s. hotels and 17 golf clubs and a winery and a hotel management and licensing business that exports the trump director. >> get enough media attention over the last 12 month so fantastic for me. >> when mexico sends its people -- >> reporter: but some of trump's comments throughout the campaign has sent shock waves through the hospitality industry. >> they are krig crbringing cri >> reporter: they removed the trump names from all of his brochures and websit. brand used to be an asset and now a liability. >> reporter: this chefs pulled their restaurants from the d.c. hotel. >> it's like a magnet. when you're a star, they let you do it. >> reporter: arnie wiseman of "travel weekly" says the leaked videotape of trump making lewd comments about women in 2005 may be a tipping point for agents who book hotels. overwhelmingly women. travel decisions are made overwhelmingly by women. we surveyed our readership recently and she said that 50% of their clients are pro actively saying don't put me in a trump hotel. >> reporter: trump paints a different picture. during a june disposition for one of two lawsuits he filed in reaction to the chefs pulling out of his hotel, he was asked about the impact as presidential bid has had on his business. >> i don't think it's had one example, where it's actually been very positive, is in florida, mar-a-lago, the manager told me recently, boy, it is actually the best year we have ever had at mar-a-lago. i was looking at the numbers. i said, what do you attribute this to? ed the campaign. >> reporter: "forbes" editor dan alexander said revenues at trump golf courses were up the last year but in other areas the response has been mixed. >> some of his partners in middle east he has licensing his comments. on the flip side we have talked to some of his partners in places like the philippines say more notoriety into asia and bring in more people so they are excited about it. >> reporter: the stakes are high at the hotel in washington, d.c. the trump family and their partners have poured $200 million in renovating the old post office to a 263-room luxury hotel. nearly 200 million dollar lease with the being with the u.s. government and it runs for 60 years. >> of all the rumors there are corporations or travel companies booking away from you guys. have you seen that at all? >> no. it's higher than what i've seen in a trump hotel. it's always going back to business. >> reporter: what you're telling me now, at least in the hotel business, business trumps politics? >> business trumps politics. >> reporter: or maybe not. industry insiders tell me that government because he substantially overpaid for the deal and competitors like hilton and marriott dropped out. in fact, marriott told cbs they actually crunched the numbers and based on the trump deal they couldn't figure out how anybody could make a profit on this. cbs news did reach out to the trump organization for comment. we received none. one final piece of irony here. i'm sure they didn't plan it but right next to the trump hotel on pennsylvania headquarters of the internal revenue service. >> interesting to see how this will have an impact on his businesses. >> it looks like the hotel turned out beautifully. i love the line business trumps politics. we will see. >> trophy projects are always irresistible to donald trump, mar-a-lago being one. >> this is certainly good real estate. "rolling stone" magazine goes to court today for a conversation. ahead the challenge for. who claims she was portrayed as a villain in a retracted story about sexual assault. you're watching "cbs this morning." ? ? ? ? can you say i love it? ? ? oh love it? ? ? can you say hey? ? ? hey! ? ? ? wooh ooh ? ? wooh ooh ? ? sing sing, baby baby i love you. oh yes.? ? ooooh oooh.? ? every little thing. ? ? ooooh oooh.? does your child need help with digestive balance? try align junior probiotic. so she can have a fraction dominating... status updating... get 24/7 digestive support with align junior. i spent many years as a nuclear missile launch officer. if the president gave the order we had to launch the missiles, that would be it. i prayed that call would never come. [ radio chatter ] self control may be all that keeps these missiles from firing. [ sirens blearing ] i would bomb the [ beep] out of them. i want to be unpredictable. i love war. the thought of donald trump with nuclear weapons scares me to death. hand-dipped, with real milk is the only way to make a milkshake. you can't trust machines. now, how come? once i got a machine-made shake from some other place, and it clanked and clunked and spit out a glop into my glass. and do you know what it was made of? artificial turf? what? no! powder! what? get half-price fall milkshakes between 2:00 and 5:00 during happy hour. only at steak 'n shake. be ? "rolling stone" magazine goes to trial today over account of sexual assault at the university of virginia. the 2014 article told the story of jackie a student who claimed fraternity party and became a national investigation but investigations cast doubt on jackie's version of the event. "rolling stone" issued a retraction after the case was looked into and now the magazine is sued and believes she was cast into the article as a villain. rikki klieman is here. this former dean is now suing for over 7.5 million dollars. what is the case she has? >> her case, like other cases, involving "rolling stone"'s article iii cases. one got tossed. the other one is going to be brought next year by the fraternity that says it was defamed. nicole irma was the dean of students and cast as the villain here and named 31 times in this article and looked at as someone who discouraged this jackie from reporting a rape, that even said university's reputation was more important than jackie's complaint. >> right. the story was she alleged this horrible rape and the school didn't back her up? >> correct. what happened here is this judge has ruled that dean aramo, this plaintiff, is now considered a public figure for a limited purpose. what does that mean in plain english? >> just to back up here. the dean aramo said she did help jackie, righ jackie and did not discourage her, that all of this is false. everything alleged about her is false, that she was sympathetic, that her job was, in fact, to protect alleged sexual assault victims, that she did encourage her to go to the police. but when you are looking to prove defamation, if you're a private person, meaning that no one has ever really heard about you and that you get named in an article, all you have to show is that the publication was negligent in what it said about here, the judge has ruled that nicole framo is a dean and political -- >> is this like new york versus sullivan? >> exactly correct. new york time verse sullivan the public figure and liability. >> why does she qualify as a public figure? >> because she was the face of the university for sexual assault controversies. in this limited person, she was the person who was put up there and that, therefore, she is the with actual malice and they acted knowing or they should have known what they had was -- >> malice? >> the best evidence of the malice is that there was no investigation of this particular allegation at all, including not even looking to the boys who were accused. >> she is still at the school and she is fighting back. >> she is fighting back big her. the nation's am tallylind. i st my sighin ahanian. ifou're tallylind, com. >> samantha: good morning to you, and happy monday. this is another live look outside. we're still socked in with cloud cover. you're out towards the east right now. 67 is where we stand, and we have a south wind but clouds break up through the day, and with that sunshine and that south wind i do expect us to get into record high territory today. that is the record set back in 1953. so we are going to be well above average by about 20 degrees. expect increasing sun, decreasing clouds, and no rain on our maps for today. we should be dry until tomorrow night. if you're loving the warmth, well, we get to do it all over again tomorrow. here's your full seven-day. i'm going to go 84 tomorrow. that is also a record. we get just a little bit cooler by the middle of the week, but end. week that more seasonable air ? we are hearing from the diver who survived this terrifying encounter with a great white shark off mexico. remember this video? we showed it to you last week, how the shark burst into an underwater diving cage and came out on top. minutes later, the diver calmly roseth little golf clap. his experience helped him react very quickly. >> honestly, if you see it, everything happened so fast! so don't have time to get frightened. >> i don't know. chan says despite the close call he went back in the cage the next day because he trusted his team that much. wow. that is somebody who really trusts their team! i don't know. i think i would have had time to >> what do they say about one time, two time? >> survival training. >> and you need a new wet suit too! that was a scary thing! >> yeah. they don't have depends under water! >> not yet! welcome back to "cbs this morning." coming up in this half hour, you must be so proud, right? >> charlie? don't you just love us? some days, you say i would never have this conversation anywhere else. >> charlie is like, why do i have to sit here? how to get your own home. ali webb, there she is! ahead her tips and tricks for all types of hair and what she sees for the future of her blowout empire. >> a band on fire. band of three brothers and a cousin, they released a new album. guess who spoke with them. anthony mason. he talked to them about their struggle to handle the intense time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "usa today" reports on a new rule taking effect today that lifts restrictions on cuban cigars. now americans can purchase the items in any country they are sold but they must be solely for personal consumption. online purchasers in rnot allowed. >> britain's financial times saysal has discussed a possible trump tv network after the election. jared kushner, approached another company. the conversation was reportedly brief and has not progressed since then. the financial times says they may be thinking how to capitalize the plort of trump's campaign if he loses the election. in the past, trump has denied that he wants to start his own reports on a dramatic i couldn't of a man from a burning car. bystanders formed a human chain in palm bay to pull out the trapped driver. another vehicle. at least six people linked arms to drag this man up an embankment. he was pulled out just before the flames took over his car. the driver is expected to be okay and thank goodness for the kindness of strangers! target is pulling clown masks from its stores nationwide. this comes after the crazy clown craze which includes threats of violence made on social media. target says it is withdrawing the masks out of sensitivity for the issue at hand. the "l.a. times" says police have a new way to tackle parking offense. the barnicle clamps over a car's windshield so offends cannot see where they are going unlike the wheel clamp boot. it can be installed with less sound that tries when someone drives by leaning out the side window. >> we learn something new here every day. >> drybar is the largest blow dry hair chain in the nation and found ali webb opened the first one in 2010. no cuts, no color, just blowouts. its locations give more than 1 million blowouts a year! the 66 salons in six states and one in vancouver, canada. she shares her tips for getting the perfect blowout at home and we are pleased that ali has decided to come back to the table. ?> thanks for having me. >> you say tips at home. i personally don't believe people even if they read the book can do and this hot me, do i felt compelled to do a book about the burning questions that women have. it's not replacing getting a full blowout by a profession or drybar. it gives you tips and tricks and you know we struggle with everything. there is something in there i never knew you could section your hair. >> you say men don't get it but all women get it. doesn't matter how good you look, if you have great shoes and makeupnd hair didn't look good, it ruins the look. >> how many people come for this? >> like a lot of men and my brother thaw it was for events. women come on monday and tuesday and don't have to worry about it a couple of days. they come all day, all night. we are open seven days a week and we never close and we are busy all the time. >> you're open seven days a week? >> yes. million in revenue. first, is that correct? >> yes. >> things are looking good. yes. >> talk about how your family said don't brag about money. you should say yes, we are doing great! >> well, you know. >> more significantly over what you did last year? >> yes. the business is really, really growing. i think that -- we did tap into this area that really was very on tap which is why we opened drybar because two bad choice in the marketplace and n and we have a full product line. really just -- so much growth and opportunity. >> this is what somebody said about drybar. i haven't been there but i know you do black women too. we should point that out. right when your walk in you're greeted friendly by someone at the fronts desk and offer you tea and champagne and all of the stylist are fun and quirky and not like a is notty and stuffy salons. >> that is amazing. i've worked in salons and i know what feels like and it's competitive and cut throat. drybar -- >> you wanted experience. >> i wanted it to feel high-end but women to come in and feel like people were nice to them and treated them well. my parents had their own business growing up. so my brother and i grew up in that steatmosphere. you bend over backwards to make the customer feel great. >> you went to beauty school to learn how to do it? >> i did. i went to beauty >> you're not allowing the rest of us to get any questions in. >> i'm fascinated by this! okay, jump in. >> i think that what you were ahead of, which is the mobile beauty business or the on-demand beauty business. >> that's how i started. >> right. how do you see that as a growth industry when people are looking at this investors and others in terms of the change in which the way people are spending money on beautiy and on-demand beauty? on-demand and how i started a mobile blow dry business. over the years we have offered mobile as well but it's like women love to come in and goat out of their house an hour and you come in and get out of the the house. >> an escape. >> it is. >> what does the experience cost them? >> it's $45. most hair salons will up-charge you for curls, flat iron. 's down to your butt, it's still the same price. >> i have one more thing to say. because you don't have people look in a mirror which i think is interesting. they are looking at tvs because you want the big reveal. i want to see what is happening while somebody is doing their hair in case i have some suggestions. >> you can. we can turn you around. but the idea was -- that really came from my mobile business because i was doing women's hair in their living room. so they didn't have a mirror. what would happen after i was done and i had it to the point i tell me what to do, they would run into the bathroom and there was this big, like oh, my god! then that is what we try to re-create in drybar. >> your new book is here. >> anything else, gayle? >> no, i'm done. i'm done. >> we have fun here, can you tell. >> i like it. >> her new book "the drybar guide for a crisis for a band early in their career. >> you said you didn't like the name. did they have another name for you? >> they wanted us to be the follow-up brothers. >> you put your foot down and said no way? >> we said we are going to be the king band of leons and they said that is the worst name monday. we have a lot of clouds out there right now. it's about 67 degrees, so it's very warm for this time of year in the morning. i think we'll see more and more sun breaking out throughout the day. lots of sunshine this afternoon, and the big story, of course, is the temperatures. highs today top out at about 82. that's 20 degrees above average and it's also the record high for today. we're going to do it all over again tomorrow. ? ? you know i could use somebody someone like you ? >> reporter: kings of leon has won three grammy awards, including record of the year back in 2010 for that hit song you just heard. now the song is back at the top of the charts. the band released a new album itunes this morning! this is the first release in three years from the southern rock sensation. the band became a household name with hits like "sex on fire" and "radioactive." anthony mason visited the band members in nashville. >> one of the successful rock acts of the past decades, kings of leon was on top of the world in 2011 when everything seemed to unravel. now with their seventh album "walls" the kin regain their crown. ? >> reporter: in search of a new sound, kings of leon recorded their latest album with a new producer in a new city. you wanted to go somewhere different. why? >> we just felt like there was a spark there that we needed to ? ? your sex is on fire." >> reporter: kings of leon caught fire behind their hit "sex on fire" in 2008 is a family band. the three follow brothers, lead singer caleb and naij nathan on drums and jared on bass and leon on guitar. where did your first love of music come from? >> our dad was a traveling minister so church music was part of our lives, caleb and i. >> reporter: he and caleb were signed to a recording deal in 2002. they wanted to name themselves for their grandfather leon but their manager had a different idea. >> we said we are going to be kings of leon and they said that is the worst band name ever. they said you're sabotaging your the bomb about our cousin and little brother gentleman they brought in then 15-year-old jared and 17-year-old matthew. >> they were, like, do they play? and we said, we just bought jared a bass today. he is learning. and they said, well, what about moout? i said, well, he played a thin lizzie song over the phone from mississippi, sounded pretty good, so. >> reporter: the kings of leon grew up quickly. >> jared and mt became men. like, on the road while we were touring. >> nathan still tries to order for us at dinner and stuff like that. >> there is a point when the younger brother fights back and did that change the balance of the band? >> we started pretty early on. you know, things would come to a vote, which i still don't like that. >> reporter: you don't like votes? >> no. >> reporter: the band broke first in britain where their third album, because of the look. >> i went into a bar one night and someone came up to me, what are you, somebody kings of leon want to be? i said like, yes, yes, i am. it was crazy. we would leave london having played sold-out shows and, like, getting recognized at the airport, and then we would get home and our mom would be there to pick us up! ? someone like you ? >> reporter: but their fourth album would break them worldwide. only by the night sold more than 8 million copies. but success brought greater pressure. and some fans accused them of selling out. >> even though you try not to read all of that stuff, you start to hear it and it starts to kind of weigh on you a little bit. >> reporter: in 2011, caleb, notoriously walked off stage in the middle of a concert and the kings cancelled the rest of their u.s. tour. mentally, where were you? >> ready for a break. >> exhausted. >> unemployed. >> frazzled. >> if we hadn't done that, i don't think we would be talking about our seventh album right now, you know? >> reporter: is it easier to get through that when you guys are all family? >> family. it's a double-edged you get over it a lot easier, too. ? when the walls come down ? when the walls come down ? >> reporter: the music press is already calling this the kings comeback year. >> i think we might have lost sight of why we wanted to be in the band in the first place and play music. >> reporter: that new single waste a moment just hit number one on billboard's adult alternative chart and first time on that chart they have done that in nearly six years. on the rebound. >> that is awesome. >> i like caleb's mumbling. >> reporter: if you're an interviewer, you don't like that so much. >> i like the way he sings. but in this latest album, it's different. >> reporter: he has one of the greatest voices in rock 'n' roll. >> no king of leon there. how tall are y? how do we measure greatness in america? the height of our skyscrapers? the size of our bank accounts? no. it's measured by what we do for our children. the values we pass on. i've spent my life fighting for kids and families and it will be my mission to build a country where our children can rise as high as their dreams and hard work take them. not debt. and an economy where every young american can find a job that lets them start a family of their own. we face big challenges, but we can solve them the same way families do. working together. respecting one another. and never giving up. i want our success to be measured by theirs. i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. that does it for us. >> blow dry, anybody? i love my mom. my mom. i love my kids. my kids. my job. taking care of everybody. everyday. my mom. my kids. my job. yes. when i'm at work. when i'm at home. i could just really use some help sometimes. hey we hear you. that's why aarp helps family caregivers... with resources and connections to experts to help make your life easier to manage. because we get it. if you don't think "this is right for me" >> samantha: it's good to see you again on this morned. we start off at 8:55 with a check at what's happening with satellite and radar. i have a lot of clouds out there, but there are breaks in the clouds. we will see sunshine. it's just going to take a little while. it will be later in the day. there's also a little light drizzle out there. nothing of significance, and it's not going to pour on you i think any drizzle or light rain we see would be confined to the early morning hours by 10:00, 11:00 we should be done with any moisture that's out there. speaking of moisture, it will feel humid today. here is your planning forecast. look at that. 82 this afternoon, and that is not only 20 degrees above average, but it's a record for today. it hasn't been that warm on this date since 1953. it's been a while since we saw mid-october, but we are going to be seeing it today and tomorrow. twenty four meals under four dollars! just like in 1934! four dollars was a lot in those days. that can't be right. no, i was there! back then, you not only got to choose from 24 meals under four dollars, you also got a shave, a shoeshine and a new suit. used to be called "steak 'n shake 'n shave 'n shoeshine 'n suit." they even put it on the sign! 'til it broke. is that a steak 'n shake suit? get 24 meals for under four dollars. >> announcer: today on rachael ray! can gretta & peter get this fashion high school room decluttered? >> seriously. look at my one finger. >> go gumbo. and, supergirl, and this hearty supper is 5 ingredients away. and now are you ready for ... rachael? ? ? [ cheers and applause ] ? ? >> rachael: all righty. welcome everybody! [ applause ] >> rachael: you know, everybody in our show today could legitimately wear a cape. we have one actor who wears a cape as a superhero on tv. and we have two people that i think deserve capes because of how good they are at their profession.

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