tv CBS This Morning Me-TV October 24, 2015 6:00am-8:00am CDT
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>> all that. >> must akis. >> off they go to the fall mets. >> and all that matters. >> chan was a true dodgers fan had to the average price for a the scalped ticket to the mets game is $1700. it's terrible. the only people who can afford to go to a mets game are derek jeter and a-rod right now. >> and welcome to the weekend. we have some great guests for
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including akim by a musttumbo. a look back at his unlikely rise to global fame. >> and now a world class chef and one of the most acclaimed. he'll join us in the zish. >> and the this year's best of list for rolling stones, spin and pitch fork. how she went from down under to stage. saturday session. we begin with breaking news overnight. one of the most powerful storms on record struck mexico and its remnants could pose a threat to the u.s. hurricane patricia slammed mexico's central pacific coast friday deliver tag potentially catastrophic blow. it was a category five storm
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>> reports o flooding and landslides but no words of death or major damage. maximum sustained winds now are about 75 miles per hour. adrian bar is in mexico city. >> reporter: so far the heaviest impact was in colima where the storm made lan fall friday evening. mud slides are reported in colima, highways washed out and lamp posts and billboards knocked down. trees up rooted. rivers flowed into the streets in southern ha lisco dragging cars and trucks away in the current. the public servants went door to door telling people they had to go.
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the governor even a walked the streets of the puerta vallarta with a mega phone urging people to get inside. about 10,000 foreign tourists including many americans were evacuated from the area. so far no deaths have been reported and there is a huge sense of relief. adrian bard, cbs news mexico city. >> for a look into where the hurricane is headed next we're joined by meteorologist ed curran and our chicago station wbb mtv. >> amazing storm. maximum winds at 200 miles per gusts to 245. the most amazing is how quickly this storm exploded. going from a tropical storm to a category five in just 30 hours. amazing. we continue to watch as it loses its hurricane status quickly. but it is tracking towards parts
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they have seen five to ten inches of rain since thursday morning. this morning parts of texas are being flooded and actually seeing flooding rains here. and we have flash flooding here in the area here. and as this moves east, louisiana will see its share of flooding mostly on sunday. dangerous conditions for the southwest. the best thing we can tell you for texas, oklahoma, arkansas, louisiana. you will see heavy rain, flash flooding. and if you see a water-covered roadway, turn around don't drown. >> thank you. as we reported what is left of hurricane patricia after crossing mexico is expected to hit texas perhaps as early as today, delivering a lot of rain to the lone star state. definitely does not need or want. heavy rain and flooding have plagued much of texas for days and might go on for days to
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comb. let's get the latest. >> reporter: a steady rain continues to fall across north texas turning parkways into the ponds and making driving conditions dangerous. parks started to look like pools, streets were flooded and interstates shut down in both directions because of water. the rain is also causing plenty of accidents. a section of interstate 35 which is one of the nation's busiest highways was temporarily closed after this 18 wheeler hit a median and overturned. the governor act activated the state's emergency operation center because we are expecting more rain throughout the morning. >> looking damp there in dallas. thanks. now to politics and there is
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first jeb bush has made what could be a momentous decision cutting back sharply on his campaign, despite months building a huge and expensive campaign organization, bush made little headway against candidates trump and carson. so he is slashing costs, reducing staff and ordering across the board pay cuts for those who remain. >> donald trump continues to confound opponents this time by rejecting what he calls dark money from the super pacs. he told them to stop raising money in his name and said he'll return any money already received. and challenged others in the race to follow suit. >> well the crux of donald trump trump's appeal is that he's on outsider who doesn't need money from rich donors. now he's taking the extra step
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any pro trump super pack to stand down but there are still questions whether or not he gave one group his blessing months ago. >> they have these things called super pacs. >> reeling against super pacs are regular lines in his speeches. >> they want to take these people like little pickup truckuppets and say you do as i told you. >> trump made those comments last night amid a flurry of questions from a washington post article and whether one of the groups based in america, the make america great again pac was operating with trump's approval. people familiar with the campaign's initial planning, before he became a candidate his team discussed whether to make a
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america great again. one said she had been invited ahead of the announcement. she was told the campaign was planning to have an allied super pac. then over the summer. the curbner family gave a hundred,000. trump attended and some people gave money to the super pac. more connections were revealed later this week in another article by the washington post which published an e-mail also obtained by cbs news showing that in early september the consultant who was running the denver-based seung pac sent a fundraising solicitation to a donor whether he said he earned their e-mail from rona trump's long time secretary. and sent letters to nine secretaries backing trump including the make america great again pac saying your organization is not authorized
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and we are formally disavowing such activities. by thursday night, the group's director said they would be winding down. saying mr. trump said he doesn't have a super pac to. super pac. and trump insists every candidate should follow his lead. >> all candidates disaso i have your super pacs. run for office and be proud. but disavow your super pacs. drop them. >> the trump campaign hasn't responded to repeated questions about cbs news. and why he would even let it exist using his signature slogan from july to this point. anthony, the super pac also had han affiliated non profit which doesn't have to disclose its donors and that is shutting down as well. >> thanks julianna. as for the democrats this morning, hillary clinton faces a
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the nomination, like former week. lincoln chafee has withdrawn. he made the announcement friday at the woman's forum sponsored committee. >> as you may know i've been campaigning on a platform of prosperity through peace but after much thought i have decided to end my campaign for the president today. >> chafee was far back in the polls and the struggled to raise campaign money. morning. joining us is lauren fox. welcome back. let's start with julianna left off. this super pac maneuver. first time it feels like in a long time trump hasn't had the lead for consecutive weeks. do you think that's why he's doing all this is it. >> i think trump is try toinging to reassert that he is the candidate. and i think what he's concerned is he might be starting to lose
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that i peel he had on the campaign trail. what is the best way to disavow that? is well i'm not going to take all this extra campaign cash that the others are. >> you mentioned ben carson is now the front runner in iowa. at the same time he's also stepping off the campaign trail for a book tour. which seems unconventional at this point. >> certainly. i think it reveals a little about what's so different about the republican side than the democratic side. as the democraticside is starting to rally around hillary clinton and seeing her as the inevitable sort of nominee. and the republican side they are still working through this. and it raises questions whether or not he really wants the job of being in the white house. >> a lot of people are saying the difference between the two candidates is do you care about social issues? or do you care about the economy? do you find that is polarizing voters? >> i think we are starting to see the republicans are so
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and why is first we say we need the house of representatives. then they say we need the senate to do what we -- they got it. now they are saying we don't have the white house. now voters are really going to be careful before they give republicans the white house. and meanwhile marco rubio is starting to make a rise as well. >> and jeb bush is having to make significant spending cuts how much trouble is he in? >> i think this is partly precautionary. one of the cris simples walker got was he didn't tighten his belt soon enough. but i think that jeb bush has struggled to gain traction. the name is difficult, especially in a campaign when again this is all about how connected you are to washington. the perception is he's very connected to washington and that others are less so. >> this is a candidate who going in, he was perceived almost as
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partly because of the money he raised. and now he's got troubles with money. so what does that. >> i think it reveals that early money gets you off the ground but you have to make progress. >> what -- what do you think of hillary testimony? 52% of voters say they believe -- they say no, they don't believe she had been honest. what's your takeaway from after that? >> i think hillary clinton showed she was very measured, very calm. one levity of moment around 7:15. unscathed unscathed. members of the media were asking what did you learn from this hearing? and a lot were saying well we didn't learn a lot but it was important to bring her in. and maybe this was a grilling
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exercise that may backfire. >> is she through the woods now you think. >> i think for republicans she will always have a suspicious and -- >> thanks so much for being with us this morning. tomorrow morning on face the nation. john dickerson's guess will including democrat adam schiff of california california. and devin nunes. >> and vice president joe biden tomorrow night discusses his decision with the cbs this morning host norah o'donnell. and secretary kerry is in talks this morning. talks are aimed at the recent wave of deadly attacks in israel in the west bank as well as the bloodshed in the syrian civil
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war and threat from isis. >> islamic state militants have purportedly released a video showing the aftermath of a raid in northern iraq that left an american soldier dead. the pictures show the rubble created on thursday to free the hostages. joshua wheeler was the first american killed in the situation in iraq. >> fighting situations in the east can't come fast enough for tens of thousands of migrates who continue to flee war zones in europe. the danger grows especially for those escaping aboard overcrowded boats. we have video of one rescue that ends well but we want to warn this is disturbing to watch. >> a turkish fisherman alerts his crew to what's floating in the distance. as they approach the high seas drama takes shape. oh my god there is a baby too,
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he screams. cell phone video captured what unfolded next as the officials plucked the 18 month old from the water and desperately tried to revive him. more children were spotted nearby and rescued. this played i out wednesday after a boat of migrates sunk off turkey. such scenes have become common place and mark the latest push by migrates to make it to europe before the winter chill sets in. already conditions in greece have become dangerous. this refugee camp was pounded by heavy rain. many were hungry and exhausted. in just the past few days officials say nearly 50,000 people fleeing conflict in north africa and the middle east have made to it the coast. dozens have died at sea.
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but muhammed hassan has later identified does get a happy ending. that cpr worked. and he survived. roman catholic bishops from around the world are wrapping up a three week summit at the vatican today. the bishops will vote on crucial final documents of families. expected to cover everything from better marriage to sex education for children and whether divorced catholics can receive communion. last night in the bottom of the eighth with the score tied at 8. the orioles lorenzo cane walked. and then a single and cane came all the way around from first and the royals took the lead. >> great game.
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in the ninth inning the blue jays threatened but a ground out ended it. they return to the world series for the second straight year to meet the mets. >> coming up a little later we'll have a lot more on baseball and the marlins man. he's been there behind home plate and the bright orange miami marlins outfit at nearly every playoff game. we'll tell you who he is and why he's doing it. >> the "new york times" reports the director of the fbi sees a connection between the increased scrutiny of police and the rise in violent crime across the nation. james comey says officers are under the microscope in the wake of the well publicized cases of police arrests. he says this makes them less aggressive on cracking down on criminals. comey added this was just his observation. the justice department has no response.
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some do say they do not agree. convicted james holmes and a guard were attacked in a colorado prison. holmes was not injured. he's serving multiple life sentences for killing 12 and wounding 70 others in a massacre three years ago. the washington post reports safety concerns were raised about the pentagon's f 35 striker brigade and were apparently ignored. the conern is is the ejection could cause injuries for lighter weight pilots. those weighing less than 136 pounds are being banned from the plane while the problem is fixed. >> and prosecutors are warning about the dangers of wearing green contact lens with your halloween costume. the concern is that the festive eye water could cause serious
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they should only be worn with consultation from a doctor. and the bbc reports the picture of the iceberg that may have taken down the titanic is heading to the auction block this weekend. the photograph was taken the day after the liner hit it in 1912. it apparently shows some red paint from the ship's hull. the sinking claimed the lives of more than 1500 people. and expected to cost at least $15,000. today cloudy through mid morning, then gradual clearing, with a high near 62. breezy, with a northwest wind 16 to 18 mph, with gusts as high as 26 mph. tonight clear, with a low around 39. northwest wind 5 to 9 mph becoming calm after midnight. sunday sunny, with a high near 63. light and variable wind becoming south southeast 5
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coming up, they have a different way of stopping cyber attacks. we'll take you inside the company that is not just protecting data. they are going after the hackers too. and later a controversial bear hunt under way in florida. the first there in 21 years. animal protection groups are outraged and you will see why. you are watching "cbs this morning saturday." hi. i'm ben affleck. the only thing better than playing a hero in the movies, is being a hero in real life. like the 50,000 veterans who returned from iraq and afghanistan with devastating injuries. they are true heroes. and they're why
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i'm proud to support paralyzed veterans of america. they make sure veterans with spinal cord injuries get the care and support they need at no cost to them. to learn more, visit pva.org. that's p-v-a dot org. bipolar disorder is a brain condition that causes unusual or dramatic mood swings. it affects millions of americans and compromises their ability to function. when diagnosed, bipolar disorder can be effectively treated by mood stabilizers. but most people with bipolar disorder suffer for years without help because the symptoms are missed or confused with other illnesses, like depression. learn how easily you can help keep this from happening to a loved one. visit cbscares.tv. when the twins were about 10 days old, the doctors told us they were going to need blood transfusions. we're so proud of who they've become. as a result of one person, deciding to spend an hour of their life giving blood
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how powerful that one donation could possibly be. ...and the crowd goes wild! >> coming up he went from pop star to president. the unlikely tale of how sweet mickey martelli game president. >> and one congressman pays off a losing bet. watching "cbs this morning saturday." fety." "i wasn't going to invite people over and when i saw what their homes looked like." "i didn't know where i was gonna go, what i was gonna do." "we're in darkness, but there is always a little bit of light, and if people help, the light becomes greater."
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"just walking into that house was the beginning of a different life." "because of this house, i'm home." you can change the lives of families in your community and around the world. join us. habitat, we build. , trt: :30 c cbs cares - justin constantine: overcoming adversity jc14oa30, trt: :30 closed captioned as a marine in iraq, i was shot in the head by a sniper. at first no one expected me to survive, let alone regain my life. with the right help and determination, i did. whatever hardship you face, never give up. if you feel overwhelmed by problems, it's okay to ask for help and lean on others for support.
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john grisham is here for an interview you are seeing first here on cbs this morning. tell us who this rogue lawyer is. sebastian. >> his name is sebastian rudd. and he's a radical rogue lawyer who does not have ab office. does not have a secretary. he carries a gun. his office is a bull proof van driven by his only friend and body guard and paralegal and confidant. a guy he got off a murder wrap. and he takes cases nobody else will take. and he's at war with the police and the prosecutors and the government. and big corporations and politicians. and he's just a lone gunman. >> a lot of people are out to get hem u.im. and the title rogue lawyer. you said at one point you wanted to be a rogue lawyer. and i i didn't know that about. >> i.
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>> i always admired the lawyer whose had the guts to take unpopular lawyers. and i never did that. i wanted to make a living. and i admire the lawyers who did. >> and you write in the book, our prisons the packed. streets filled with drug. who's winning the war? we've lost our minds. >> yeah. >> that's not just fiction. >> no it's true and it touches on an issue i'd a like to explore in another book. and that is the harsh incarceration. and just this drive to put everybody in jail. >> this has the support of the koch brothers and the white house. they are on the same side. >> finally. >> finally. yeah as the prison population
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eradi interest a network. >> what's at stake? >> i would say everything is at stake. reputation, valuation to your customers and the overall health of your organization. >> hackers embarrassed sony pictures last year releasing personal e-mails, salary information and movies. and 56 million of home depot credit cards accounts for compromised and a security breech at target could cost more than $1 billion. experts say organizations everywhere are under cyberattack 24/7. >> they are able to bypass the security products that have been installed in the network at hundreds of millions of dollars. >> you are essential spotting a burglary in progress. >> absolutely. >> here's what's really different. on average it takes a company
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and seven months to remove. they go after hackers in real time. anyone from state sponsor terror groups to teenagers with time on their hands. >> this is not a government problem solve. >> john harbaugh is the chief operating officer here. >> was the frustration the bad guy always got away. >> is always ahead. >> always had. >> always had and getting away. >> and this is a battle, air land sea and cyber and i think the commercial markets are quickly realizing they happen to be ground zero in this war. >> in this particular battle the hunt was successful. this adversaries were caught and removed from the system. but chances are they will be back. for "cbs this morning saturday" mark strausman, colorado springs. >> what does it take to bring ab nfl team to london?
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cbs chief news correspondent and cbs chief news contributor. first off for more than a decade the american cancer society is waiting most women wait until age 45 to get a mammogram. in age 55 they can start getting a mammogram every two years. what is behind the changes. >> breast cancers screening guidelines have long been controversial because the four or five main groups that weigh in have never really reached an sense. this was striking because this was the american cancer society. and they tend to be more aggressive with guidelines in terms of screening earlier and more frequently. but as you said they just slid back the age at which women who are at average risk of breast cancers. not heightened risk but average. the age they should have their first mammogram. 40, 45.
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55. . it does represent a significant shift. the idea is that if you screen base on the guidelines you are going to catch women who are going to benefit the most and have the least downside from the tests. >> what is behind the change? did something happen? >> this is a literature review on the latest data that is out there. and let's be clear about one thing. let's not be confusing. mammography saves lives. if you are at average risk there is a 2% chance you are going to skreerning. if you do screening at 50 that goes down. if you're more aggressive and start at 45 every year that goes down to 1.8 to 1.9% chance. so it goes down a little bit more. the bottom line is if you are more aggressive, say, start at
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40, you are going to pick up more breast cancers. you are also going to pick up more false positives and unnecessary testing and biopsies and the unnecessary worry so you have to balance the risks and benefits. >> doctors no longer need to perform these exams too. what is that change about is this. >> a clinical exam is when a doctor feels your breasts for lumps. previously had been recommended for all women ages 19 and up yearly. and according to this report there wasn't enough evidence to show that it significantly detected cancers and the benefits outweighed the risks of unnecessary testing. i will say this one is particularly hard for me to get my mind around. i have to say every physical that i do, virtually every physical that i do on all of my female patients i do a clinical breast exam. i'm not sure i'm ready to make that change. or that it is going to be beneficial. >> -- if holly is saying this is something actually really believes?
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>> in terms of the breast exam i think this is going to be some argument. not only in terms of the doctor doing it. in terms of the patient doing it. what are the pros and cons. you can pick it up earlier and then have false positives. in terms of what is a woman or a doctor supposed to do? so much of a personal choice. they specifically say talk to your doctor about it. i do colonoscopies in people and there are specific guidelines. i've found colon cancer in someone in their twenties. so it's a risk/benefit thing. >> mothers should avoid all forms of alcohol during pregnancy. it says no amount should be considered safe and adds all forms such as beer, wine and liquor pose similar risk. this goes against other research
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alcohol may be harmless. what you would hear was later on you might be able to have a class. what's changed? >> really they are just reiterating their position they have held for the last 30 years, which is that no amount of alcohol is safe for women at any point in pregnancy. i think they are putting this out there because there are reports that show 10% still drink and 3% binge drink. that's one or more. and we are seeing results from people drinking. >> it is such an important guideline for women to have highlighted too. next up the man at the
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mayor michael blumoomburg --. john asked doctor farley about considers his biggest success, the decline of smoking rates in the big apple. >> how did you lower smoking rates? pieces. first was raising the prices significant. >> significantly. >> costs about $12. big increase in the price of cigarettes. then a smoke free air rule. >> big political fight. >> people said no one would ever go to a bar again. we wouldn't even have tourists come into the new york city. >> any of that happen? >> no. as a matter of fact just the opposite happened. the european tourists saw it was nice and the idea spread to europe and now most of europe is smoke free. >> -- took a lot of heat for public health problem. this. >> gun violence is absolutely
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the public health problem. it is not just gun homicides. it is also gun suicides. in new york city the gun suicide >> why? >> because we have so many iffer rest of the country. >> when there is a mass shooting you hear two things. gun control and people also saying well you need better mental health services and preventions so people when they do have some psychological problem don't commit violence. is it both? either is this. >> we absolutely need better mental health services in the country but it is not going to be able to reduce the gun events we're talking about. the difference is whether a gun is available. and the evidence is very clear. the more dpuns you have, the mur more gun related violence. more guns is not the solution to the problem. the solution is fewer guns. particularly fewer guns in the hands of people that are likely to use them.
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in oklahoma city on friday, 911 calls came in about the run away horse downtown. turned out to be a miniature horse on the loose. it evaded police and crossed a few roads without getting hard. police have no idea where it came from but they were able to safely capture the run away. >> can you imagine? >> in the dark in silhouette. >> alligators are usually what
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comes to mind when you think of the florida everglades. but this is the black bear. for the first time this morning a statewide sanctioned bear hunt is under way. despite protests from activists. david begno has the story. >> for the first time this woman is about to go hunting for a bear. >> we're kind of like the posse the sheriff hires to help catch this guy. >> over the last twenty years the black bear population has soared from 300 to nearly 3,000 and so have the nuisance complaints. more than 6600 people called authorities last year to report bears wandering in the neighborhoods. 320 bears can be killed in the hunt. but animal activists like linda fear a slaughter. >> there is no more than a trophy hunt.
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the wall, a rug on the floor or a paw as a paper weight. >> state authorities insist they will closely monitor the hunt. nick wiley runs florida's fish commission. >> it is not easy to hunt bears. they are very elusive. they are not easy to take. so we know that only a small percentage of hunters are going to be successful. >> stot the madness for the love of the bears >> environmentalists sued to prevent it and lost ron. ron is a lifelong hunter. he says the bigger problem is coming from people. >> you think the issue circles back to trash. >> absolutely. 95% of the conflicts of bears going into neighborhoods is the garbage. >> great grandmother belin
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disagree sees the hunt as her chance to help manage the bear population. >> i hope my chances are at least, you know, 50/50. and if i see him, i got to go for 75% on the kill. >> if hunt started before sun rise this morning and it will end when the 320th bear is killed or in seven days. which ever comes first. when i lived in colorado there was a ton of these. the bears are everywhere. they are fun to watch. but you can understand the nuisance. >> dangerous yes. but i do love bears. coming up nfl football is trying to gain a foothold in the land of cricket and soccer. but they are not exactly feeding players. you're watching cbs this morning
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the fans here in london, they definitely should be cheering for the bills. and you know we got, you know, hey, same color. union jack all that kind of stuff. >> rex ryan is hoping british fans will support his team against jacksonville this weekend. >> when it doubt -- what is it teal? what is jacksonville? please stop. >> the bills play the jaguars. the bills sent about 17,000 pint of freight to the game. all to try to make everything like a normal week for the team. but the bimslls say it is all worth it if they come home with
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dikembe mutombo coming up. welcome to "cbs this morning saturday," i'm anthony mason. >> and i'm vinita nair. coming up how could a provocative pop star named sweet nicky win election as president of haiti? a new document tells the strange and strange aly wonderful story. then the marlins man. if you have been watching the baseball playoffs you probably noticed him behind the plate in his orange. we found out what he's up to exactly. and she battled anxiety to become one of the most acclaimed musicians around. courtney barnett. and she'll perform in our saturday negs. >> and breaking news overnight. hurricane patricia, one of the most powerful storms on record, hit central mexico's pacific coast. the remnants may pose threat to part of the u.s. today. patricia was a category 5 storm when it hit and made land fall
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it had sustained winds of 200 miles an hour. >> there are rourts reports of flooding and landslides but no reports of major damage. from space, looks menacing from space. and stay safe. and it is now downgraded to a tropical storm as it moves inland. >> our meteorologist is tracking it across its path towards texas. >> winds of 200 miles per hour was the amazing explosiveness of the storm. it went from tropical storm to category 5 hurricane in just 30 hours. we continue to watch its progress as it quickly loses hurricane status. but what remains will head up into texas where they have already seen rains thinssince thursday morning of five to ten inches. they are seeing flooding rains
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this morning across texas and this will add to theirir woes there. watches and warnings in the red across texas and into the louisiana. and as you can see the rain continues moveing that way. louisiana will see rains. up to ten inches in areas by the time we get to sunday night. >> thanks ed. the kansas city royals host the mets tuesday night in the first game of the world series with the score tied in the bottom of the eighth last night lorenzo cain walked and then eric hosmer single deep into the right field corner and cain all the way around from first and the royals took the lead. in the ninth the blue jays threatened but a ground out to third ended it and the royals beat toronto. the royals return to the world series for the second consecutive year. >> i like your voice on that.
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dikembe mutombo is literally larger than life for his story. he came from his native congo to university. his 7'2" naturally drew attention and he recruited to play basketball for the hoyas. >> he went onto the nba, became a great defensive player and last month was inducted into the hall of name. he's distinguished himself off the court as well working with charitiesy sies around the world including his own dikembe mutombo foundation. he joins us that in capacity to talk about the upcoming nba season. >> good morning. >> as a fellow hoya i especially welcome you. >> yes i like that. >> how does it feel to be in the hall of fame. >> i feel great. everywhere you go now everybody
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i feel like i'm becoming a chinese. >> you know we mentioned you started ouch eded off in medicine. so how did this all start for you? basketball? >> i really didn't want to play basketball when i was young. it was like one of those games that i really disliked so much. and it was not until my senior year, my brother keep challenging me to play a little bit. then i start playing and i stop. and i have to focus on my study and then i came to america. and it was not until my sophomore year that everything changed. >> john thompson found you and said why don't you come play. >> yes. i can make you rich. >> oh is that the promise? >>. [ laughter ] >> so tell us about it. because you entered into the nba a little later. you were a little older than most guys to get recruited. >> yes. >> when did the finger wag start. >> it really didn't start until
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my second my third year. it was not like i plan about it. because i used to shake my head every time i would block the shot. and i felt like guys was not getting the message and not respecting me. maybe if i tell them they cannot fly on mutombo it will stop. >> and it's not this. it's important. it's -- >> only the finger that moves. >> you paid a lot of money to keep this. you were fined heavily. >> a lot. i think that is one of the reasons i'm working for the nba because they are trying to pay me back. >> i love the geico ad. >> yes. >> that must have gotten you even more attention. >> i think the geico kind of took me in another level. >> it did. >> the new situation didn't know that much about me they end up
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>> yank we'vei don't think we've seen any other player do as many great things away from the game. when did that start for you the realization you wanted to do more? >> i think it start from -- nba care and the program and brought this initiative that we have to make this thing global. we have to change the world. we have to go where the game is being played and where the game is being watched. and today we are in almost all of the continenting making differences and building school and playgrounds and we want to have a big important. >> where do you see the season? do you lebron getting back to the finals? golden state winning again? >> i live in atlanta so i no longer want to be bias. but it is going to be a great season. there is a great team and so many great teams. the lakers, atlanta hawk, miami
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heat, the cleveland, golden state. don't forget about new orleans. there is a lot of great teams out there. >> you didn't mention the knicks -- >> oh. oh. >> could lebron james have dunked over you? >> yes he try few times. but he just couldn't climb mount mutombo. the mountain is high. >> did he get the finger wag? >> of course. few times. >> thank you so much for being with us this morning. >> thank you for having me. >> we'll give you one -- thank you. >> it's about p seven minutes after the hour. now today cloudy through mid morning, then gradual clearing, with a high near 62. breezy, with a northwest wind 16 to 18 mph, with gusts as high as 26 mph. tonight clear, with a low around 39. northwest wind 5 to 9 mph becoming calm after midnight. sunday sunny, with a high near 63. light and variable wind becoming south southeast 5
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up next, how did the oout outrageous pop star cult sweet nicky become the president of haiti? and we'll meet the rapper who made it happen. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." this helps me to manage my chronic pain. but it came with some baggage. you're not the only one. opioids block pain signals by attaching to something called mu-receptors here but they also attach to mu-receptors in the bowel. and that can cause opioid-induced constipation... or oic. i could struggle with oic the whole time i take my opioid? maybe not. there's movantik. movantik can help reduce oic by blocking opioids from binding to mu-receptors in the bowel. do not take movantik if you have a bowel blockage or a history of them. serious side effects may include a tear in your stomach or intestine. and can also include symptoms of opioid withdrawal. common side effects include stomach pain, diarrhea,
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>> founder of the hip hop fuje esefujees returns home. >> they can't get a break. now they feel at this point they lost everything. they lost everything. so i was like, you know, we need a drastic change. an outsider, if you will. you need someone who can inspire the people. >>. what a man what a amine what a man what a mighty good man >> we started to talk. man, you the run that really with help haiti to make that change. >> good morning. as we saw in the clip the movie earthquake. as it is hitting almost in a >> right.
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>> why did you want to do this project and why did you want to start where you started it? >> that's when i got to haiti. i went to marsel martelli and basically tried to convince him to run for president. >> did you really think you could pull this off at that time? >> you know my intentions were good you know what i mean? it was just something to help the people. i didn't know how we were going do it. but we got to believe. you know? >> yeah. >> what was it about nicky that made you think he can do it. >> he's a pop tar and as a leader you got to be able to inspire people and get people to do things they normally wouldn't want to do to make that change. and i believe at that time he was the guy for the job. >> neither of you had any political experience whatsoever. or money really. >> i was part of the obama
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we right we had no money. y clef had like -- >> that's the real curve ball in this. you start the campaign. and y clef, your band mate ends up entering the race. but he's not aware you are behind sweet nicky. >> and i didn't know he was going to run either. because we weren't talking at that time. so when he entered the race it was a shock. i was flabbergasted. >> you were flabbergasted. >> yeah. >> there is a lot of intense exchanges that were captured. >> two musicians are fighting for the highest office in the land. i think that was d because when you sit back and think about it you are like why? because they have no experience. it really became kind of like -- it seemed like an ego think. i'm a musician, i'm successful
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but now i want to be president. kind of like trump. >> y clef ended up having to withdraw because he was not a resident of haiti. you wanted to get him to endorse sweet nicky. >> y clef was the international superstarch superstar. he was the goliath, if you will. >> did you make peace? >> yes. for the sake of the count skri the people we had to make peace. >> sweet nicki has been president now for for four years. how do you think he lived up to the hype? >> he's not wince bston churchill. he's not ivan the terrible either. i don't know. i think the progress was that the people's vote was recognized.
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the republic is 400 years old. but the first democratic election was 1990. so the fact that the people said listen, even though he may be sweet nicki, wearing diapers, the clown. but we voted for him. and that is who we want and you are going to respect and listen to our vote and i think that is progress in itself. and obviously tomorrow there is a new election so hopefully we can get back on track and get some more muslim politicaleum political experience and brick some more jobs. healthcare. >> thank you so much. remarkable story. up next, millions have seen him in his orange jacket sitting behind home plate in the baseball playoff. he's the marlins man and he has a fascinating story you will hear about next. you are watching "cbs this
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as we mentioned the world series match up was set last night when the royals advanced passed the blue jays. one baseball fan was there last night and will be there tuesday as the world series opens. he's the guy in the right orange shirt you always see right behind home plate. >> who is he? and why does he always have the best seats? >> he's known as the marlins man, always wearing the jersey of his hometown baseball team, no matter where he goes. including the 150 baseball games he's been to this year. it might seem like a lot of fun but it is also serious for him. he's trying to build his own personal team of believers before his time runs out. >> thank you for waiting patiently. i appreciate it. >> lawrence levy should be a fish out of water wearing his bright orange florida marlins jersey as he wades through a current of blue royals fans
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friday night in kansas city. but time after time he effortly ly effortlessly reels in a school of new followers. >> you are going to go as my guest. >> marlins man is well known to sports fans. more than 15,000 followers on instagram and more than 43,000 on twitter but in an interview this week on lake view baseball club overlooking chicago's wrigley field he told us he doesn't wan to be known as the guy who always snags the best seats or for his ubiquitous presence on tv. >> do you want people to know your name. >> no. it doesn't matter to me. i want them to know about the marlins man movement. >> and it's catching on. watching around the ballpark levy stops for everyone. prefers selfies to the
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traditional posed photos. and has a tendency to direct the production using other people's phones. >> here we go. watch. i got to reverse it becauseky get four people at once. his passion and generosity seem to come from a bottomless well. we saw him give this guy a hundred dollar bill just to fix his phone. don't tell anybody. give me a hug. >> like his modesty is more measured. >> it will never go to my head. >> every time we try to interview him we get stopped for a selfie or someone wants to say thank you or shake his hand. >> seems like you get a kick out of in as well. >> i love this. i love this. it is doing -- it makes me alive again. >> makes you alive again? >> absolutely. for a guy who thought he had six months to live. to do this is like a drug. >> you feel alive? >> you kidding, i'm trying not
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i don't want to look like this. >> can i get a picture real quick? absolutely. >> in march he was told he had only six months to live. the doctor turned out to be wrong but for him the diagnosis was unmistakable. >> i got my life back. i'm changing it so he started working less at the law firm he founded and catching more games. >> this is your office? >> yes. >> is this your therapy as well. >> yes. >> one day he took a stranger another. >> you take their worries away. >> yes but they have to come by themselves. because in the beginning they would go in pairs and they would all talk to each other. and i want them to go by themselves. so they make more friends. >> he took 25 and then 50 to a yankees game. then 104. he pays for everything. >> i thought he was the most
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>> levy did skip one game so he could donate the $10,000 he would have spent to the families of two firefighters who died this month saving people from a burning apartment building. >> how much is this costing you? >> time or money? >> money. >> i don't have idea. >> >>. i won't run out of money. >> why not. >> i have made sure i stashed enough money and i have enough buildings i own that if i decided to sell them tomorrow i could make five million dollar profits. >> you would rather sell the buildings you have invested in than let these people down? >> there are those less enamored. but. >> are you the guy behind home plate?
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>> yes. >> that's me. go cubbies. >> and just like that the heckling is water of his back. >> i just wanted to tell him are just a non believer. and i know if you ever read about me he'd probably be one of my biggest followers. >> only people he's not yet hooked using kindness as his bait. >> do me a favor. tomorrow both of you guys do something nice for a stranger. that's pay it forward. i'm trying to say there is a lot of good americans who sacrifice every day who go to work, who sacrifice to pay for their families who might not have their experience and i'm sharing with them. and all i want back in return, all awant back is you do it for someone else. i did it for marlins man you say. make me happy. >> levy is on the road every day next week including at the world series and in the pace truck of the new york marathon.
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he plans to be at the consist chiefs game tomorrow. >> aside from the money it is kind of an exhausting travel schedule. how does he make it to every game. >> helps when you are single and have no kids and you are rich. >> helps in a lot of things i'd imagine. >> i love what he's doing. i'm the same age and you get a scare like that it makes you look at everything differently. it is so great what he's doing. >> he reordered everything he's doing and the point is you don't have to be rich to make a difference. >> mark albert. thank you so much. up next, the dish. mike price grew up on the shores of the bay fishing for crabs and oysters and clams and he'll tell us all about pretty his newest restaurant aptly named "the
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morning saturday". i went to london and worked with a writer and artist and i really wanted to talk about something that was relevant. artists of the past -- bob dylan dylan, marvin gay, so many used this platform to echo the reality of what was going on in the world. the best dramatizations of life happens in music or in art. so why not use it as this platform. and again the technology came up later on when i came up with the idea that in order to fix the problem we have to face the
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so the technology provides that. when you look into the eyes of the victims you hear the song and you begin to make a connection. you know? and that empathy, that compassion i hope is what is fuelling america to really address this issue. >> and if you turn away the video stops and you are saying you have got to look at this video to capture it all. >> to fix it you have to face it. you can view it on your phones. i was trying to come one a demo to show you again. but also on your computer. it is an eye-tracking technology that, you know, provides you a connection with the victims. >> and don't look away from it. don't look away from this problem.
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>> rig his love of food and cooking began on the farm he grew up. his family tended cows, pigs and chickens and also grew their own food. but an the shores of the chesapeake bay his love for seafood took root. his first cooking experiment was making rice, plain boiled rice at five years old. then she slowly started adding sawuteed onions and garlic. and by the age of 18 cheffing at the holiday inn. >> he's come a long way. two restaurants the market table, and the clam which opens just last year. what did you bring for us.
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cranberry cocktail. made with vodka. can substitute tequila. clam dip. and a lovely fall salad with peccarino cheese. and the toasted pumpkin seeds. and the spaghetti and clams with the salad on top. and a roasted calamari with toasted pine nuts on top. >> just delicious. >> i feel like most people ignore clams. is that just my imagination. it seems like everyone else wants do a restaurant with the higher end seafood. >> oyster and lobster and crab and shrimp get a lot of attention. and that's part of the idea of opening the restaurant. clam never got its day. so we went for that single ingredient restaurant with a
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been really successful so far. >> we mentioned the fact you were making rice at age five. this love of cooking was just always there? >> yep. my grandmother was a dietitian. my grandfather was a butcher. on the other side of my family my grandmother owned large farms. so we always had corn and tobacco and soybeans and just grew los of stuff at home it's been in my blood a long time. >> your mom tried to make a frozen dinner once i gather. >> once is about the extenantt of it. i think it was upheaval at the house for sure. >> just one time. let the woman have that. >> yeah, you know. >> no, it obviously influenced you but you do look at your career and think there was one moment that you thought i want to do this full full-time. >> i worked you should a chef in college who had gone to culinary
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and he was the one that kind of pointed me in the direction that i needed to go to cooking school to take this to the next level. so i went. >> you started in a restaurant. >> dish washing was the first step in cook and then you start to prep and make salads and eventually you work your way up. >> a lot of people have said you are in this niche between fast casual and high end dining. do you feel that is where the industry is heading? are more and more chefs starting to come to this place? >> i feel like it. i'm excited about that spot. it fits us well as the company. you are not pretentious. anybody feels like they can walk in. you make reservations but you are a neighborhood restaurant. when it is raining and snowing that is who is coming. so you need to make it accessible. >> it is about the hospitality part of it, right? >> you know, i always say this. you can look at people two ways
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they are lucky to be there or you are lucky to have them. as long as you look at them like you are lucky to have them it really makes a difference and translates to the food, the service the atmosphere. >> i really want to slurp this up but i want to hand over this dish. and as we hand it to you and get your signature, if you could have this meal with any person past or present, wholgd who would that person be is this. >> for cooking personalities i'd have to go with jacques peppen. i would love to sit down with him and just -- >> he's coming on the show this a few weeks. and for more orn mark price and the dish head to today cloudy through mid morning, then gradual clearing, with a high near 62. breezy, with a northwest wind 16 to 18 mph, with gusts as high as 26 mph. tonight clear, with a low around 39. northwest wind 5 to 9 mph becoming calm after midnight. sunday sunny, with a high near 63. light and variable wind becoming south southeast 5
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up next our saturday session with australian courtney barnett. a rock and roll heart with a poet's wit. we'll talk about her meteoric rise and she'll perform coming up. you are watching "cbs this morning saturday." if you can't see me i can't see you i can't see you what if there was another way to look at relapsing multiple sclerosis? this is tecfidera. tecfidera is not an injection. it's a pill for relapsing ms that has the power to cut relapses in half. imagine what you could do with fewer relapses. tecfidera may cause serious side effects, such as allergic reactions, pml, which is a rare brain infection
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rolling stoins, spin, pitch fork and pace all have they are debut album and they are top albums of the year. >> opening for the band blur and she'll perform for you in a moment. first we talk with her about what sparked her striking rise. >> >> it is the words that strike you first in courtney barnett's music. the wry lyrics that spill out of her songs. >> more people die on the road than they do in the ocean
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>> rolling stone magazine's called her one of the sharpest most original song writers around. a talent we'll be following for decades. and more and more fans are following her. >> i definitely have that moment of realizing i was on the other side of the world and these strangers coming to my shows that weren't my friends and my parents. >> the 27-year-old singer grew up near sidney, australia, a shy kid who seemed to express herself best on paper. >> you started writing when you were ten? >> oh roughly. i started playing guitar when i was ten and then i wrote a lot through school. wrote poetry and stories and read lots and started writing kind of when i learned enough chords to write my own songs. >> you started singing when you are 19. >> yeah.
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years ago with "avanity garner." a view story. it is about an anxiety attack while working in the garden that landed her in the hospital. >> is it something that effects you as the performer? >> well yeah it's totally part of me and my life. >> do you have stage fright more anything like that. >> yeah. >> you do? >> yeah i don't know whou to kind of deal with it you just get on with it. >> you just a go. >> and the energy is important too. there. >> and it matters. >> -- in the moment and all that energy kind of, you know, as it eases away from feeling like you are going to throw up, turned into a -- turns into something else. you know? >> there must be some reward at the end of it or you wouldn't do it. to go through that. >> yeah. yeah, well i guess when that
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feeling turns on stage and it kind of -- and it takes you to the right spot then that is kind of the payoff i guess. >> but barnett says she nound her voice while writing her first record. >> when i wrote in my books it is in that kind of tone, i guess. >> uh-huh. >> it is kind of like diary. >> was there a moment when you said this is it. this sounds like me. >> a little of the time i don't realize things like that until i step back and have time to reflect on it. at the time it is -- you know, it just feels like a scary new thing. and is it the right thing? and. >> but you must have heard something you liked. >> yeah well it sounded like me. you know, it sounded -- it sounded real. and it sounded natural. so i went with it. >> now here with a perfect song for a saturday. the chorus of which is "i want to go out but i want to stay home "this is courtney barnett
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with "nobody really cares if you don't go to the party." you always get what crow want and you don't even try you poe toefriends hate it when it always going your way but i'm glad that you've got luck on your side you're saying definitely maybe i'm saying probably no smz smz you say you sleep when you're dead i'm scared i'll die in my sleep i guess that's not a bad way to go i wanna go out by i wanna stay
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why are you so eager to please i wear my heart on my sleeve gets harder in the winter gotta be a fake or shiver me yes i like hearing your story s by i've heard them all before i'd rather stay in bed with the rain over my head than have to pick my brain up off the floor i wanna go out but i wanna stay home
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stay home i wanna go out but i wanna stay home i wanna go out but i wanna stay home i wanna go out but i wanna stay home i wanna go out but i wanna stay home [ applause ] courtney barnett. we'll be right back with more music from courtney. you are watching "cbs this morning saturday."as serious. fortunately, my doctor had a game plan. treatment with xarelto . hey guys! hey, finally, somebody i can look up to... ...besides arnie. xarelto is proven to treat
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and i guess the neighbors must think we run a meth lab we should amend that i pull the sheets back it's 40 degrees and i feel like i'm dying life's getting hard in here so i do some gardening anything to take my mind away from where it's supposed to be the nice lady next door talks in green beds and all the nice things she wants to plant in them i wanna grow tomatoes on the front steps sunflowers, bean sprout, sweet corn and radishes i feel proactive. i pull out weeds all of a sudden i'm having trouble breathing in i'm having trouble breathing many i'm having trouble breathing in i'm having trouble breathing
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and we're back with our chef mike price. and we're enjoying the homemade potato chips. >> ginger cocktail. orange juice, and seeped with the cranberries and the ginger. >> how do you do it? >> the important thing is to slice the potatoes the right thickness. about the 16th of an inch. important to wash them in warm water before you fry them and pat them dry. the warm water takes off the starch so they don't stick clump. about 325 and turn them and warm. >> try not to eat all at once. >> really nice. light and really great. >> we talked so much about clams and we didn't even have a chance restaurant which is so call. >> we think it is beautiful. the whole ceiling is the lined
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in the mother of pearl so it almost feels like you are in that clam shell. >> who came one that. >> my partner. and the architect brought up the mother of pearl tiles. >> we so sourcing it wasn't that hard. >> we have that great architect. and she gives us a lot. >> thank you all for being out there. and see you next saturday. have a wonderful weekend bye-bye. >> for more about cbs this
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