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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  October 15, 2016 6:00am-8:00am PDT

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? welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm anthony mason. >> i'm margaret brennan. coming up this half hour, you may think it's all satellites, but hundreds of cyber optic cable are under ocean and that enables much of our on communication. we will take you aboard the ship pushing the information to the superhighway into the future. >> drawn to history. tomorrow night, "the simpsons" will do what only one other show has done before -- hit 600 episod episodes! we will take a look at that coming up. the bear's den wanted to create an album to drive to.
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top ten record in the united kingdom and a sold-out tour here in the u.s. hear them perform ahead of in your "saturday session." first, top story this hour. two more women claim donald trump made unwanted sexual advances years ago, leading the republican presidential nominee to fire back at these latest accusers. >> at least eight women now accuse trump of sexual assault, including the two who stepped forward on friday. one says she was assaulted at a the other is a former contestant on "the apprentice." >> i pushed his chest and put space between us and i said, come on, man, get real. he repeated my words back to me. get real, as he begegan thrusti his genitals. >> trust accusations and calling the women liars and sick women and on friday, he
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yearars ago and sittiting with on an airplane. she would not be my first choicece, that,, i c can telell >> trump running that trump is being falsely accused but so far it has not shared any evidence. hillary clinton's campaign is the target of yet another document released by wikileaks. the anti-secrecy group clinton's would be appear-to-close to wall street bankers. another one fromever granholm suggest that hillary clinton change her image she is out of touch or in a bubble by selecting eight occupations she is willing to spend one day working at. for example, the e-mail said perhaps buses tables at denny's
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mcdonald's. >> we are joins by "the washington post" columnist catherine rampell. good morning. >> good morning. >> reporter: hillary clinton didn't take that campaign advice from jennifer granholm busting tables at dennys but is that something she can change voters minds about at this point? >> her trust worthiness or perceived trust worthiness seems to be the main obstacle standing between her and the oval office whether she is overcome the negative perceptions about her is a different question. you can imagine, for example, if she had taken this advice and gone to denny's or to mcdonald and worked there for a day that that would have been seen as just as artificial and gimmicky and nearly reinforced this perception voters have of her. it's hard to figure out exactly how to overcome that problem. >> on the other side, donald
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against him right out lies, the sexual allegations. mike pence sat at this table yesterday morning and said more information would be coming out in mr. trump's defense. did we see anything about that yet? >> the campaign did bring forward a supposed witness who claims he was on the airplane where the woman said she had been groped 20, 30, longer than that years ago. this particular witness is not the most useful or credible witness. he has previously been in the news for underaged boys for pedestriophi politicians. >> he made up a story -- >> he made up a story to a fictional fiancee so maybe reasons not to elevate him to the most comfortable person who is defending your character. but perhaps they don't have anything else to go on at this point. >> wow. on wednesday, you've got this last debate. it's going to be, it would seem, pretty contentious with hillary
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yes. >> it's hard to believe it could get even more so. in the wake of all of these suits, how do you walk into that room and move forward for hillary clinton, or is it just -- >> for hillary clinton or for -- >> for hillary clinton. does she just sit back and let donald trump try to explain this away? >> that seems to be working so far in that donald trump has in addressing these various allegations doubled down on the same sorts of rhetoric saying i never would have assaulted that woman because she is too ugly. he didn't use those exact words but the implication of the sound bite you were referring to. that doesn't seem likely to win owner female voters or other voters for that matter. hillary clinton, for all i know, could just be saying, let him keep talking, give him enough rope to hang himself with. >> his weakness is particularly among female voters but he doesn't seem to be appealing,
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point, or am i wrong? >> you know, i don't know what he would say he is doing. as an outsider observing his rhetoric this campaign it seems he is not making much in the way of overtures to expanding his base. he is drubloubling down oo onn people who love him and support him and he laying the groundwork not to capture a larger share of the electo b when he loses that the election was rigged and was stolen from him. >> catherine rampell of "the washington post" thank you. a powerful pacific storm system. remnants of a typhoon knocked down tree lines and power lines on friday and brought heavy rain and dangerous winds to portions of washington state and oregon. rob munoz of kiro-tv is
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have seen the first of two storms come through the seattle area and cleanedup this morning with downed trees and crews won't have long until the powerful and third system comes through. overnight a storm with winds packing up to 50 miles an hour knocked down power to more than 50,000 people. a tornado spurned off the oregon coast uprooting trees and causing damage to homes. here in seattle a tree collapsed injuring a father and putting his 4-year-old son in the intensive care at a local hospital. this afternoon, we arexp storm, the remnants of typhoon to hit here in the seattle area. if the storm reaches projections, it will have winds 70 miles an hour and be the most powerful storm to come through seattle since the columbia day storm of 1962 and that storm killed 46 people. >> rob munoz, thank you, of kiro-tv. a massachusetts woman is recovering from hypothermia, but is lucky to be live after
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boston. witnesses pulled her to safety, but it took some effort. >> you got to come out! come out! [ screaming ] >> wow! quick action there. the woman did escape through the back window just in the nick of time. the suv then completely submerged. officials say the woman crashed through a fence after mistaking the gas pedal for a brake. now here is a look at the weather for your weekend. up next, a century and a half after the first transatlantic cable. a new one is being placed at the
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ship responsible for laying 900 miles of cable and tell you how it will affect you. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." ? i ain't got wings
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? ? ain't no enouenough if you've ever phoned or e-mailed someone on another continent or browsed a foreign website you can dial up some gratitude for something that happened a century and a half ago. >> it's 150 years since the first transatlantic cable began ushering in coble communications. now tech giants are taking that undersea revolution a big step further. here is mark albert. >> reporter: when you pick up the phone to reach out and touch
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like the global sentinel. >> this cable tank number one. >> reporter: what am i standing on right now? >> you're standing on fiberoptic cable that is going to be laid from here toward brazil. >> reporter: this is how worldwide communication begins. jeff sanders is a captain at te connectivity sub con, which calls themselves the largest provider of underwater he gave us a rare view. 900 miles of cable spooled tightlily hand and one of three side-by-side tanks aboard a ship anchored in new hampshire. the cable we are walking on right now will be under the ocean carrying my phone call? >> yes, it will. a good chance any call you make to south america in the future could be on this exact table for the next 20, 25 years. cable comes right off into the ocean from here. >> reporter: robots take over from there.
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create a trench allowing cable to sink into the sea bed and become buried. >> 95% of transferred over cable, not satellite. >> reporter: we can rely on phone calls and banking and web surfing and other communications and e-mail and it began 150 years ago. >> we have here samples of the early cables from the >> reporter: this is what the first permanent cable looked like under the atlantic? >> absolutely. >> reporter: barney of the smithsonian's exhibit of national history helped stream together an exhibit of the first permanent transatlantic cable and the man who assembled the financial, political, and technical prowess to make it happen, entrepreneur cyrus field. some of the items have not been on display in more than a century.
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going across the atlantic. >> reporter: laid in rough seas, the first few copper cables broke or burnt out. when it finally worked after a decade of failure, field wrote to his wife on july 27th, 1866, all well, thank god. great britain's queen victoria congrat congratulated andrew johnson. if i wanted to send a message to a relatively england, it would take ten days to get there and ten days to get back and with this cable now, it's minutes? >> that's right. >> it sounds like this was the original information age? >> that's right. >> reporter: for the next 90 year, the cable handled messages by morse code before telephone cables arrived. today a maze of fiberoptic cables crisscross the ocean and the u.s. >>. what is the main challenge? >> capacity.
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he says the explosion of data use around the world is leading to innovative partnerships like facebook and microsoft, which have teamed up to build a blazing fast 160 tara bixpay te from here to spain. >> we live in a world of instant gratification. you're standing in the grocery store and you want to see what is in your refrigerator to finish your shopping you can your refrigerator. think about driverless cars. think about the amount of data that is required. >> reporter: it sounds like what you're saying these companies building these new transatlantic cables, they are not on offense, they are on defense. >> for sure. >> we can transmit the library of congress across the atlantic ocean in two seconds. >> reporter: te plant in new
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create the cables for those like google and facebook and microsoft explains the vice president john dufor. look how thin these fibers are. this is like a hair. >> the size of a strand of human hair but about a thousand times stronger. >> reporter: demand is just as strong. the cable highways runs to the sentinel ship 24 hours a day until fully loaded and once in the dark ds will be a highway of fiberoptic light. >> it's connecting the world and connecting families and it's a mission we enjoy doing. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning: saturday," mark albert, in new hampshire. >> that is amazing. mark sent us these thin, thin little thread. >> yeah. >> all information? >> it's housed in a thicker thing but the actual cable, itself, you can barely see it. this is what the library of
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>> that is astounding. >> extraordinary. wow. up next, we are going to look the other part of the information age. the television phenomenon. 600th episode of "the simpsons" airs this weekend and put them up there with the longest running shows in tv history. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> announcer: this portion sponsored by breathe right. yeah, so mom's got this cold. hashtag "stuffy nose." hashtag "no sleep." i got it. hashtag "mouthbreather." yep. we've got a mouthbreather. well, just put on a breathe right strip and ... pow! it instantly opens your nose up to 38% more than cold medicine alone. so you can breathe ... and sleep. shut your mouth and say goodnight mouthbreathers.
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that's what i'm here to tell you about tonight. a western. a new television show cal "gunsmoke." no, i'm not in it. i wish i were, though. because i think it's the best thing of its kind that has come along. >> john wayne introducing the first-ever episode of "gunsmoke" right here on cbs back in 1955. that classic western series rode off into the sunset after 20 seasons and more than 600 episode. >> the record still stands. no other scripted show in u.s. television history has made it
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tomorrow night. dana jacobson is here with more on this tv milestone. >> reporter: good morning. "the simpsons" has been a fixture on sunday nightly since 1989 and tomorrow night viewers make the familiar trip to springfield for the 600th time. for 28 seasons, millions have followed on the animated exploits of that mustard skin family creator named the dysfunctional clan after members of his own family, including his mother marge and father named homer. the family is surrounded by a vibrant array of more than 150 recurring character. >> oh, my god! that one has taken a bite out of the big rice krispies square! >> reporter: including a police
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p.m. i-going to shrink you like a christmas card. ! now get out! >> reporter: sinister billionaire who happens to be homer's boss. "the simpsons" made their television debut of animated shorts that aired during the tracy ullman show back in 1987. the cartoons were so popular by that 1989 fox made the decision to part and put animated sitcom into prime time. the show became an instant hit. executive producer al gene has been with the simpsons since their debut. >> we taulcalled it a dysfuncti family. who has a functional family? it doesn't exist. >> reporter: the show generated controversies in the early days.
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profanity. >> reporter: and drawing the ire of president george h.w. bush. >> to make the families less like wolves and a lot like "the simpsons." >> the show responded. >> we are like the walton's and playing for an end for the depression too. >> reporter: early reviews described the show as wicked, skewed, weird, and wonderful. >> it was just, you know, a show that kids would like because of the form, but then adults would since then, everybody, the writers an animators, everybody has just worked so hard at preserving the quality of the show, i think that is one reason we are still around. >> you little! >> reporter: with a knack for incisive pop culture references. >> wow! paul mccartney! >> reporter: celebrity guest appearances. >> if you play, maybe i'll be amazed and in fact, you'll hear
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soup. >> reporter: wasn't long before they went from phenomenon to part of the culture fabric. >> "the simpsons" hasn't had an impact culture as it is culture. 600 episode and movies, books, toys, video games, clothing. every aspect of popular culture has been contained within "the simpsons." and they have commented on every >> reporter: one other thing "the simpsons "i made famous, pink frosted doughnuts! >> you shouldn't have! >> the producer is looking to keep things fresh. they have done shows in the real world. one homer was voiced live and a lego episode and tomorrow night they will continue to break new ground. part of episode number 600 will
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technology. >> scholarly papers have been written by celebrities! >> research. bart simpsons paper. i got an a. i won best answering machine for bart. here we go. hey, dude, this is bart simpson. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> that's pretty good! [ laughter ] >> bart would be proud! >> up next, "the dish." michael kornick, we will meet him genetic a taste of just why he is so successful. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> dude! don't fill up on the doughnuts! >> no!
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>> you talk about your fifth grade teacher who said bryan goofs around in class. he tends to be disruptive. >> thank you. >> he needs to apply himself. >> are you going to stop pretty soon? >> and another thing, a crazy girlfriends, too. >> ava. >> and they called him sneaky pete. >> r! nice to talk to you too. >> were you a bad boy? >> i was not a bad boy as i was -- >> she likes bad boys. >> yeah. >> were you a bad boy? oh, really? >> the breathing was getting heavier! >> that's a good line, charlie. >> i was a confused boy. i think i have adhd. it was never diagnosed back in the day.
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himself. he is day dreaming. he's not -- you think, there is something wrong with me! i think so. i still don't know to this day. >> actually, bryan, the soap opera "loving" i actually watched it. i didn't know that was you at the time. >> you see that dashing associate professor, the drama. >> and that was you, you said you called "loving" your proudest professional accomplishment to date. not necessarily your soap opera role, but what it taught you. >> felt like i had arrived. like i belonged. like i could do something and do it well. and that gave me an open door. >> look at that. >> look at that! i was wearing a dress at the time. my hair was longer. i don't know who that guy is. >> but you could do it and do it well? >> yeah. and to this day, it's my biggest professional accomplishment that i felt i belonged and i could
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? ? come on let me cook for you baby ? chef michael kornick is one of the most popular and honored he declared he wanted to become a chef at an early age. by 16 he had his own catering company and after apprentice school he was at the "quilted giraffe" here in new york. >> mk, the restaurant, dmk burger bar and fish cabar.
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zagat and conde nast. welcome to "the dish." >> thank you. >> tell us what we have here. >> ribs in all spice and red wine and butter nut squash with apples and mint and >> it is pretty. >> i did some catering for people. i went into the chocolate truffle business. my mother sold residential real estate so she had a big rolodex so i found a way to contact a bunch. people and sell holiday chocolate truffle. >> why did you want to go in that business? >> i could make them well and i wanted to make money for the holidays. i thought i could make $400 or
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of $5,000. >> wow. >> my mother helped me a lot. we turned our whole kitchen into a truffle factory! the vessels we had to melt chocolate at night and after school, put -- roll it in balls and roll it in cocoa and box them. >> i was reading about you. i love the story you sort of learned how to taste really good food from the doggie bags that were parents would bring home because they were big foodies? >> they were interested in restaurants. this is 1970, '72, they respected chefs and they went to restaurant and part of their social experience so they would bring home doggie dogs. >> what started you in the restaurant business in chicago? >> i found that i wanted to have sort of a mix between art and business and i thought cooking did that. i started cooking at a really early age.
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when i went to cooking school, i really, for the first time really worked with professionals. chefs who really took their industry and their profession seriously. then hi a chance to move to new york in 1983 and work with barry wine. >> when you started in 1988, not a lot of chefs who were owning their own restaurants. >> i had left the hotel industry in 1993 and left there to be in re that worked out really well until the paerp didrtnership di work out so well. i think chefs are likely to end up in situations they can't control their own future and not a lot of equity built up in that as a job. my wife and i wanted that security. we also thought we wanted to do something that was our vision of the way dining felt and mk is the kind of place where the guests come first. it's given us a place where we
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dining that we enjoy doing. >> was it hard to step out of the kitchen? >> i didn't step out right away. i stepped out because i wanted to be present with my kids. and so after five years i promoted one of my chefs to chefs and start doing other things and started opening up restaurants in las vegas and working there and then in we opened up another place. last week, i did an event i'm cooking and go home and i have an event next tuesday night where i'll be cooking and i miss the kitchen but it was a decision really that was more about my family and being able to coach little league. >> can you do that all now. it seems like these days when you walk into a restaurant, the cocktail menu is getting more and more exotic. what are we drinking?
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the '20s and i love compary and i thought it was refreshing when you mix it with bourbon and gin. i like to do it with rye. t this is bullet rye and sweet -- >> we like it. >> we have enjoyed dining to you. if you were to eat a meal, who present? >> i miss elaine chappell. he was a three-star chef who, at the time, i had the greatest meal of my life. more than that, he was such a great mentor in the day that i spent there and i didn't get to cook in the kitchen. i just got to walk with him and his story about what it meant to have a profession that you could be passionate about your whole life. >> you don't forget something like that.
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you so much. for more, head to our website at "cbs this morning".com. now here is a look at the weekend weather. up next, our "saturday british rockers whose new album is getting rave reviews after a sold-out u.s. tour. they are making their network debut right here. you don't want to miss it. this is "cbs this morning:
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impressive linda. it seems age isn't slowing you down. but your immune system weakens as you get older increasing the risk for me, the shingles virus. i've been lurking inside you since you had chickenpox.
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will it be you? and that's why linda got me zostavax, a single shot vaccine. i'm working to boost linda's immune system to help protect her against you, shingles. zostavax is a vaccine used to prevent shingles in adults fifty years of age and older. zostavax does not protect everyone and cannot be used to treat shingles or the nerve pain that may follow it. you should not get zostavax if you are allergic to gelatin or neomycin, have a weakened immune system or take high doses of steroids nant. the most common side effects include redness, pain, itching, swelling, hard lump warmth or bruising at the injection site and headache. it's important to talk to your doctor about what situations you may need to avoid since zostavax contains a weakened chickenpox virus. remember one in three people get shingles in their lifetime, will it be you? talk you to your doctor or pharmacist about me, single shot zostavax. you've got a shot against shingles.
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to protect it. at legalzoom, our network of attorneys can help you every step of the way. with an estate plan including wills or a living trust that grows along with you and your family. legalzoom. legal help is here. ugh. heartburn. sorry ma'am. no burning here. try new alka-seltzer heartburn relief gummies. they don't taste chalky and work fast. mmmm. incredible. can i try? she doesn't have heartburn. new alka-seltzer heartburn relief gummies. enjoy the relief. now that karen's taking osteo bi-flex, real difference in her joint comfort... "she's single." ...and high levels of humiliation in her daughter. in just 7 days, your joint comfort can be your kid's discomfort. osteo bi-flex. made to move. where are starring in this morning's "saturday session"
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they began performing in the west london music scene in 2012, scored big in the united kingdom with their debut album "island." and brought in four more players for a just completed u.s. tour. >> their new album red earth and pouring rain is getting rave reviews. here with the title track and making their network television debut, bear's den. ? ? can't you hear it in the silence ? ? can't you hear me calling out your name ? ? i've got something burning coursing through
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? in the words we speak babe ? ? somehow i get lost in between ? ? whether to suffer in silence ? ? or to break it all with each breath that we breathe ? i don't wanna break it off or break it all ? ? but i can't let it be i don't wanna be the one to call it out, love ? ? but it's all i can see ? remember what we found love no one can ever take that away ? ? remember what we found ? ? in the red earth and the pouring rain ? ?
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don you remember love don't you remember love i was waiting for a call ? ? a call never came so i made my own way ? ? and i can't find my way back home again stranded in the darkness ? ? begging please don't pin all of your dreams on me ? ? baby, you can count on me ? ? you can count on me to mess up everything ? ? i've been running forever love forever love ? ? i'v been running away i forget what i'm running from but it still scares me today ? ? what i found in you love no one can ever take that away something forever ? ? in the red earth and the pouring rain
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don't you remember love don't you remember love ? ? don't you remember anything ? ? it's just you and i love ? ? it's just you and i love ? don't you remember love don't you remember love don't you remember anything it's just you and i love it's just you and i love ? don't you remember love don't you remember love n' just you and i love it's just you and i love ? don't you remember love don't you remember love ? ? don't you remember anything ? ? it's just you and i love ? in the red earth in the pouring rain ?
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? don't you remember love don't you remember love ? ? don't you remember anything ? ? it's just you and i love ? don't you remember love don't you remember love ? ? don't you remember anything ? ? it's just you and i love ? ? it's just you and i love ? don't you remember love don't you remember love ? ? don't you remember anything ? ? it's just you and i love ? ? it's just you and i love ? don't you remember love don't you remember love ?
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? it's just you and i love ? ? in the red earth in the pouring rain ? >> don't go away. we will be right back with more music from bear's den. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> announcer: "saturday sessions" are sponsored by blue buffalo. you love your pets like family so feed them like family with blue. ?
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you inherit lots of traits from your family. my ancestor, lady eleanor, made it big in textiles. my great-grandfather bernard wrote existential poetry. and uncle john was an explorer. i inherited their can-do spirit. 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... 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, including if you: have had or plan to have surgery or cosmetic treatments on your face, neck or chin; 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.
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? ? ? only you ever make things right only you ever going to make things right ? have a great weekend, everyone. >> thanks for watching.
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this is "dew on the vine." ? ? born to break or to last ? ? is it all in the past? is that a scar or a birthmark? ? ? retracing this cold heart ? ? and now i'm all out of thread ? ? and i don't wanna die here ? chasing echoes in my mind ? ? babe, it's a fine line ? ? and i'm so far over it ?
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beneath it all it's still broken ? ? cut me out, cut it open ? ? i can't do it anymore ? ? i can't do it ? ? i don't pay any mind ? to the dew upon the vine ? ? does that mean that it's not there if i can't see it all? though the mor fog the night creates ? ? there'll still be a trace of our love left behind ? ? in the dew upon the vine
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? your only words are all lies ? ? confiding in your own mind ? ? caught in the cold light ? ? i thought you were better man ? i thought you were better man ? one slipped step on the tightrope faked out by a false hope ? that things will be all right ? ? no they're not all right ? i never paid any mind to the dew upon the vine ? ? does that mean that it's not there if i can't see it all though the morning light ? will burn away all the fog the night creates ? ? there'll still be a trace of our love left behind ? in the dew upon the vine
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? it's like lightning trying to put out a spark i can't tame my heart ? ? you're like lightning trying to put out a spark i never paid any mind to the dew upon the vine ? ? does that mean that it's not there if i can't see it all the morning light will burn away all the fog the night creates ? ? there'll still be a trace of our love left behind ? and the driving rain rain will wash away all the frightened fires i could not tame ?
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in the dew upon the vine ? ? ? ? i don't pay any mind to the dew upon the vine does that mean it's not there if i can see it at all ? ? the morning light burn away all of the fog the night creates there will still be a trace
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in the dew upon the vine ? >> for those of you still bus, we have more music from bear's den. >> here is "emerald." ? >> there are emeralds
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storm raging through my mind a whisper in the shadow ? i fell into the night. ? won't you let me out ? ? won't you let me out ? no, i tried so hard ? ? don't leave me here waiting ? we've come so far ? ? are you there at all are you there at all won't you break my fall don't leave me here waiting no we've come so far ? the sun was shining bright.
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narrator: today on lucky dog... brandon: you gonna come? narrator: ...a chihuahua min/pin mix works to overcome her fear with every step. everything. narrator: but becoming an emotional support dog for a woman with anxiety... jennifer: it makes me feel a little bit scared and out of control. narrator: ...might just be a leap too giant to take. brandon: i'm brandon mcmillan and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are living without hope. brandon: my mission is to make sure these amazing
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dog will be saved and one family will have a new best friend. this is lucky dog. come on omar. narrator: if there's one thing that omar, a ridgeback puppy, doesn't lack it's energy. what's that? oh, good, i finally wore you out. narrator: but only one of them will get to rest. brandon: alright omar, come on, play time is over. come on. the north central shelter just called me and they
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min/pin mix. they say she's very sweet but she is very timid. timid dogs often don't do well in shelters because when people go to a shelter they generally adopt the ones that are planting their faces against the cages and wagging their tails. where the timid dogs, they're hiding back in the shadows. so unfortunately this little girl's days are now down to hours. so i'm gonna go down there and rescue her, see if i narrator: at the shelter patches is indeed on edge. brandon: is that you? you the one i heard about? you're a little scared one aren't you? a little timid? i'll tell you what, let me join you for a few seconds. come here. let me in there, let me in there.
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i'm not gonna hurt you. there, we'll start with that. there, then we'll go to that. yeah, you have a big shell around you don't you? i'll tell you what, how about you and i go for a little drive? you're gonna like where you're going. brandon: it's alright, it's okay. es to banfield pet hospital to ensure she is physically ready to begin training. woman: hey brandon! brandon: how are ya? woman: how are you? is this patches? brandon: this is. batista: hello brandon. brandon: dr. batista, how are you? batista: how's it going? good thank you. brandon: this is patches. batista: alright. brandon: she is a shy one. batista: hi patches. can i take a look at you? i'll take a look at your teeth. oh, take a look at this brandon, she actually has some extra teeth.
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oh yeah. batista: those are called deciduous teeth. they haven't fallen out yet like they should have. you see what's holding in that debris? brandon: yeah, what is that? batista: that looks like fabric, maybe some food in there. it's probably causing her some discomfort. yeah, so that tooth isn't even loose. so we're going to have to put her under anesthesia and do a dental cleaning and then we can remove this tooth. we can remove this material but we need to actually pull her baby teeth and get them out of there. they can cause infection, more inflammation. you see how her gums are red right there at the eah. batista: that's because the germs and the food is getting caught in between those teeth and it's causing some infection in her mouth. it can cause the bone to actually recede away as well. let's see how much of that we can remove right now. okay? so ready patches, open up. good girl. there we go. so it came off. brandon: oh yeah. batista: but you can see it's still stuck in between the teeth there. since she has this infection we should put her on an antibiotic today. brandon: okay.
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move those teeth. narrator: dr. batista gives patches a complete examination. batista: looks good. narrator: checking her eyes, ears, coat, organs and joints. batista: alright, good girl. narrator: other than the issue with her teeth, the young dog is the picture of health. brandon: is she safe to start training today? batista: yes, she can still start training today. so she's ready to go. i'll send you home with some antibiotics for her. brandon: thanks dr. batista. batista: thank you. good to see you again. brandon: see you next time. patches' dental cleaning, der of business is to theranch t giving patches her red training collar. brandon: there, you look beautiful. brandon: everyone gather around. here, come on. nice and slow. go make friends. you're safe here. welcome to the lucky dog ranch. go on. go on, go play.
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narrator: not far away there's someone who can definitely relate. jennifer: my name is jennifer, i live in thousand oaks, california and i'm a medical biller. i've been suffering with anxiety for at least 10 years. my heart races, i get a little anxious, a little over-excited, afraid of crowds, going into enclosed spaces. it makes me feel a little bit scared and out of control. the doctor suggested that i get a dog for anxiety purposes and just to have a companion around for me i am the co-host of a knitting group. we meet once a week and we play cards and we knit and do fun things together. knitting is a passion because it's calming and it's very challenging. you can always learn something new. so i like to take the challenge and keep my mind busy. i feel that having the dog would be important because i am in a good stage in my life. i just lost 35 pounds, i've done a lot of work
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work to do herself. more it turns out than brandon even expected. brandon: come on. right as i got to the top of the steps patches hit the brakes hard. you gonna come? either she's timid of the steps like she's timid of just about everything else, or she's never been down steps. alright. the assessment is gonna have to be on hold. i'm gonna have to do a little training on this dog before i even get down there. brandon: this is gonna be very easy. so i put a treat on the end of a lure stick and i i guide her down the first step. there you go, good, good, good. perfect. was that hard? once she gets down that first step i reward her with a treat. oh, look at that. and i lure her down the next step. and the next step turns into the next step. and before you know it... good, perfect. ...she's running up and down these steps as if she was doing it her whole life. oh, there you go, perfect. all the way, all the way, all the way up. there you go, there you go, good, good. oh my gosh, look at you.
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narrator: coming up, patches' uphill climb is about to get even steeper. brandon: it's okay, it's okay. she's basically scared of the ground she walks on. it's okay, it's okay, come here. men. 80% try to eat healthy, yet up to 90% fall short in getting key nutrients from food alone. let's do more. add one a day men's gummies. complete with key nutrients elp convert food into fuel. one a day. when coughing keeps your family awake. breathe easier with vicks vaporub.
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does your makeup remover take it all off? every kiss-proof, cry-proof, stay-proof look? neutrogena? makeup remover does. it erases 99% of your most stubborn makeup need any more proof than that? neutrogena. megan and louie have impeccable taste; in shoes and shoe boxes. so they choose new meow mix bistro recipes, made with real chicken to make mealtime taste like a reservation for two. no wonder it's the only one cats ask for by name. this is lulu, our newest dog. mom didn't want another dog. she said it's too much work. lulu's hair just floats. uhh help me!
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swiffer sweeper, and dusters. this is what i'm talking about. look at that. sticks to this better than it sticks to lulu. that's your hair lulu! mom, can we have another dog? (laughing) trap and lock up to 4x more dirt, dust and hair than the store and stop cleaning. start swiffering. the right things working together can give you an advantage. like trubiotics with immune support advantage. its unique formula supports immune health in two ways. with probiotics that work in your gut. ants that work throughout your body.
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narrator: first it was baby teeth that delayed patches' assessment. then it was baby steps. this sweet but timid 1 year-old chihuahua min/pin mix has some time to make up. brandon: today i'll be doing patches' assessment which are sit, stay, down, come, off, heel and no. the first thing i noticed about patches when i brought her in the training yard is this dog is very timid of just about everything. [loud bird noises] brandon: it's okay, it's okay, it's okay. it's okay, come here. she's basically scared of the ground she walks on. it's okay. the silver lining through all of this is her age. patches is only about a year old so there's still
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no, no... the first thing i asked patches to do was sit. nope, that's not a sit, alright. i asked her to go down and she had not a clue what i'm talking about. the no she did not know. the heel, well i don't think this dog has ever been on a leash. stay was a joke. and come, she pretty much looked at me and walked away. i think it's safe to say you have no training. narrator: patches has plenty of work ahead of her, but first she has to return to banfield pet while she's there brandon has the opportunity to do an assessment of another kind. jennifer: hi brandon. brandon: hey, how are ya? jennifer: hi, come on in. brandon: today i'll be doing a home visit with jennifer to see if her and patches are a good match for each other. so what kind of activities do you do? jennifer: i do knitting; i made that blanket. brandon: not bad. jennifer: yeah. i like to play tennis, just other fun things. brandon: and would you want a dog to...?
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i've just lost....recently lost 35 pounds so i thought that would help with upkeep for that, so... brandon: dogs will definitely help upkeep exercise, yeah. and i know you've never had a dog before but why now? jennifer: i have anxiety and my doctor said an emotional support dog would actually be good for me. 'cause sometimes i get overly-excited and kind of over-react. brandon: when i heard this it sent a red flag straight up a pole for me. patches still has a lot of issues. the last thing jennifer needs is a dog with issues i do have a dog in mind that i just recently rescued. she sounds like the right dog for you. there's only two problems here; number one, i'm just getting to know her; and number two, she seems to be a little timid herself. and although i'm making some headway there, there's a long way to go before i feel comfortable releasing her to you. with that said, i do have an idea to help move the process along quicker. do you mind if i take this? it's for training. jennifer: no, you can have it. brandon: alright.
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the ranch and keep working on patches and make sure these issues are solved once and for all. narrator: coming up... brandon: watch this. narrator: ...turning an anxious dog into an emotional support animal might just require a
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narrator: 1 year-old patches has just had her teeth cleaned and her baby teeth removed. with a clean bill of health she's ready to get on with her training. but for patches that means starting at the very beginning. brandon: the first thing i'm gonna teach her is the most basic command in all of dog training. can you sit? i can see why someone would've had a hard time teaching patches a sit; mainly because every time
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i'm gonna lock her off on a double leash lock-off and this will prevent her from flipping over on her back. put the feet right there, slip this up, and i gotcha. one more, there. gotcha there, gotcha there. now i say the word ?sit? and hold the treat in a 45-degree angle above her head. that's a sit. good, good, that's a sit. right as she hits the ground i quickly reward her, not giving her an opportunity to flip on her 's a sit, perfect. that's a sit. and i repeat the process. give me a sit. control. there we go, perfect. good...hold it...and good, that's a sit. until eventually i'm saying the word ?sit? and she goes right to the ground. so from there i'm gonna teach her the down command. give me a down. go with it, perfect! that's a down. narrator: and then, the no. brandon: okay, i'm gonna put this right here and say no. no...no... there you go, good, put it in park.
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that's a no. alright, come on. narrator: with patches making great progress in the basic commands brandon decides it's also time to give the puppy a sense, or rather a scent, of her potential new owner. brandon: i grabbed a scarf from jennifer's house that she knitted and i brought it back here to the ranch. watch this, it's very simple. now it's time to introduce patches to her new mom without actually introducing her in the flesh. association. watch, see this? look at that. you get it there. i start throwing treats all around it and of course patches, she grabs the treats. can you get it there? all i'm doing here is getting patches comfortable with the scarf. more importantly, i'm getting her comfortable with the scent of the scarf. since dogs explore the world through their noses, she's actually getting to know her new mom without actually meeting her.
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begins, but also continues for the days to come. what's that? eventually she looks at the scarf as something that she wants to be near. she looks at it as a friend, she looks at it as something positive. narrator: coming up, when basic training can only get patches so far, another 4-legged friend is brought in to provide assistance. announcer: here's a health and wellness tip from banfield pet hospital. certain dog breeds like chihuahuas and miniature sceptible to periodontal disease. this condition occurs when plaque and tartar are allowed to build up on teeth and it can contribute to tooth loss, eating difficulties, behavioral changes and liver, kidney and heart disease. early detection is the key to preventing periodontal disease in your dog. so make sure you schedule regular oral exams with
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mr. clean gets tough on dirt and grime and grease in just a minute mr. clean will clean your whole house and every room that's in it floors, doors, walls, halls he's so tough, he cleans 'em all mr. clean! [ cough ] shh. i have a cold with this annoying runny nose. better take something. dayquil liquid gels doesn't treat a runny nose. it doesn't? alka-seltzer plus cold and cough liquid gels fight your worst cold symptoms cluding your runny nose. oh, what a relief it is! do you know what to do when a child or an adult is choking? make sure that you do. go to: you could save a loved one's life. cbs cares. you could save a loved one's life. narrator: having mastered the commands of sit, down and no... brandon: stay. narrator: ...patches progresses nicely through the stay... brandon: come.
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perfect, see? narrator: ...and off commands. brandon: are you still a jumper? oh my gosh, look at that. good. there you go, good. narrator: while completing her training in the 7 common commands patches has gotten nice and cozy with a scarf knit by her potential new owner. but she remains detrimentally submissive around just about everything else. brandon: come here, come here. so far all my efforts to pull patches out of her timidity, it really hasn't worked in my favor. she's submissive with unknown environments. and she's definitely submissive with new people. but the one thing she's not submissive with is other dogs. in fact, when she's around other dogs she's like a different dog herself. her tail is wagging, her posture is high; it's almost like you see this other personality come out of her. so today i'll be using another dog to my advantage to help patches with her timidity. in this case she trusts another dog that i'm training, terry.
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i'll be doing a technique known as the daisy chain. the daisy chain is a very simple game of follow the leader. terry? to start this technique all i do is hook them both up in harnesses and i connect about a 2-foot leash between the two of them. guess what? now you're daisy-chained. terry, show her what to do. terry was following me and in turn patches is following terry. and around and around we go. there you go, there you go. good, follow her, follow her. learn is that everywhere terry goes patches is going to go with her, no matter what the situation; whether it's fun or whether it's scary. patches is going to learn off terry how to get through situations. so now patches is conditioned to the basic fundamentals of the daisy chain, it's time to take it to the next level. narrator: coming up... brandon: now it's time to take her out in public,
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lucky dog will come on duck! (puppy barks) you can do it duck. hurry up duck! you can do it duck. iams. helps keep your dog healthy at every stage. so you can always look forward to what's next. narrator: tricks, treats and a dog named terry... narrator: ...have helped to bring patches out of her shell. but it's a big world beyond the lucky dog ranch and it's one that she has yet to confront. brandon: for several days now patches has been daisy-chained to terry, following terry's lead everywhere they go. now it's time to take her out in public on her own to see how she can do without the help of terry. narrator: patches must show that she can handle the world on her own before she'll get her
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brandon: here we go, good. so we started walking all around town, anywhere where the unpredictable can and will happen. we walked by busy intersections with cars blowing by us at 40 miles an hour and she was walking right by them confident. we even walked by a city bus that pulled over and let off that big steaming sound and she didn't even flinch one bit. patches proved to me today that she is not the dog that i pulled from the shelter. she's not that shy, timid dog that thinks the world she can walk around with her head held high as if she owns the place. woman: oh, that's a good girl. brandon: at that point there was only one thing left to do. narrator: patches' mastery of obedience and conquering her fears... brandon: let's try it on. narrator: have earned her a green graduation collar. brandon: that's something you really shouldn't be afraid of. oh thank you so much. let's save that for your new family.
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knitting club. and i decided that was the perfect time and place to surprise her. have you all seen my crochet? jennifer: yeah, right. brandon: it's incredible. jennifer: hi. brandon: i have a surprise for you. jennifer: oh...yay. when brandon put patches in my lap i felt very calm. i think there was immediate connection. brandon: what do you think? jennifer: she's awesome, i love her. you're so cute. pulled jennifer aside because i needed to have a little heart-to-heart talk with her. i explained to jennifer what to expect from patches and also the important role that she plays in patches' life. i know that she's gonna help you when you need it, but there's gonna be times in her life where you need to help her when she most needs it. jennifer: okay. brandon: which is the beauty of the relationship between a dog and a human. it's a perfect circle that you guys are forming and it's only gonna get better over time. jennifer: i can't thank brandon enough for training patches. because of my anxiety i couldn't imagine getting a
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ow that i will have constant companionship and that the void will be filled. brandon: think you can take it from here? jennifer: i do. brandon: come here. say one last goodbye. you go to your mom. jennifer: hi. brandon: emotional support dogs have been around for centuries but it hasn't been until recent years that their value has been recognized by humanity. now instead of looking at the world through bars, patches has gotten a second chance at life to deserves. and jennifer will return the same favor to patches for many years to come. from hopeless to a home, that's my mission, one dog
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narrator: on this episode of dr. chris pet vet... woman: what's that cookie? narrator: ...chris gets involved with a very special mission. chris: if you can imagine for a second being someone world. woman: come on buddy. narrator: then, a distressed owner pleads for lisa's help. glenda: my initial thought was he had a stroke. it looked like a human that had had a stroke. narrator: and later, james's obsessive digging has landed him in serious trouble. can chris solve this porker of a problem. anna: i think he can dig a hole faster than i could with a shovel. chris: i've loved animals my entire life.
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i'm dr. chris and these are the stories of my life as a pet vet. (music) neil: you're gonna meet a huge array of people. chris: the heart of it is they just love their animals. neil: oh absolutely. narrator: after a busy day of helping animals at the clinic... chris: this is us here? neil: yeah, yeah. their time to a community clinic called pets in the park. woman: what's that cookie? what's that? neil: i've been doing this for about three or four months now and it's one of the highlights of my month. just to see these peoples' faces, oh it's an amazing feeling when you get home. you're walking home on cloud nine. narrator: dr. mark westman started the free monthly clinic to help those struggling financially to care for their pets. mark: some of our clients will feed their animals before they feed themselves.
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owner's at the same time. neil: this is rodney. chris: hi rodney, how are you. neil; and di. chris: good day di, how you doing? di: hello doctor. narrator: chris's first patient is 6 month-old isabella. owner rodney is worried about his little girl. rodney: oh we heard about the pets in the park and thought it would be a good opportunity to come and just find out if she was pregnant. chris: i certainly know what you mean, she's a little bit rotund. a little bit pear-shaped. so we need to work out why that is. s in there which would more than likely say that she is pregnant. i'd say she's about a month or so. rodney: sounds about right 'cause it's been about 4 weeks since she's been like this. chris: we'll look to vaccinate her and worm her but also i would do a bit of a nail trim as well. rodney: yeah, okay. chris: yeah, you'd probably benefit from that
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see ya. di: bye. narrator: annual vaccinations, flea treatments, routine nail trims and basic medical care for an animal costs hundreds of dollars. woman: good girl, get it! narrator: but today all these services are being performed free. chris: well you get so much out of having a pet don't you? neil: yeah, yeah. man: in a lot of way they become like your children don't they? chris: you know that phrase ?unconditional love?, it gets thrown around a lot. but when you come here today you see its true meaning because here these pets, they don't ask for for these people, these pets may be their only companion. so is she doing a lot of scratching is that the problem? lamie: 24/7. she just scratches and scratches and scratches. narrator: lamie's 12 month-old pooch tiffany is suffering a common problem. chris: i can already see something that might be the culprit here. can you see this little guy running through here? lamie: yeah. she's got hates heaps of them actually. i bathe her every day. chris: do you?
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because a lot of these flea treatments what they do is they...they actually...the treatments sit in the skin oils so if you bathe her every day you actually wash away a lot of those oils, so you almost wash away the treatment. if you're guilty of one thing it's probably caring too much, you know. lamie: she means the world to me. chris: i can tell. lamie: she's just... 'cause i was living up on the streets and i only just got a place last year. and my daughter gave me her for my birthday. i just go ?oh, i gotta have her.? so maybe if we give her a flea treatment and don't bathe her for at least 2 weeks or so and you should notice the fleas should then fall off her and die in that time. lamie: thanks dr. chris. chris: no worries at all. lamie: you have a good weekend. chris: you too, good to see you. neil: we'll see you next time, alright my love. lamie: okay. chris: bye. neil: bye, bye. i came here really with no idea what to expect but what i found is a whole lot of people with a whole lot of pets of all shapes and sizes.
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them. the bond they have is so incredibly deep and so incredibly special. lamie: kiss? you want a kiss? narrator: coming up on dr. chris pet vet... anna: i think he can dig a hole faster than i could with a shovel. narrator: ...this pig loves to dig. chris: this digging is a normal thing for pigs to do. but here in the city, it doesn't work. anna: the last thing i want to do is have to give him up. narrator: and bello has mysteriously collapsed. m save him? lisa: the worst case scenario would be that bello has got a brain tumor. men. 80% try to eat healthy, yet up to 90% fall short in getting key nutrients from food alone. let's do more. add one a day men's gummies. complete with key nutrients plus b vitamins to help convert food into fuel.
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how about a country dinner plate? ? it's time to create.... ? ? youuuuur country dinner plate... ? ? pick a pork chop or rainbow trout .... ? ? chicken, mac n cheese.... ? ? choose from all of theeeeese. ? ? i'll be on the wall, feel free to try them all. ? country dinner plates at cracker barrel. this is lulu, our newest dog. mom didn't want another dog. she said it's too much work. lulu's hair just floats. uhh help me! (doorbell) mom, check this out. wow. swiffer sweeper, and dusters. this is what i'm talking about. sticks to this better than it sticks to lulu. that's your hair lulu! mom, can we have another dog? (laughing) trap and lock up to 4x more dirt, dust and hair than the store and stop cleaning. start swiffering. the right things working together can give you an advantage. like trubiotics with immune support advantage. its unique formula supports immune health in two ways. with probiotics that work in your gut. and antioxidants that work throughout your body.
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chris: shouldn't be hard to spot. (music) narrator: chris has been called out to meet a new patient named james. chris: i got a funny feeling this is...this is why i'm here, right? anna: yes, this is james. chris: he's a bit of a demolition man isn't he? anna: i think he can dig a hole faster than i could
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that he's putting in the park and they're asking me to keep him on the lead at all times even in an off-leash park. chris: to be honest i came out here thinking ?oh geez, the council is over-reacting again.' but you see the holes he digs. he is making a mess down here. anna: thanks james. chris: this foraging behavior, this digging is a normal thing for pigs to do. but here in the city it doesn't work because the council are really on anna's tail. anna: i think they are at the point of almost asking me to not take him to the park. i guess the only other solution is for me to move to a rural area and i certainly don't want to do it. but the last thing i want to do is have to give him up. i love him. i couldn't imagine not having him around. glenda: bellie? bellie?
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iel, has suddenly collapsed and has been rushed in to the small animal specialist hospital, sash. glenda: all of a sudden he just lied on the kitchen floor. couldn't focus, his head tilted to one side and he just couldn't stand up. he was just like going in circles. it was very upsetting. narrator: glenda and her daughter-in-law georgia are fearing the worst. glenda: my initial thought was he had a stroke. it looked like a human that had had a stroke. lisa: bring him through. narrator: emergency vet lisa chimes need to year-old. lisa: hey honey, your world is upside down. what's happened? glenda: he just went down, his eyes started flickering and he just couldn't stand, he couldn't...like he was all over the place. lisa: so what we really need to do now is work out is this a problem going on in his brain or is this a problem going on outside of his brain; so somewhere like in the ears. okay? so i'm just gonna pop him on the floor, see what he can do. glenda: come here baby.
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re. lisa: there's something going on with bello that is affecting the nerve that's controlling his balance. glenda: he's not too steady at all. lisa: there's a whole variety of things it can be and we need to do some more tests to work out why. so i'm gonna have a look inside his ears, see if there's any problems there. that one looks pretty good. his ears look actually pretty clean. there's no inflammation, there's nothing i can see down that ear canal that's causing any issues. determine if the problem is within the inner ear or the brain. glenda: hey, what's going on? lisa: problems inside the brain could be something like a stroke, something like a tumor in his brain, some sort of inflammatory disease in his brain. the worst case scenario would be that bello's got a brain tumor and i really, really hope that's
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georgia: poor bellie. narrator: it's a tense wait for owner glenda and her daughter-in-law georgia. glenda: he's our baby. all our boys have grown up now and he's our little boy. he's never been away from us. yeah, it's just that he's always been with us. wherever we are he is. ct scans are in. glenda: is it normal for a dog that's so healthy to get these like in 24 hours? narrator: can lisa save bello? and chris has a solution to stop james from digging. chris: i think we can safely say that this is
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(music) chris: it's the council saying put him on a leash? anna: it doesn't stop him from digging at all. narrator: chris is attempting to come up with a solution that will stop the destructive mini-pig james from being banned from his local park. chris: i can see you are trying to do the right thing. y that this is not the answer. the thing about him is he's like that naughty kid in school; you can't help but like him. i've seen enough to know that james does need help, he needs a solution, and i reckon i've got it. the way we do it...you ready for this? anna: yeah. chris: it's a nose ring. anna: really?
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ly well 'cause what it does, it goes through his little nostrils there and each time he digs it presses and he just feels it and goes ?okay, that's not as fun as it used to be.? anna: a nose ring? you know, i'm willing to try anything. if it works, it works, which would be great. chris: he just jumps on in does he? anna: yeah. he should be able to. chris: james, come on. narrator: chris is on his way to the clinic with anna and her problem mini-pig james. (james squealing) the car may be as difficult as stopping the porker digging up huge holes in the park. chris: you've heard about my driving james? anna: it's okay. chris: hey mate. driving okay? what a nice day buddy.
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narrator: at sash lisa is examining bello's ct results. the cavalier king charles spaniel suddenly collapsed at home. lisa: okay, come through. so we've done the ct. his brain looks okay on the ct scan so i think we are dealing with a primary middle ear problem, okay? glenda: okay. lisa: the area behind the eardrums is filled with fluid, okay? it should be empty and both sides are filled with i think glenda is actually quite relieved to hear that bello's got middle ear disease. she was so worried that it was gonna be a brain problem. glenda: is it normal for a dog that's so healthy to get this like in 24 hours? lisa: it can happen quickly. and, you know, perhaps there was fluid in there and it was to a point and he was coping, he was coping and then it just got too full, put pressure on the nerves and then bang, that's caused these signs. glenda: yeah, okay. lisa: okay?
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edure done with one of our specialists. we're going to flush the ears and make them empty like how they should be. glenda: yep. lisa: and i'll speak to you straight afterwards. glenda: okay. lisa: okay? glenda: thank you. thanks very much. lisa: not a problem. you take care. glenda: thank you. i am feeling relieved but yeah, every procedure has concerns 'cause you don't know what's gonna happen, they're under a general. it'll be a long wait. narrator: coming up on dr. chris pet vet... lisa: the middle ears should not have any fluid bello's middle ears are just packed. narrator: ...will bello's procedure restore his balance? and this little piggy gets a new fashion stylist. chris: james. is this to your liking? for adults with advanced non-small cell lung cancer previously treated with platinum-based chemotherapy, including those with an abnormal alk
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putting the nose ring in is easy, anesthetizing him to the point where you can put the nose ring in safely, that's the tricky part. so what should happen now is that he should just start to feel a bit sleepy as you can see. alright. how this ring works is pretty simple. you can see it's got a little latch there. nose. but to actually get it through the nose requires a fair bit of pushing. so they need to be precise but at the same time quite forceful. so that's in. i'll just spin it around. you can see the latch. it's gone through perfectly.
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e digs he hits the... anna: there's so much drool. chris: from here james is gonna rest up for a few days, get used to having that nose ring. then comes the big test. he's gonna go back to the park in about a week and we're gonna find out if he digs. lisa: just hold steady for a second, pull it back. narrator: at sash lisa is working with dermatologist dr. philippa ravens to unblock 6 year-old bello's dr. ravens: so what i think we're gonna do now is see if we can make a little hole in that eardrum and try and drain it. narrator: the cavalier king charles spaniel was rushed to sash after suddenly collapsing at home. a buildup of fluid behind the eardrums has compressed his balance nerve and resulted in severe vertigo. dr. ravens: it's really tenacious... lisa: when we make that first puncture in bello's
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they should be filled with air. and bello's middle ears are just packed with this thick, slimy mucus. we're flushing out all that muck and hopefully that's gonna relieve the pressure on his nerves and improve his balance. dr. ravens: well done team. lisa: lovely. dr. ravens: i think we've pretty much got most of it out but sometimes there's just a little bit of mucus. certainly i think he was towards the more extreme end. kly he recovers. some dogs get better as soon as they wake up from the anesthetic and some take a few more days. but no doubt he will be feeling instant relief. you just have a good snooze. (music) lisa: bello, you wanna come out? narrator: the next day lisa is ready to release
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ill take some time for his balance nerve to fully recover. lisa: good boy bello. he is strutting his stuff, wagging his tail. he is a different dog to what he was when he came in. narrator: glenda and her son matthew are waiting to take their beloved cavalier home. glenda: i was very relieved it wasn't a brain tumor and it came out to be mucus in the ears. lisa: you wanna go see mum? should we go? let's go. come on. gonna have to give him a lot of tlc. he's gonna have a lot of love and care. lisa: look who's there. glenda; i'm gonna start crying. oh he looks so much better. lisa: he's walking and he's wagging his tail and he's happy. glenda: he's so much better. kiss, kiss, kiss, kiss, kiss. oh yes.
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amazing. sorry, i'm emotional. lisa: yeah, you're allowed to be emotional, this is a pretty traumatic thing. glenda: it is. to go from healthy to being that sick and now he's sort of bounced back. lisa: yeah. glenda: that's so good. lisa: that was a delightful reunion. glenda was so emotional. i didn't think she had any idea that bellow would be this good. glenda: this is overwhelming. chris: hmm...there's no holes. that's a good sign. narrator: it's been one week since chris gave james a nose ring to stop his obsessive digging in the local park. chris: i'm coming back to the scene of the crime to see if his nose ring has worked. if it hasn't this could be the last time james ever sets foot in this park. hello matey. hello, how are you?
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tions? anna: no. there's a lot more sniffing though. chris: just think about what he could do. anna: yeah. chris: he's not actually carrying through with the digging? anna: no, no digging. chris: it's incredible that anose ring, something that looks quite simple, can make such a huge difference. he can still sniff, he can still do all the things he likes to do, but the moment he actually pushes his nose into the ground the ring pushes into his nose and he goes ?you know what, this ain't so fun.? so do you miss the bad boy though? it's a lot easier. chris: he's a better pig now. he can still come to the park, be the center of attention which he loves, but not be the serial park pest. you'll be just fine won't you? (james snorts) chris: i guess that was goodbye.
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mo: welcome to "the henry ford's innovation nation." i'm mo rocca, and today, you are going to be razzle-dazzled! print... alie: oh, my gosh! mo: ...on your tiniest twin, bubbling to the surface of water safety, keeping on track to fix history, and couching the shake while feeling the quake next on "the henry ford's innovation nation." you know what gets way too much attention in our world? height.

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