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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  March 10, 2018 5:00am-6:59am PST

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one year later see how that moment is still changing lives. but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eyeopener" your world in 90 seconds. >> law enforcement, we express our deepest and most sincere condolences to the family. >> a california standoff comes to the heart breaking end. >> tragedy unfolding at a veterans home north of napa. >> the gunman and three women are dead. every student has a right to learn in a violence free environment. >> the nra is claiming they're defending everybody's second amendment rights and it's a bunch of nonsense. >> it's a high stakes opportunity. >> no word from the white house on the date or a location for the historic meeting between president trump and the leader of north korea. >> president trump says the deal with north korea is very much in the making. >> another powerful snowstorm is possible across the northeastern u.s. coming this week. >> i don't like the cold. >> yes.
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>> and there's still some rumbles on the mount. >> and kareem bruteton, jr. for the win. >> yes. >> the young virginia boy pumped to get his first spare. >> and all that matters. >> tiger woods held a lead for the first time in 930 days. >> yeah. i hit it well today. >> oh, my goodness. he's on his way back. >> on "cbs this morning saturday." >> you worked with patrick stewart. what was he like when he had hair? >> he was very handsome. he always had a great body. >> great body? you don't have to whisper it. it's okay. how would you know this, helen mirren? [ laughter ]
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welcome, i'm anthony mason. >> we begin this morning with breaking news overnight and a tragic end to an hours long hostage situation at the nation's largest veterans retirement home. authorities in napa county, california, say the suspect an army veteran and three women were found dead in the room at the facility in yountville, north of san francisco. >> the victims identified as christine lobar and two doctors all worked for a nonprofit that helps the veterans of the wars of iraq and afghanistan. carter evans is in yountville. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the suspect is identified as albert wong, a decorated former infantry man. now investigators haven't released a motive for the attack right now. but reports indicate that wong had recently been kicked out of a treatment program here by one of the victims. napa county sheriffs deputies
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were called to th veterans retirement home of yountville just after 10:00 a.m. on friday. investigators say the suspect albert wong made his way into an employee party, then brandishing an assault rifle took three women hostage and started shooting. >> he was armed with a rifle, 15 to 30 shots fired. >> a deputy exchanged gun fire with the suspect but police had no more contact with him as he took the three hostages into a room in one of the buildings on the sprawling campus. >> he walked in with a rifle so i think people had a pretty clear understanding about what was going to -- what was going on. there's obviously no firearms allowed in that building. >> reporter: the home stayed on lockdown for nearly eight hours. but after failing to establish contact with wong, police made their move. >> law enforcement personnel made entry into the room where we felt the hostages were being held by the suspect. and unfortunately made the discovery of three deceased females and one deceased male
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suspect. >> reporter: military records show he was awarded five medals while serving in the army. he spent one year in afghanistan during his three years of active service. the three victims were committed to serving veterans of iraq and afghanistan. they worked for the pathway home. a program that treats vets for post-traumatic stress disorder. in a statement, pathway home said the brave women were accomplished professionals who dedicated their careers to serving our nation's veterans. now police are crediting the first deputy on the scene with stopping wong from finding more victims. there are security guards here. but the association that represents those guards says they're not allowed to carry weapons. anthony? >> carter evans in yountville, california. one police officer was shot dead and one wounded in pomona. police were at the scene. and they were fired upon by a suspect who was barricaded
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inside an apartment. the other officer is hospitalized in stable condition. there's no word on whether anyone was arrested. the national rifle association has filed a lawsuit to try to block a florida school safety bill that puts new restrictions on guns. final passage came after a gunman killed 17 people with a semiautomatic assault style rifle. the bill balances individual rights with the need for public safety. adriana diaz reports. >> reporter: with the sweep of a pen, florida governor rick scott is allowing some teachers to carry guns in classrooms while also tightening access to firearms. the new law also limits rifle sales to people 21 or over after a three-day waiting period allows law enforcement to confiscate firearms from people who make threats and allocates $400 million for school safety and mental health.
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but what it doesn't do is ban assault rifles. >> the one thing that the students had a consensus on, they wanted an assault weapons ban and this bill doesn't include that. >> rather than banning specific weapons we need to ban specific people by having any weapons. >> reporter: by allowing those opting into the program, florida joins 11 other states with similar measures. the union says they want guns ots of the schools. >> these students are our future and we're showing them that the answer to violence is more violence. >> the idea of being armed is very enticing. but the bigger issue is that we're creating laws that are not fixing a problem. >> reporter: the families of all 17 victims in the parkland shooting support the new law. some like tony manle to toe who lost his daughter were there for the signing. >> we have paid a terrible price
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for this progress. we call on more states to follow florida's lead and create meaningful legislation to make all schools safer. this time must be different. >> reporter: gun control laws have emerged from other school shootings but what's significant about this state is that florida is such a gun friendly state. it also has a republican governor and republican controlled legislature. now, governor scott is a member of the nra. he received an a-plus rating from the nra but he broke from the nra with this move. earlier this week a lobbyist said that the legislation was a display of quote bullying and coercion. for "cbs this morning saturday," adriana diaz. president trump will insist on quote, concrete verifiable actions from north korea's leader before the two sit down face-to-face. while the date of the meeting is yet to be determined, mr. trump
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tweeted last night a deal with north korea is very much in the making adding quote, it will be a very good one for the world. we have more. >> reporter: good morning. the white house yesterday said that the u.s. position on north korea has not changed, insisting it made zero concessions in havin president trump agree to meet with the north korean leader kim jong-un. sarah sanders said that the u.s. can have the discussions now from a position of strength. >> and the president is getting exactly what he wants. >> reporter: press secretary sanders said a meeting between president trump and north korean leader kim jong-un would be more than just a photo-op. facing criticism that gives the dictator equal footing on the world stage. >> and the president will not have the meeting without seeing concrete steps and concrete actions take place by north korea. >> reporter: president trump learned of the face-to-face offer from south korea's national security adviser who had been at the white house to brief administration officials on his own recent visit with kim
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jong-un. almost immediately after hearing of kim's invitation, president trump accepted stepping into the press briefing room to tease reporters about the pending announcement. >> the president took these steps himself. >> reporter: rex tillerson said he was surprised by the change in north korea's posture but not by mr. trump's decision to agree to the sit down. >> he expressed it openly before about his willingness to meet with kim jong-un. >> reporter: but the president did surprise his own national security team by quickly deciding the time was ripe, base odd the pledge by the north korean leader to hold off on testing the nuclear programs. >> it's unlikely he'll give them up unless a sweet deal comes forward, but it is also unlikely he'll also use them. >> reporter: this man served in the obama administration and he says that the trump
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administration's pressure helped to bring them to the table. >> it's exciting to see how they manipulate each other and how they conduct themselves during the negotiation. >> reporter: and indeed, officials from both sides now need to overcome the logistical details of getting both leaders into the same room. meanwhile, president trump will make a quick trip to pittsburgh, pennsylvania, tonight to defend rick saccone's effort to win a congressional district there that he won by 20 points. >> thanks, errol. new evidence that the nation's economy is gaining strength. the labor department said friday 313,000 jobs were added in february, much more than expected. punchanged at 4.1%.te stayed that is the 89th month in a row of job gains. it got a big reaction from wall street, the news sent stocks high we are the dow jones industrial average up 440 points, almost 2% more than
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25,300 points. let's get some perspective on the week from ed o'keeffe who covers the congress for "the washington post." we are glad to say starting next month he'll be joining cbs news as a political correspondent. >> whoop whoop. >> that's a good welcome. >> bring the cow bells the next time. >> ed, let's start off by talking about this meeting between president trump and north korea's kim jong-un. >> yeah. >> if this occurs it would be historic. what are the risks in the meeting? >> oh, huge risks. i mean, like errol was saying i think the logistic of this are the most complicated part of this and then what would be discuss and then what assurances he'll follow through? every other time that americans have engaged the north korean regime in the last 20, 25 years they have fallen back on their assurances of promising to work with them. so we'll see. make no mistake, this announcement combined with the other things that the president
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likes to do with big fanfare it's consistent with that. and whether or not the follow through actually happens is i think the biggest question. we have seen dramatic moves on immigration, gun control. other issues. nothing has come of it. we'll see if we get anything out of this as well. >> like those issues, his own administration does not seem to be on the same page. >> exactly. >> we have the secretary of state saying i'm surprised, usually a meeting like this is the end result of months if not years of careful diplomatic negotiations. >> precisely. so again, consistent with what the president has done before. announced the first -- announce the details later, make a big splash on television and he did that. we'll see whether or not anything comes of it. >> later in the week the president said he would move forward with steel and aluminum tariffs. a move that is -- he's gotten significant push back from his own party on. >> it's big concern. there's still a chance that later this month in what is the last big piece of legislation
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passed this year before the election, the big spending bill. they might try to tuck in some language that would either pull that back or stop it from happening. no serious attempt at that so far. look at the faces. speaker ryan said i disagree with this decision. those are two words the speaker has never used -- >> on almost anything. >> on almost anything this president has done or said. mitch mcconnell said i'm concerned. john thune said this is causing chaos and confusion, words we haven't heard from the republican leaders in response to anything that the president has done. that shows you where they are about this. anything that could potentially upset that economic growth could upset republican chances at the polls in november. >> this would seem to split sort of trump's base off from the republican party. >> yes. >> i mean, there's actually a fairly big difference here because there are some democrats that actually like these tariffs. >> in fact, this is a big wet kiss in essence to a bunch of moderate democrats running in industrial midwest states who said this is great.
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if i were the president i'd do even more. so it just divides the republicans even more and gives a gift to some of the democrats who need something to be able to agree with the president on ahead of november. >> it caused the president's top economic adviser, gary kohn, to leave the administration. >> this was certainly a convenient excuse because he had been making the argument not to do it and he lost. >> what are you hearing about areplacement? >> not yet. gary kohn the president said might come at some point. >> another story from this week, stormy daniels the adult film actress has filed a lawsuit against the president. it is raising some potential red flags as far as election campaign finance law. what can you tell us about that? >> i think the important thing to remember is, you know, this will get caught up in all of the ongoing investigating by robert mueller. remember, this started with
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russian interference or potential collusion with the trump campaign. it's going to lead to things like stormy daniels. sounds like what happened to bill clinton. it started with a land deal in arkansas and it ended up with paula jones. it shows you this is a wide reaching investigation going in all sorts of different directions. there are concerns about campaign finance violations and if she starts talking you wonder where things will go. >> you were going to say? >> go ahead. >> one last thing on this long list that we have. we saw legislation passed in florida about gun control. >> yeah. >> is that going to change the landscape in terms of the importance of this issue in this election? >> well, we'll see. there could be state legislators who suffer or benefit from this in florida. the legal challenges could be a bigger test overtime. not only is the nra now challenging what florida did, a man out in oregon is suing
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dick's and sporting goods for putting in the age limits. we may not get results on that for a few years, but that could be even more significant than any electoral changes in november. >> ed, we need you to clone six copies of yourself. >> that's why we had to go to full-time. a lot to talk about. >> one for each issue. >> congratulations and welcome to the family. great to see you. tomorrow morning on "face the nation," the guest is mike pompeo and colorado senator cory gardner. the attorney for former pharmaceutical ceo martin shkreli said he'll appeal the seven-year sentence. he gained notoriety and widespread condemnation for raising the cost of a life saving medication by 5,000%. the so-called pharma bro dismissed the trial as a joke, at least until yesterday.
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>> reporter: in court, martin shkreli cried as he told the judge i'm not the same person i was. i know right from wrong. and he apologized to the hedge fund investors he was convicted of defrauding but the judge gave him seven years in prison. he made no apologies when he made the raised the price of a drug up to $750 per pill saying -- >> i could have made it more profits for the shareholders. which is my primary duty. >> reporter: the public disagreed. reacting with shock and putting the entire world of drug pricing under a microscope. dr. peter bach studies health policy. >> what he showed everyone was that drug companies can set their prices where they want and they can raise their prices when they feel like it. >> reporter: other companies soon came under fire including valiant for the price increases
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on old drugs and mylan for the price of the epipen. >> shkreli came at the beginning of a wave of events that i think had had a permanent impact an how people understand the problems we have with drug pricing. >> reporter: as for shkreli, letters he sent to cbs news radio correspondent stevedoresy did not match his tone in court. >> he was not remorseful, he was defensive and antagonistic. >> do you think he'll keep talking to you now that he'll have some time on his hands? >> well, he has seven years of time on his hands. perhaps he can pick up that pen pal relationship. >> reporter: i'm anna warner. time to show you the headlines. a los angeles times reports that people are fuhr use after witnessing an arrest. video of the agents dragging morales off the street and way i from the three daughters has
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been seen by more than 10 million people. officials accuse luna of having ties of to the human smuggling operation. it is not clear if she will face criminal charges. she is expected to face deportation proceedings. "the new york daily news" reports rapper santana cut his trip short after allegedly attempting to get a gun past security agents at newark liberty airport. the rapper fled in a taxi when tsa agents spotted his weapon. his single "there it go" hit the top ten was arrested for drugs and weapons possession charges in 2011. the citizens voice of wilkes-barre, pennsylvania, reports state representative toohill obtained a restraining order against a colleague who she says pulled a gun out and threatened to kill her. the allegations date back to 2012 when toohill was dating representative nick neck areally. he is banned from possessing the
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firearms. a spokesman calls the allegations baseless. "usa today" says president trump's military parade is starting to take shape. the pentagon says soldiers wearing period uniforms from the revolutionary war to the present day will be marching from the white house to the capital on veterans day. but a memo detailing the plan says tanks will not be part of the event in an effort to minimize damage to washington streets. the parade is expected to cost $30 million. and "the miami herald" reports some florida lawmakers would like to make daylight savings time permanent in the sunshine state. most of the nation prepares to spring forward and add more light to their day by pushing their clocks ahead one hour at 2:00 a.m., the florida legislature passed the sunshine protection act this week. it would provide benefits for the economy, public safety and mental health. it would require congressional approval to take effect. doesn't mean that florida exists
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in its own time zone? >> i don't know. i like the word sunshine protection act. i think sunshine should be protected. >> i'm all for protecting sunshine. go forward, florida. it's about 22 after the hour now. here's a look at the weather for your weekend. ♪ a former russian double agent apparently poisoned. the stuff of spy novels became all too real in britain this week. and now the question is whether the putin regime was involved. we'll have the latest from london. and later big game and big controversy. the trump administration will now allow some elephant trophies to be imported back to america. what will it mean for wildlife conservation. you're watching "cbs this
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morning saturday."
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even if no one in your home smokes, secondhand smoke can be closer than you think. secondhand smoke from a neighbor's apartment can enter your home through air vents, through light fixtures and even through cracks in the walls and the floors. secondhand smoke is toxic. especially to children. protect your family. visit tobaccofreeca.com.
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listen up, listen up, children. long were streaming songs and digital downloads, the record store was where we went for music. we'll look back at the legacy of the once mighty tower records and the legendary founder. >> he had a front row seat to the wild music scene of the '70s and partied with some of the decadent's most famous names. we'll hear the tellings and the tales in a new book. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday."
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the thing that was so fascinating with tuesday dover air force base, the unprecedented aspect you got it. you call it the most important funeral home. >> it is. a few years ago i was doing the uso tour and entertaining in the middle east, it was after that i found out about dover. and dover is where we lay to rest our amazing soldiers who fall in battle. and what i didn't realize is that dover also gets the biggest cases. when the space shuttle went down, went to dover. 9/11, the victims went there. and it holds the biggest spies across the world and no one is supposed to know where they are, but they go to dover too. dover is built on secrets and mysteries. and how could i not set a mystery there? >> and the mortician cares for the bodies because of the relationships with the families which works inin the question of whether the main character is alive or not. >> yeah. what's -- i was blown away by that. you'll see in the normal
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situation if something happens and you're disfigured, you get a closed casket. but not at dover they'll work so hard, because they'll take 14 hours to rebuild the cheek bones in someone's face, or they'll rebuild someone's hand because a mom specifically asked can i hold my son's hand one last time? we are starving for heroes right now, this is where the best of the best of us work on the best of the best of us. i wanted to show them as heros. >> so many unsung heroes. nola brown is your favorite protagonist character, why? >> people said she's like the girl with the dragon tattoo and i'll take that any day. she grabbed me by the throat and she said, pay attention to me. does this map show the peninsula trail? you won't find that on a map. i'll take you there. take this left.
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a man accused of fleeing police endeded up giving them assist in his capture. it shows a suspected drunk driver by trying to evade officers by getting out of his car but he doesn't put it in park. he gets hit by his own car. police say the man is okay but he's facing a long list of charges. welcome back to "cbs this morning." british soldiers are being deploy and hazmat teams are scouring in what's being treated as a counterterrorism investigation. roxana saberi has more from london this morning. good morning.
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>> good morning. sergai skripal and his daughter remain in serious condition. today the british government will hold an emergency meeting on what authorities are treating as attempted murder. around 180 military troops and chemical weapons experts are looking for evidence, a sign into the poisoning of the former russian spy is expanding. at a local cemetery where sergai skripal's wife is buried, investigators wore hazmat suits and placed a memorial over his son. they cordoned off his house whether he lived. after going out to lunch and visiting a pub the pair were found on a park bench unconscious. the uk's home secretary said two were exposed to a nerve agent. >> this was an attempted murder in the most cruel and public way. >> reporter: detectives are
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trying to discover how the toxin was administered, where it was made and who made it. >> the very nature of the agent is pointing toward the state. it is only ever states that have used these kinds of materials. >> reporter: british authorities say it's too early to lay blame but suspicions are falling on russia. skripal came to russia as a part of a prisoner exchange in 2010 after doing jail time in russia for spying. on friday russian foreign minister sergey lavrov said we're guilty of everything wrong on this planet. police say government scientists have identified the nerve agent used but are not yet saying what it was. authorities say there's no risk to the general public, but as you can imagine, alex, there's still a lot of concern here. >> a lot of intrigue.
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roxana saberi in russia. thanks. >> everybody in the west was calling him a russian spy. the russian embassy tweeted out he was actually a british spy working for mi6. west and east fighting it out. her life in america is a dream. she went on her own voyage of gratitude looking to find the strangers who saved her life. but first here's a look a at the weather for your weekend. it was an on the court trauma for a proathlete but this time it voinvolved not his body
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but his mind. up next, gail saltz and the surprising revelation and how he hopes it can help others. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." ♪ ♪ heard you had a hard day. i had a bad day too. i forgot my briefcase. there i was, at work... ♪ ♪ feed his kindness, where there's jif, there's love. mitzi: psoriatic arthritis tries to get in my way? watch me. ( ♪ ) mike: i've tried lots of things for my joint pain. now? watch me. ( ♪ ) joni: think i'd give up showing these guys how it's done? please. real people with active psoriatic arthritis are changing the way they fight it. they're moving forward with cosentyx. it's a different kind of targeted biologic. it's proven to help people
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time now for "morning rounds," our look at medical news of the week. this morning how a pro athlete's personal revelation has put the focus on a common mental health issue. nba all-star kevin love penned an essay for the website ""the players' tribune,"" detailing a panic attack that he suffered earlier in the season. love's article also focuses on changing the perception of mentality health not only for athletes but for everyone. >> love wrote, i thought about mental health as someone else's problem. sure i knew on some tlaerchl some people benefitted from asking for help or opening up to. me it was a form of weakness that could derail my success in
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sports. here to discuss the issues raids is dr. gail saltsz. welcome. >> thank you. >> how important is it? >> it's huge. people look for role models. this is a fantastic message, especially for older boys and young men who are a very susceptible group to these kinds of issues and really have great difficulty talking about it and for that reason even if they do, the stigma and shame associated with it keeps them from getting treatment and getting evaluated at all. in fact, the vast majority do not get evaluated. this is a major health issue. >> going from that, how common are anxiety disorders? he falls into this category. as many as one in five people at some point in their life will vn an anxiety disorder and as many as one in four children. so it's very common, but as i said, unfortunately it's often
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either not understood and overlooked or more commonly the person knows they're struggling, but the stigma associated with it keeps them from doing it. somebody like a sports figure particularly makes a huge impact. >> you talk about that stigma. kevin love wrote about it specifically. he said growing up you find out quickly how a boy is sus posed to act. you learn how to, quote, be a machblt it's like a playbook. be strong, don't talk about it, get through your feelings on your own. >> we've been talking in a good way for women about what needs to change. the reality is the cult ter for men needs to change as well. you have to suppress your feeling, not talk about weakness. but in reality this is a major problem because just like any other human being, men, too, have emotional issues, needs, and have these kinds of mental health issues going on. when you don't talk about it as kevin love points out, that's
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what goes really bronc and wonderfully when you get treatment you can really get back on track. it's important to talk to your boys. i hope parents use this as a teaching moment to say, look at what he did. he's incredibly accomplished and achieved, but at the same time he's had struggle. oftentimes they go together. >> absolutely. >> they do. tell your children, hey, if something's going on, i want to know about it. talk to whoever you're comfortable talking about it and treatment makes all the difference. another nba all-star talked about anxiety. is the taboo around mental health and mental health concerns being lifted? >> do i hope this is a tipping point? of course, i do. i think we're only going to know in retrospect when that really occurs. i don't think we're there yet. i would tell you in many parts of the country, this remains the
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idea that, you know, you don't talk about it. we try to keep our family members who may be having issues sort under the covers. so i don't know yet, but these kinds of watershed moments do make a big difference. and having athletes support each other on top of all that and be public about that, that also -- it role models the idea that, hey, if someone -- if your colleague, if your family, friend is having trouble, be there for them. talk with them. help them get the care they need. that's a very different model for men and athletes that has been there before, so that could make a big difference. >> just talking and acknowledging it could be a big step. >> it absolutely is. >> dr. gail saltz, always good to see you. >> my pleasure. will aid conservation efforts help the world's most beloved ceature turs further
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toward extinction? we'll look at a major reversal by the trump administration, affecting elephants and other endangered animals. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." vings and lose weight with contrave. it's fda-approved to help adults who are overweight or struggle with obesity lose weight and keep it off. contrave is believed to work on two areas of the brain: your hunger center... i'm so hungry. (avo) and your reward system... ice cream. french fries. (avo) to help control cravings. one ingredient in contrave may increase suicidal thoughts or actions in some children, teens, and young adults in the first few months. serious side effects are mood changes like depression and mania, seizures, increased blood pressure or heart rate, liver damage, glaucoma, allergic reactions, and hypoglycemia. not for patients with uncontrolled blood pressure, seizure history, anorexia, bulimia, drug or alcohol withdrawal, on bupropion, opioids, maois, allergy to the ingredients, or pregnant. may cause nausea, constipation, headache, and vomiting.
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this week the trump administration lifted a ban on the importation of some trophies from animals hunted for sport. that includes el familiarity parts despite statements from the president in november that such a practice is, quote, a horror show. the u. fish & wildlife service says it will make determinations on whether to allow fro fi imports on a case-by-case basis. >> here to tell us more about the new policy and what it means is dr. m. san gin, ceo of conservation international. he's also the executive producer of the new virtual reality film "my africa," which debuts at the
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tribeca film festival. welcome. >> thank you. >> what does that mean. >> just when china in january announced that it's banning its domestic market for ivory, this new factor comes in and creates uncertainty how we manage elephant populations. >> let's talk about the risks to elephants because they're in grave danger, correct. >> absolutely, yes. >> how sill can't? >> so when i was a child, when i was in high school, there were probably about 1.2 million elephants in africa. today there may be 200,000 or 300,000. it's hard to know exactly. the population has declined. it's declined across the range. some countries are doing well and we're seeing the tide turn. the price of ivory has dramatically dropped from, you know, $2,000 a key low four years ago to about $400 a key low today. but just when this is happening, just when we have more leadership on this issue, the united states and uk, now china
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can take some leadership on this issue, this new uncertainty has created a level of anxiety amongst people who really care about elephants. >> the president called this kind of hunting a horror show. >> and he is probably right. >> he's been unstinting publicly in his criticism of it and yet it's happening. we're back at this issue. who's driving it? >> i don't know. look. i was shocked by it just as you were because president trump was khris tall clear on this in november, not just tweeting but publicly made statements in "the new york times" and others. what was unusual about this announcement that there's this backtracking of this case-by-case to allow trophies. we're expecting partality that should be determined by science. so having a organization --
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private organization announce this is a bit unnevg. >> for people who don't know, what is safari club international? >> it's basically an organization that supports trophy hunting and primarily big game species around the world. >> and they were making announcement on it. >> that's how we learned about it. >> do we have any information on the guidelines for these judgments and who's going to be essentially judging it? >> no, i don't have any clear understanding of what the guidelines are going to be and how they're going to judge it. it has been used as a conservation tool. frankly i'm a hunter myself, it's used as a conservation tool, but even in the united states, dwoejts hunt endangered species. if we don't hunt it hee, why don't we think it's okay in zambia or zimbabwe when clearly the regulations are far more obscure. >> what needs to be done? what can ordinary americans and people watching the show do?
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how can they participate in ensuring it? >> don't buy anything with ivory on it and then get your voice heard. make your voice heard. we want the fish & wildlife service to have an open process where people can comment public own it. president trump has the unit opportunity to bring leaders around the table and continue to have the leadership the united states has had on this issue and really deal the big problems of elephants which is habitat loss and large-scale commercial poaching. this is flank a side show and it's distracting the attention away from what is really needed. >> very quickly we featured your "my africa" film. tell us what it's about? >> it's an amazing story on a woman's perspective. it's spectacular, everything from wind will derbies and la p
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lends her voice to it. >> you have to to get in line at a record store. coming up we'll look back at the man who revolutionized the way the world got its tunes. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." i work overtime when i can get it. i need my blood sugar to stay in control.
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♪ ♪ ♪ couldn't be extremed or downloaded tower records stood above its competition with late night hours, knowledgeable employees, and huge inventories, tower records was a go-to for serious music fans. >> i could say, have you heard this and it was -- they were
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like friends. >> the chain was found by russ solomon who started using used jukebox records out of his father's sacramento drugstore. he died this week. he's being remembered as a vision iowa and natural leader. >> he had really great ideas and he could put it together, and he could also encourage other people to follow him. that's why he had the reputation especially in the early years of his business of being a pied piper. people just loved him. >> russ solomon and the rise of tower records are the subjects of the 2015 documentary "all things must pass." >> i called the number on the sign. i said, do you want to rent this place? the guy said, love to. i made a deal just like that. >> tower expanded from sacramento to san francisco in 1968 and at its peak maintained
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more than 270 stores. each location was different, with solomon giving individual store managers control of what records to stock and encouraging his music-loving employees to be themselves. >> i got a job at tower records because that's the only place cold get a job with my [ bleep ] haircut. that is the truth. >> tower's success put solomon on forbes list of 400 wealthiest americans. but the dawn of digital music downloads and a heavy corporate debt load led to the end of the record chain. after selling a billion dollars worth of records in the 1990s, tower declared bankruptcy in 2004 and finally closed its doors in america in 2006. but 12 years on, tower records is still flourishing in japan, including a nine-story flagship store in tokyo. >> my favorite store ever. >> amazing. >> i was heartbroken when it
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closed. i even went in. i stole a music divider just to remind me what record stores used to be. >> queen was fired. >> not a lot of records in "q," but this was the best shape of the ones. >> fao schwartz when i was a kid and tower records when i was older. loved that place. >> a word of wonder. a sprawl on a city street was mostly a spectacle to those who watched it but not the man who stopped two lives who took a completely different packet. that's coming up on "cbs this morning: saturday."
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you're known for your super power. yeah. >> do people come up to you? i was reading people come up to you and say, go ahead, krysten. hit me, hit me. does that happen with both men and women? >> mostly men. mostly it wheens we go to comic-cons to promote the show and a lot of men ask me to arm wrestle them or punch them. >> what do you do? >> i just go for it. fans keep me employed. >> female viewers say your character makes them say -- >> i've had that happen a lot. it's been one of the most moving experiences in the whole job in addition to it being a great acting part. i've had women come up to me and say they feel represented, it's mad them feel better about what they've been through in their own lives and seeing a badass
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female character like this has meant a lot to women and men, so that's been something that's been really exciting for me and makes me want to work even harder and throw my full self into the role. >> is that why we all like comic book stories and superheroes? >> i think that what our show does and what marvel does well is they kind of go underneath the superhero powers. you know, they let you fall in love with the person underneath of all of that and you root for them. you know, joe casa da at marvel talks about you don't just talk about the guy in the suit. it tees guy under the suit. and i think that's what jessica jones does specifically. it's such a personal story and we really get into her psychological journey. fire fighting is a very dangerous profession. we have one to two fires a day and when you respond together and you put your lives on the line, you do have to surround yourself with experts.
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and for us the expert in gas and electric is pg&e. we run about 2,500/2,800 fire calls a year and on almost every one of those calls pg&e is responding to that call as well. and so when we show up to a fire and pg&e shows up with us it makes a tremendous team during a moment of crisis. i rely on them, the firefighters in this department rely on them, and so we have to practice safety everyday. utilizing pg&e's talent and expertise in that area trains our firefighters on the gas or electric aspect of a fire and when we have an emergency situation we are going to be much more skilled and prepared to mitigate that emergency for all concerned. the things we do every single day that puts ourselves in harm's way, and to have a partner that is so skilled at what they do is indispensable, and i couldn't ask for a better partner.
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welcome to "cbs this morning." i'm anthony mason. >> i'm alex wagner. coming up this hour, what will it take to get president trump and north korea's leader together for face-to-face talks? we'll talk with an expert on u.s. relations with the so-called hermit kingdom. rather, a vietnamese immigrant's incredible journey to reunite with the men who rescued her at sea after the fall of saigon. and notes from the wild and crazy 1970s world of art and music. we will hear some amazing stories from artist duncan hanna on the decade that redefined pop culture. that's ahead. first, the latest on the breaking news overnight as a deadly hostage standoff ended at a veteran's retirement home in california. the victims identified as
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christine lo burg and dr. jennifer gonzalez all worked for a nonprofit group that helps veter veterans. >> it was at a facility northeast of san francisco. carter evans, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the suspect is identified as albert wong, a kedecorated form army infantryman. reports indicate wong was recently kicked out of a treatment program here by one of the victims. investigators say wong made his way into an employee party. he had an assault rifle help took three women hostage and then started shooting after a deputy exchanged fire with the suspect. police had no more contact with him. he took the three hostages into a room. the area was on lockdown for nearly eight hours. after failing to establish contact with wong, police made their move. they found the three victims and the suspect dead inside. now, wong has spent one year in afghanistan during his three
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years of active service. the three victims worked here at a program that treats vets for post-traumatic stress disorder. now police are crediting the first deputy on the scene with stopping wong from finding even more victims. alex. >> carter evans, thank you. also breaking overnight in california, one police officer was killed and a second wounded in ponoma near los angeles. police were called to the scene last night. the officers were shot by a suspect who was barricaded inside an apartment. the second officer is hospitalized in stable condition. so far, there's no word if anyone was arrested. >> the white house says north korea's dictator will have to take, quote, concrete, verifiable actions before meeting with president trump. last night, mr. trump tweeted that the deal with north korea is very much in the making, adding it will be a very good one for the world. the date of the meeting is yet to be determined. for more, we are joined by lisa collins who's in our washington
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bureau. she's a fellow with the north korea chair at the center for strategic and international studies. lisa, good morning. >> thanks for having me. >> when president trump made the announcement thursday about this meeting, this proposed meeting with north korea's kim jong-un, were you surprised? >> i think the news was certainly surprising. the fact that the north korean leader had actually invited president trump to have a summit and that president trump had accepted, that was surprising. but beyond just the shock value of the announcement of a potential summit, i think real questions about first what will they discuss when they meet. where will the summit take place. and do the two countries even agree on the same suspect of denuclearization or a freeze of the north korean nuclear weapons program. >> you mentioned the concept of denuclearization is different perhaps for koreans than it is for those in the united states. can you elaborate more on that? >> so in the past, when north korea has talked about complete
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denuclearization of the korean peninsula, they have -- they have prefaced that by saying they would need the security of their nation to be guaranteed. usually what that means in practical terms or what they have asked for is a removal of u.s. troops from the korean peninsula, ultimately a dissolution of the alliance, and a stopping of the military exercises which happen each spring and fall. >> lisa, what do you think the white house is looking for when they talk about the need for concrete actions before this meeting can take place? >> well, it's a little hard to tell because the u.s. officials, north korean officials haven't actually sat down to talk about any of this yet at the working level. but i think what the north koreans probably are asking for is something along the lines of guaranteeing their security, and then on the united states side, i think the u.s. will be asking
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for some guarantee that the north koreans are serious about due nuclearization, which could be an agreement to stop production of their nuclear materials, to stop testing nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles, to stop producing ballistic missiles. any number of those things could potentially be an ask on the united states part. >> this is a complicated diplomat maimakic diplomat maimaki maneuver. there is no u.s. ambassador to south korea. there's no undersecretary for arms control and international security. how much of a problem is that? >> i definitely do think that is necessary to have a u.s. ambassador to south korea named as soon as possible. we have a very competent, the current person filling in for the ambassador, is very competent, but i think we do need more people who are working on the korean issue. there are lots of people in the
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state department who are career diplomatic officials. but i think we definitely need to pull together a team that will be involved in the negotiations with north korea over a potential north korea/u.s. summit. >> thank you for being with us this morning. it's about six minutes after the hour. now, here's a look at the weather for your weekend. after the hour. now here's look at the weather for your weekend. saved at sea. up next, we'll follow a woman on a mission to find the men who rescued her family from truly desperate straights, opening the door to a whole new world. you don't want to miss the incredible story coming up next on "cbs this morning saturday." ."
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after the fall of saigon in 1975, more than 1 million desperate people fled vietnam, many of them in small boats. the refugees were called boat people. now a successful attorney, a vietnamese immigrant was one of them. she has accomplished so much in the four decades since then, but one goal remained elusive. finding and thanking the men who rescued her at sea. don dahler has the story from maritime college. >> what made you want to take this journey to begin with, to try to find these people? >> at every big juncture in my
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life, graduation, law school, taking the oath, having children, seeing my parents, in the back of my head, i would always think, you know, i have to find these, i have to find these men. >> reporter: lauren carried that passion for decades to express her gratitude to those who saved her life. >> my very courageous fearless mother. >> reporter: and she wasn't alone. >> i would ask my mom periodically, do you ever think about them, and she would say every time i have something good to eat, i think of them. >> reporter: wow. >> when we first arrived in america, my first thought was how could i find the people who saved us. >> reporter: all these years later, and it's still that important to you? >> that's my dream. >> reporter: she never gave up her mother's dream. she parents, upper class land owners in the south, fashiced terrible persecution. under communist rule, her father was taken to a vietcong
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reeducation camp. >> when we saw our husband, you know, working and looking like, one more a day, that's no, that's when i thought, we got to get out. i have to get him out. >> reporter: you were afraid he would die? >> for sure, 100%. >> reporter: and that led to a daring decision to get her entire family to flee the country. along with dozens of other families, they crammed on to a small fishing vessel and set out to the open sea. voong was only 7 years old. >> i remember just throwing up. just throwing up so much that i didn't think there was anything left to throw up. and there was nowhere to go to the bathroom. if you had to go, you just go. >> reporter: so you're living in all of that? >> you're living in that. >> reporter: for how long? >> we were at sea for ten days. >> reporter: did you think you were going to die? >> yes.
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yes. i don't know that a 7-year-old really knows what death is, but i didn't see how we could keep -- keep doing and feeling the things that we were feeling and continue. >> reporter: but somehow they endured. about 120 ships were on the same route but never slowed. on june 29, 1980, they watched with awe as one paused and approached. a liquefied natural gas tanker called the vergo. >> there was the smell of all kinds of things in the boat. >> reporter: dan hanson and ken nelson were the first two men vong remembers seeing. >> i believe i threw my shoes and stauff over the side when w came back up on the main deck because conditions were that bad. >> there was no way that we were going to let those people go
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away on that boat. that would have been likely condemning them to death. >> well, the two men came on board. and then next thing i know, my mom was laughing. she was crying. all at the same time. she says to me, we're going to live, we're going to live. >> saved your family at that point. you knew your family was going to be okay. >> yes. >> reporter: the rescue meant not just survival but set her family on a path full of promise here in america. 27 years ago, lauren began her journey to find these men. she researched maritime registries, scoured the internet, which led to conversations with officers, photographs and eventually an emotional reunion. >> hello. >> reporter: this was the first time they'd seen each other in 37 years. >> it was your words to the captain that saved us. >> dan stood on the gangway and
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ken stood on our boat and they had to lift each child, time the swells and then hand the child over. and so i said to them that i was delivered by you that day. >> reporter: like a baby? >> it was incredible. i still feel like this is all a dream. >> reporter: vong got to share that special day with her parents, husband and children. do you feel more american or do you still feel vietnamese? or is there in you no distinction, this is who you are? >> i'll never not be vietnamese because that's my heritage. i can't help being american because it's my country. and when i see that hyphen, vietnamese-american, i don't see it as a dividing factor, i see it as a bridge, that hyphen is a
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bridge of where i was, who i was, with who i am now and where i am today. >> reporter: a bridge that owes its existence to a boat and its crew who did the most american of things, embracing the huddled masses yearning to be free. for "cbs this morning saturday," don dahler, new york. >> wow, what a story. >> i mean, the beacon of america shines so brightly in the minds of immigrants. i mean, my family has a story like that. so countless numbers of families have stories of america welcoming to the shores. >> i love her mother, every time i have something good to eat, i think of them. >> beautiful story. from the art of andy warhol to the edgy sounds of punk rock, the 1970s art and music scene was one wild ride. duncan hanna, an artist, was in the middle of it all and took
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notes. we'll delve into his just published diaries ahead. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." y." >> announcer: this portion sponsored by pronamel tooth paste. protect your enamel from the effects of everyday acids. the whiter their patients' teeth are going to be. dentists are going to really want to recommend pronamel strong and bright. it's going to give their patients whiter teeth. ♪ "how clean do you feel after going to the bathroom?" (laughter) (laughter) then we asked the experts i feel as clean as a little, white tiny kitten. a ah ooh, a twinkling iceberg! that's because only cottonelle® has cleanripple® texture. designed to clean better... ...as clean as a shimmering mermaid.
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the '70s in new york were one wild ride from the avant-garde art of andy warhol to the edgy sounds of punk rock. it was a crazy kinetic decade that redefined pop culture and artist duncan hannah was in the middle of it all. his notebook "notebooks on the seventies" are being published next week. we recently met up with hannah
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at his brooklyn, new york, studio. duncan hannah was 19 when he landed in new york in 1971, an art student from minneapolis in a city so alive he wrote in his journals this place is a monster. >> so yu just put anything in there that was camping your fancy at the time. >> yeah. >> throughout the decade he filled dozens of elaborate notebooks which he titled and illustrated. i'm rich in my povertying he wrote, in the prime of my life. he paid the rent doing magazine illustrations, living for the night life. ♪ >> reporter: like one epic after party, in 19784, after a roxy music concert -- >> at the end of it, andy warhol said, we're all going to the 82 club, do you want to come, and i
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said, sure. it was bryan ferry, david bowie, and andy and me. >> in the car. >> yeah. >> what are you thinking at that moment? >> i'm thinking, wow, am i dreaming? the next thing he remembers is waking up alone in an abandoned harlem apartment building. >> no idea how you got there? >> no. in my party clothes. in a bow tie. why the fifth floor? maybe the first floor, but the fifth? >> that story seems to symbolize the highs and the lows of the '70s. >> well, yeah. that's it. it when from the most glamorous to the most tawdry all in the space of 12 hours. >> hannah became friends with warhol. >> i brought andy to cbgbs to see the talking heads because i thought he'd really like them. he did. he thought they were really cute. he said, do you think they would
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like to come to lunch? and i said, yes, i think they probably would. >> and he attracted the interest of another prominent artist. >> and he spread his arms and sailed dali is here. >> the extravagant surrealist salvador dali. >> and then he said, you're going to model as an angel for da dali. and i said, sure. he said, do you have hair on your chest? i sads, no, i don't. he said, good, dali does not paint angels with hair on their chest. >> he didn't end up modeling but he did end up acting in underground films like "unmade beds." >> debbie harry is in it. she's very good. i was not very good. >> did you like being an actor? >> no. i appreciate good acting. and then i realized appreciating good acting and executing good
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acting are two very different things. >> reporter: deep sbeer the '70s, the decade grew darker. i'm caught in the tempo, he wrote. i'm compelled to live in downtown's disordered mind, young people wear out early here. >> this looks like it's getting late. >> yes. getting late is one way to put it. but i'm trying. >> reporter: in his journals, hannah worried he could become another fatality of bohemia's wicked ways. wouldn't the brave option be to try to live a positive life, he wrote. wouldn't that be rebellion. so the young artist sobered up. his work was also an act of rebellion. hannah embraced figurative painting even though the art world declared it dead. >> the critics didn't seem to know what to make of you. >> no, no. i mean they just assumed i was being ironic and this was some sort of critique of art history,
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which it wasn't. it with us more of a love letter to art history. >> reporter: since his first solo show in 1981, he's had 100 exhibitions. his paintings are in the permanent collection of the metropolitan museum of art and have been featured on many book covers. what's going on here? >> well, i don't know. it's a bit of mace industrying isn't it. >> reporter: one critic described an ominous poise in his pictures of vintage racing cars, old worlds, and obscure european starlets. >> i think it's the world i thought i was going to grow up into in the '50s, kind of a fictional europe. it's like an alternative universe. >> reporter: it's duncan hannah's world, the one he first dreamed of in his journals. what impressed you in your own journals? >> well, everything i wanted actually came true. i was impressed by that. >> it did come true. these journals are so much fun.
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he's actually a really good writer too. >> yeah. deeply poetic thoughts in the wee small hours. >> yep. and he took the time somehow to put it all down and he survived. >> yeah. which is impressive on both counts and a reminder we should all journal quite frequently. it's important to have a chronicle of your life. >> and a contemporary one. "20th century boy" is the naumt of the book. >> great cover. a fight in the streets and a surprise intervention. a viral video that hit the web last year was viewed millions of times but it was hardly the end of the story. an update, how a simple act of caring sent young livens in a new direction. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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this is what people are saying about the great ava. elaine walter roth who is a former team "vogue" editor says if you told me i was going to be standing in the presence of greatness of a curly haired girl on the big screen i might have known my own magic sooner. another, thank you for taking us on a dreamy adventure. this was ava's call to cast this movie. >> yes. it was her call to put a little brown girl at the center of it and diversify the mrs. those of you who grow up with the book, the ms. don't look like me or mindi or even reese for that matter. i think ava's whole work on the planet is about inclusion and about -- >> yours too. >> mine too. >> i love you and ava together. you guys are a great one-two punch. >> it's great. >> you play off each other well. >> we don't want people to
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mistake it's about adolescents but it's a universal message, finding your own voice and your own path. that's why the book has such wide appeal. >> well, yes. that's why it's a fantastic book for children, families, young girls is because it's about discovering your own voice at the age where you're trying to figure out is it my voice or should i do what everybody else wants me to do. >> and overcoming insecurities as well. what if any insecurities have you had? >> i've had a lot to overcome. but i think the most important essential thing to understand about all of us, the thread that runs through all of us is what meg says at the end of the movie. i deserve to be loved. remember when she said, i deserve to be loved.
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it's been one year since an internet video of two brawling teenagers and the man who stopped the fight went viral. >> and as michelle miller found out the fight seen around the world and its peaceful resolution has changed their lives and their new jersey community. >> reporter: in the midst of an atlantic city street fight last march while young bystanders recorded every swing -- neighbor ali miller stepped in, broke it up, and gave these teens a piece of his mind. >> look around. who ill-advised you? who told you wrong? >> reporter: mill 'eers lecture to this crowd went viral, now viewed more than 36 million times. words taken to heart by sheldon ward and jamar mobley. >> why is it different?
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>> because i never had no father figure in my life, so coming from a man made it different. >> nobody told us to stop, to not fight, it's not worth it. >> he said what a father should have said to us. >> it's important, yo. don't make your mom and dad look like this, yo. >> what did he say then? >> shake hands. and at first he wasn't going to shake and thats. we were still mad at each other. he said he was not leaving. >> he was literally going to stand there. >> i was living a nightmare but chasing a dream. >> to help them work through their own thoughts and emotions. rimes and rap music changes it. so you're like the mayor around here. >> no, not the mayor. but i think people respect those
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who respect them. >> reporter: a father of six himself, miller says he just wants to help kids lead better lives. >> once they know that someone's paying attention, once they know that someone loves them and be there and hold them to account, you know, they'll rise to the occasion. >> reporter: what a difference a little attention makes. >> i just hated this person. i wanted to fight this person. and now we're calling each other brothers. >> reporter: two former foes now feel like family. for "cbs this morning: saturday," michelle miller, atlantic city. >> good for ali miller. what a way to bring a neighborhood back together, to show some leadership for these two young men and really weave the fabric. >> so much good has come out of one gesture. all right. here's a look at the weather for your weekend.
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baking techniques have made it a local institution. up next chad robertson brings us some of his best. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." colgate optic white high impact white is different. it has hydrogen peroxide, to whiten four shades for a visibly whiter smile. trust your smile to colgate optic white. he's a nascar champion who's she's a world-class swimmer who's stared down the best in her sport. but for both of them, the most challenging opponent was... pe blood clots in my lung. it was really scary. a dvt in my leg. i had to learn all i could to help protect myself.
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this morning on the dish, the man known as the bread whisperer, it's taken him across the atlantic and pacific oceans. graduated from the culinary institute of america and met his future wife and business partner elizabeth along the way. >> the couple work and trained throughout france and returned to the u.s. where they opened san francisco's popular tar teen bakery. just last month it opened its first overseas flagship in south korea and another bakery in the words for los angeles. chef chad robertson, welcome to "the dish." >> thank you. >> we've got a spectacular table. tell us what we have here. >> we've got quite an
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assortment. ricotta cake. a little gem salad with shaved carrots and also ricotta on the bottom with some fresh herbs, porchetta in the center and here, shelling beans and broth and here we have a tar teen, which is the toasted bread with also ricotta and winter citrus. >> amazing. all right. i don't see west texas in this table, but that's where you're from, right? >> yeah. >> tell us a little bit about how that shaped the man you've become today. >> i grew up in west texas. pretty simple food for the most part. lots of good barbecue as we all know. my mom and dad were both pretty adventurous cooks in different ways. so i was definitely open to new ideas and sort of enjoying seeing things that i hadn't seen before. >> your dad was actually a punter for the new england patriots? >> he was. >> and you were a ranked tennis
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player as a teenager. >> i was. yeah. sports are a big part of west texas. but the interesting thing about my dad, of course, hayed to play a sport but he didn't care what as long as i focused something. tried everything and settled on tenn tennis. >> your grandfather was a craftsman and i read that sort of working with your hands was a big part of the lure of cooking. >> my grandfather on my mother's side and great grandfather on the same side are cowboy boot and saddle makers, super traditional stuff. i kind of grew up in the boot shop for years and seeing people work with their hands, you know, i was definitely drawn to that. i didn't know what i wanted to do exactly. i wanted to travel. so the idea of learning how to cook sort of seemed to hit both of those boxes where i could travel anywhere, work with my hands, and find work, you know, anywhere in the world. >> at the culinary institute, you not only learned about cooking, but from what i gather,
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alphabetical proximity is what ultimately led you to your wife. >> that was the funny thing. there were mostly guys in the class and maybe two or three girls, and my lovely wife was one of them and our names were together in alphabetical order, sew were put together as partners. we started as friends and started dating and it's been 25 years. >> and you've traveled the world together learning baking techniques and learning more about bread, which is really the showstopper at tar teen. you guys are using instant grains. why are they important? >> i took a trip to denmark and that is where the whole idea of ancient grains came from. claude meyer was working on it with team of farmers for years and they brought all these ancient nordic grains back and all the chefs in denmark were -- this is six, seven years ago, but doing really interesting things. it just dawned on me as a baker
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i grew up with white flour and whole wheat flour and hundreds of different grains. >> now people reserve your bread in advance. >> that happens. we've making more bread now for so long, 15 year, we only had a certain capacity, and now that we have another spot, we make more bread. but we still make a point of baking throughout the day, so you can also get a hot loaf of bread if you come to tar teen. >> you've expanded to korea, world domination for tar teen. >> korea has been fun. >> chef, as we ask you to sign this dish, we'll ask you as we ask oven on this program if you could share a meal with anyone, who would it be? >> honestly with all the travel and expansion, who i want to share a meal with, it's with my wife and daughter because i don't have enough of those. >> right on. chef robertson, thank you. congratulations to all of your success. for more, head to our website,
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cbsnews.com. up next, lucy day was hat her debut with us last year. since then she got a full piece in "the new york times" and is now on a national headline tour. sh'll make her triumphant return to studio 257 next. 4 and clearer skin. this is my body of proof that i can fight psoriatic arthritis with humira. humira works by targeting and helping to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to both joint and skin symptoms. it's proven to help relieve pain, stop further joint damage, and clear skin in many adults. humira is the number #1 prescribed biologic for psoriatic arthritis. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened, as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where
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starring in our saturday session, lueieucy day cass. she got signed to a record deal? >> in a large profile last month "the new york times" said miss dacus was a timeless model, a guitar-based album-oriented songwriter with a big unadulterated voice and a tattooable lyrics. she has her new single "addictions." here is lucy dacus ♪ freeze frame tidal wave in the
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passenger side i'm still a nervous kid after all this time ♪ ♪ can you imagine what it's like to be here request you now forget your current love remember me that one july ♪ ♪ laying bareback on dirt roads watching the planes at night who knew one day it'd be so hard to have you by my side ♪ ♪ now i'm awake at 2:00 a.m. without a cause to draw you in ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ buy low, sell high kind of guy invest your time in what's worthwhile ♪ ♪ was i a risk without reward or did i make you proud ♪ ♪ now i'm awake at 2:00 new mexico without a cause to draw you in ♪ ♪ i'm just calling 'cause i'm used to it you'll pick up 'cause you're not a quitter ♪ ♪ you've got addictions, too, it's true you've got addictions too ♪
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♪ you've been around the world and back always return to the ones you love ♪ ♪ you've got a sense of adventure an adventure for comfort that keeps you at home ♪ ♪ i'm just calling 'cause i'm used to it you'll pick up 'cause you're not a quitter ♪ ♪ you've got addictions, too, it's true you've got addictions too ♪ ♪ ♪ releasing years of senseless waiting you've got addictions, too, it's true you've got addictions too ♪ ♪ you've got addictions, too, it's true you've got addictions too ♪
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♪ you've got addictions, too, it's true you've got addictions too ♪ ♪ you've got addictions, too, it's true you've got addictions too ♪ don't go away. we'll be right back with more music from lucy dacus. 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. spring is coming!
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enjoy the season with a great deal on a new toyota. like low apr financing on the technology-loaded corolla... ...the adventurous rav4... ...the rugged tundra and more! i'm rebuilding the deck?? yep. okay.. right now, start your spring with great savings on an incredible selection of our most popular models. offers end april 2nd. for great deals on other toyotas, visit toyota.com. ready, set, go get your toyota today. toyota. let's go places. and i heard that my cousin's so, wife's sister's husband was a lawyer, so i called him. but he never called me back! if your cousin's wife's sister's husband isn't a lawyer, call legalzoom and we'll connect you with an attorney. legalzoom. where life meets legal.
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have a good weekend. we leave you with more music from lucy dacus. here's "yours and mine." ♪ ♪ i'm afraid of pain
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both yours and mine both yours and mine ♪ ♪ i'm afraid of pain from where it comes and where it falls ♪ ♪ somebody lit the store on fire somebody lit the house on fire ♪ ♪ somebody lit the crowd on fire marching away and you've got nothing to say ♪ ♪ you've got nothing to say have you got nothing to say ♪
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♪ for those of you who told me i should stay indoors take care of you and yours take care of you and yours ♪ ♪ but me and mine me and mine we've got a long way to go before we get home ♪ ♪ 'cause this ain't my home anymore this ain't my home anymore this ain't my home ♪ ♪ somebody lit the store on fire somebody lit the house on fire ♪ ♪ somebody lit the crowd on fire
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marching away and you've got nothing to say ♪ ♪ you've got nothing to say have you got nothing to say ♪ ♪ for those of you who told me i should stay indoors take care of you and yours take care of you and yours ♪ ♪ but me and mine me and mine we've got a long way to go before we get home ♪ ♪ 'cause this ain't my home anymore this ain't my home anymore this ain't my home ♪
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♪ ♪ take care of you and yours take care of you and yours ♪ ♪ take care of you and yours take care of you and yours ♪ ♪ but me and mine me and mine me and mine me and mine ♪ ♪ me and mine me and mine me and mine me and mine ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪ we've got a long way to go before we get home 'cause this ain't my home anymore this ain't my home anymore ♪ ♪ this ain't my home anymore this ain't my home anymore ♪
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>> for those of you still with us, we have one more song by lucy dacus. >> this is "pillar of truth." ♪ ♪ i am week looking at you a pillar of truth turning to dust ♪ ♪ i am weak looking at you a pillar of truth turning to dust ♪ ♪ ♪ you're prepared
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for the shade of the sea for the sparrows at my window ♪ ♪ lord have mercy on my descendants for they know not what they do ♪ ♪ for they know not who you are and they know not what to do ♪ ♪
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man: we've secured the search warrant, all units are clear to move in. man: unit 3 on the move. mitch: police! amanda: clear! mitch: yeah, we're clear back here boss. amanda: okay johnson, you search the bedroom, and minnix take the kitchen area. nice place for a college dealer huh? mitch: yeah, well the opioid business is booming. looks like we just missed him huh? amanda: yeah. the only thing we got on this guy is the address. we'll have to contact the landlord see if she can i.d.

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