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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  April 21, 2018 4:00am-6:00am PDT

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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it's april 21st, 2018. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." is it a real diplomatic breakthrough? north korea says it's suspending its nuclear and missile tests. we have the latest on what it will take to make it last. plus, a sweeping lawsuit over the 2016 election. the dnc sues the trump campaign, wikileaks, and russia, claiming conspiracy against the clinton campaign. saying farewell to the first lady. more than a thousand mourners gather for today's funeral of
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barbara bush. we'll have details on the ceremony. and the mystery in the world of music. one of the most popular deejays is found dead at only 28 years old. but we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> north korea announces what appears to be a significant concession ahead of a historic summit with president trump. >> kim jong-un blinks. >> the stunning news from north korea. kim jong-un says the regime no longer needs nuclear or missile test. >> rocket man might become pocket man, pocketing all of his missiles. and they haven't even met yet. >> i'm not high-fiving yet, but this is a good sign. >> students take to the streets after the gun massacre in
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colorado. >> enough is enough. enough is enough. >> the faa orders the inspections of nearly 700 engines worldwide after the deadly southwest explosion. >> friday the public was allowed to pay tribute to former first lady barbara bush. today a very private funeral service planned. ♪ so wake me up when it's all over ♪ >> tim berg ling better known as aviche has died. >> all that and all that matters. >> count it and a foul. bogdanovich tries again. way downtown. a season high 30 points. >> -- on "cbs this morning." enthusiasts are continuing to light up on 4/20 as the day of cannabis. >> you know what that means?
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your taxes are five days late, stoners. welcome to the weekend, everyone. i'm anthony mason along with day ya jacobson, and we begin this morning with what could be a huge diplomatic breakthrough with north korea. they say that have suspended their nuclear long-range and missile tests. but there was no sign of giving up the program. it was days later after he met with south korean leader. >> the president is at his ma mar-a-lago resort in florida. it would be a much needed
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welcome development for president trump who has been mired in mounting legal issues from the criminal case against his personal attorney to a new civil lawsuit filed by the dnc against his campaign, but soon after this news out of north korea, president trump was fast to describe it as progress being made for all. for decades north korean missile tests have been messages of tactile strength but now there's a willingness to end them. he reported as of today north korea will end long-range missile tests and close a nuclear site. president tweeted friday, this is very good news for the world. look forward to our summit. he's planning on a one-on-one summit with kim jong-un time within the next two months while
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they're set to hold talks with south korea next week. >> we've never been in a position like this with that regime, whether it's father, grandfather, or son. >> during a meeting the president downplayed what could be accomplished when he meets with kim. >> if i think that it's a meeting that is not going to be fruitful, we're not going to go. if the meeting when i'm there is not fruitful, i will respectfully leave the meeting. >> it is in stark contrast to mr. trump's language last summer following his missile tests and threats. >> they will be met with fire, fe fu fury, and, frankly power, the likes of which they have never seen before. >> in an interview with "face the nation" moderator margaret brennan iran's foreign minister said if the u.s. pulls out of
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the mission its country is prepared to restart its nuclear programs. >> we have put out a number of options for ourselves, and those options are ready, including options that would involve resuming at a much greater speed our nuclear activities. >> now, president heads back to washington sunday and will host french president emmanuel macron on monday. a senior white house official says the two will discuss iran's nuclear tishtds as well as concerns president trump has over the activities in the region. dana? >> errol barnett with the president in florida. thank you. president trump says it could backfire. the democrats are sued mr. trump's election campaign. russia, wikileaks, and mr. trump's son-in-law, alleging they conspired to damage hillary
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clinton's campaign for president. the sweeping complaint was filed yesterday in federal court here in new york. it says, quote, the trump campaign and its agents glee pli welcomed marco rubio's help. nancy cordes reports. >> the defendants are the who's who of the trump campaign. donald trump jr. and others including the russia federation itself, all accused by the democratic national committee of previous unimaginable treachery. dnc chairman tom perez. >> we're seeking justice and we're seeking deterrence. >> his 66-page suit accuses russian hackers of stealing thousands of documents from the dnc. it outlines all the contacts between russia and the trump campaign. in april 2016, for instance, trump foreign adviser george papadopoulos met with a kremlin
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agent who told him about the trump breach days after it happened. the embarrassing detail leak rocked the dnc. >> want to be respectful of you and u want you to be respectful of me. >> it was last-ditch effort to sub stan chat the baseless russian collusion allegations by a nearly bankrupt democratic party. >> your critics say this is just a stunt to try to raise money. >> protecting democracy is not a publicity stunt. we had employees, nancy, whose lives were threatened. if you threaten one of my colleagues current or former, yeah, i'm going to fight back. i'm going to fight like heck. >> he said the dnc is doing this now because evidence has been piling up and yesterday russia still hasn't paid the price for election meddling, but some democrats don't think it's a good idea. they think it will further move
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the criminal investigation being conducted by rob earth mueller. >> we have a plate full of developments every morning. we seem to every morning, but never mind. let's get some perspective from leslie sanchez. good morning. >> good morning. >> let's start with this dnc suit here. what is the strategy by the democrats here? do you think it's a stunt? >> in many ways you could say it's a political stunt. what it does for the narrative is it does drag it back to the issue of russian involvement. if you think of it as a mosaic, a lot of pieces that get lost in the noise, this puts a broad structure around it and tethers it back to the investigation. it allows for the dep something's. there's going to be inquiries, details, and closure. it's a very strategic shrewd
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move, but it does not account for the underlying problem the democrats have. the internal corruption, the way they talked about the shenanigans going on with the hillary campaign and there wasn't a way for the progressive candidate to move forward, not to mention they're nearly bankrupt, $6 billion in debt when you have big coffers on the other side. a lot of political fin agling, but there are other things that could come out of this. >> what are the big developments? kim jong-un announcing a big freeze. why now and what does this mean? >> there's more talk of the economic sanctions having a political impact. it's very smart to do something like this right before the summit. i will say it's very skeptical.
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it's this today. what will it be tomorrow? it's not necessarily part of a longer term. it's something he's put political pressure. they're coming. you can't discount that. you have the may 12 deadline, so there's a lot of different things lining for a possible way to move forward, a more positive way than we've seen. >> we saw that. >> did we learn anything differntly than what we all suspect thad we knew?
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>> what's interesting is some saw the redacted and learned more than others did. it's not a fair balance of who learned what. there was not a clarification even after the fact. >> that always changes. >> that changes. >> what we know now, that's exactly what the ig should be doing. this is something you had three house committee members asking for these memos to be disclosed. >> this shows there was no obstruction of justice. it doesn't show that. it shows there's a mix of what has been shared. tomorrow morning on fasz the nation geftds will include tom cotton and dianne feinstein of california. the federal aviation administration has ordered
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inspections of 737s. g investigators believe one of the engine blades snapped, with debris flying through the window and sucking a passenger halfway out of the plane. cracks were too small to be seen with the naked eye. federal health officials are urging consumers to throw away any romaine lettuce due to e. coli contamination. the centers for disease control says to throw it away. he warning includes whole heads, chopped romaine, and romaine in salad mixes. >> you're advised to throw away lettuce you might have eaten even if you have not gotten sick. it's believed to have been grown in yuma but the exact origin hasn't been determined. the warning says not to eat any
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romaine lettuce unless you know it was not groan in arizona. it's sickened 63 people in 16 states. some have been hospitalized with kidney failure. there are no reported deaths. there is more legal trouble for embattled governor eric greitens. on friday he was charged with tampering with computer information. he is going to trial over a nonconsensual photo he took of a partially nude woman he had an affair with. he said, quote, by now everyone know as what this is. the prosecutor will use every charge she can to smear me. more than a thousand mourners are expected to attend the funeral of barbara bush. mrs. bush died in her home in houston on tuesday. she was 92 years old.
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former president bill clinton and his wife hillary and former president barack obama and his wifemy shell will be there. first lady melania trump will be there but president trump will not be there. bianna golodryga is there where 1 1,500 mourners are expected. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. this is where the 1,500 mourners will be. to give you a sense of how beloved the bush family is in this city, there have been calls, why haven't we been invited. we were such good friends with the bushes. and they weren't wrong. the bushes seem to have been friends with everyone. thousands thousands lined up at the church where mrs. bush and her husband attended for over five decades.
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george h.w. bush and his daughter pause at the casket before thanking well-wishers. the beloved matriarch died tuesday at the age of 92. the funeral today will be attended by four former presidents along with first lady melania trump. there will also be some 1,500 invited guests. >> ev feels like they've lost a friend, a role model, someone of great inspiration. >> bush family pastor reverend dr. russell levinson jr. will lead the eulogy. >> i don't know how you ask a reverend but i'm going ask na anyway. are you prepared? >> i am prepared. we're going to honor her, give thanks for her remarkable life and celebrate her faith.
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>> reporter: she impacted people says quinton richardson. >> about teaching a person to read and you unlock their life of unknown possibilities. that stuck with me. >> reporter: he's one of the barbers who partnered with barbara bush and provided buook in all of their shops. >> if people will read to their children 15 minutes or more every day, it would be a complete game-changer. >> two years ago houston texans linebacker j.j. watt teemed up with mrs. bush in this psa to tackle it literacy. mr. watts said he teemed up with mrs. bush which inspired him to do his charitable work to help with hurricane harvey. >> i'm thankful for the fact she showed me what it's like. throughout her life she
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campaigned for literacy but she was about service of others. >> and throughout their lives the bushes have raised more than $1 billion for charities like cancer charities and litd rahcy charities as well. the president and his wife did a lot of planning for today's service. they picked the eulogist which will include jeb bush. the procession will be driven about an hour and half from here in college station where she'll be laid to rest next to her beloved daughter robin who died of leukemia at the age of 3. >> she was such a spirited woman. i love those pictures. the picture of her in shoulder pads? >> i told you i loved seeing the detail standing by and being there no matter what. cbs newss will be bringing you live coverage of mrs. bush's
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funeral at noon eastern time, 11:00 central. on a day of school walkouts calling for tighter gun controls a shooting in yet another florida school. a video taken by a student at forest high school in ocala shows heavily armed police entering a classroom of panicked students. the 19-year-old student was arrested and then apologized. the sheriff praised deputy jimmy long as a hero. >> without hesitation, without second thought, in less than three minutes after hearing the gunshot, responded and took into custody the suspect. >> the suspect was a former student at the school. the wounded student was treated for a non-life-threatening injury. elsewhere students walked out of their classrooms on frew to renew their call to lawmakers to take action on gun control
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reform. some focused on voter registration. >> our generation is voting next, and this is how strong we are and we're motivated. >> because we're so young people don't think we have a voice and our voice doesn't matter. i think by doing this stuff we're saying it does matter, and we are the future. >> organizers say more than 2, 00 schools representing every state took part in the effort. it was timed to coincide with the 19th anniversary of the columbine massacring. >> jeff sessions may be offering an insurance policy to the man overseeing robert mueller's russian meddling investigation. he told white house's don mcgahn that if the president fires rod rosenstein in an effort to shut down the investigation, he might lead too. sessions has been the target of
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numerous attacks since he recused himself from the investigation. it's that recusal that placed rosenstein in change. "the hollywood reporter" says holy mack who was on "smallville" is facing sex trafficking charges. mack recruited unsuspecting women to join what she called an empowering women. they were exploited sexually and physically. she entered a not guilty plea in a court appearance on friday. "the philadelphia inquirer" reports temple university has suspended the all fa epsilon pi. they both attended partds at the fra tern
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fraternities. the "new york daily news" reports a new york mets fan is hoping to pay back one of his childhood heroes. veteran infield ed crane pool is in need of a kidney as he battles with a diabetes-related issue withes he kidney. a man remembers him signing his baseball mitt when he was just 5 years old. it's not clear if the two are a match, but the fan who is being tested said he will donate his kidney if he can help. >> well, if you're a mets fan, he's a big name. >> it's always amazing to me what someone will do for someone who touched them even in a small way. it's 22 after the hour. now here's a look at the weather for your weekend.
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one of the world's most famous and wealthiest deejays is found dead at just 28 years old. still ahead, we'll look at the short and wildlife of the world famous deejay and producer. and later some teenage hackers wanted to find out just how far they could go. they found themselves deep into microsoft's xbox division and in deep trouble with federal authorities. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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there is one thing everyone in the nation can agree on. people are fascinated by the historic vehicles on the national mall. we're going to take a closer look at which ones are the cooler cars. and sektd rogan opens up about his film career, the infamous sony hack and the star-studded special he helped to raise money for an important
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cause. we'll be right back. this is "cbs this morning:
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it's undeniable when you look at the tape they i'm responsible, we're personally responsible and we need to address it with transparency. we all got on the plane to address it. >> when you say "we," who do you say it is? >> kevin johnson and my team. in recognizing it we decided we're going to close every single store at great expense for retraining, but it won't stop there. we have been on a journey to talk about race in america. it's a very difficult subject. >> talking about race makes people very uncomfortable, howard. you say, let's go there. >> i think, you know, the country has systemic issues. certainly there's a great divide
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in the country. there's a great divide around grace in america. i'm not saying starbucks has an anecdote to fix it, but perhaps we can use the moment as a healing moment for our company and in doing so, given the fact we serve so many millions of people and employ hundreds of thousands of people, we can use this as an opportunity to educate. >> you say when you look at the tape, you were heartsick. did you think it was an isolated incident? i'm asking that because now i'm hearing more and more stories from people i know. people on the street are saying, you know what? i had an incident at starbucks. i'm not surprised to hear this. >> i think it's possible given the unconscious bias and hoye systemic this problem is in the country, that this is not an isolated situation. and if it's not, we will deal with every one of them.
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queen elizabeth's 92nd birthday is being celebrated this morning with special cannon salutes in parts of london and windsor. she's the world's oldest reigning monarch beginning back in 1952. >> she will be treated to a birthday concert later today featuring an incredible lineup. tom jones. sting. shaggying and kylie minogue. it's set for june when the weather is expected to be warmer. >> wow. cannons, cavalry. it's kind of impressive.
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>> it's a little bit better than candles on a cake. >> i've got nothing. >> i get candles. that's it. welcome back to "cbs this morning." we begin this hour with a trailblazer. the electronic music dance deejay avicii was found dead on friday. >> the swedist artist whose real name is tim bergling was one of the highest deejays paid in history. he would perform for thousands of music festivals. vladimir duthiers of our digital network cbsn remembers the 28-year-old pioneer. avicii, one of the biggest stars of electronic dance music died after being nominated the billboard music award. he quickly became the hottest
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producer in the music industry collaborating with beyonce and cold play. along with country music artist zac brown. tributes on social media began immediately upon the news of his passing. he was called a beautiful soul, passionate and extremely talented with so much more to do. diplo added, you set the precedent for the rest of us producers, opened doors and set the trends. the deejay had been plagued by health problems including acude pan korea tie it is, often associated with excessive drinking. in 2014 he had a surgery to remove his gallbladder and appendix and then canceled shows to recover. >> i honestly have never felt this good before. so many trips to the hospital and back and forth. there was so much going on at the same time. we i was getting skinny, everything. i needed to break just to be home. >> reporter: in 2016 he
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announced his retirement from touring to his fans on his been site saying, i know i am blessed to be able to travel all around the world to perform, but i have too little left for the life of a person behind the artist. but the superstar deejay continued to record. just last fall was the subject of a documentary that included his health struggles. >> it got to a point where it was too much. >> reporter: just days before his death, the swedish performer posed with fans on the arabian sea where he died. no cause of death was given. for "cbs this morning: saturday," vladimir duthiers. >> this is a real stunner. so sad. >> listen to that song, wake me up. i think about the number of times i've listened to that trying to get in a workout. he really had an impact. >> still pretty much of a mystery what happened. his was a late invite to the nfl combine where draft
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prospects show their stuff, but his performance made him the star of the event. still ahead, will an athlete who's proven the doubters wrong finally achieve his dream? but first here's a look at the weather for your weekend. it's a remarble piece of medical journal it. . dr. jon lapook on what he's tweeted. tracking the effects on alzheimer's disease on a single patient and her husband turned caregiver. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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rounds," an intimate look at the devastating progression of alzheimer's disease. according to the alzheimer's association, every 65 seconds, someone in the u.s. develops the disease, the most common form of dementia. >> in a remarkable report airing on "60 minutes" tomorrow night, cbs medical correspondent dr. jon lapook followed one patient and her caregiver husband for a decade to give an unprecedented look at this debilitating disease. good morning. >> good morning. in 2008 i met carol daley and her husband mike a retired new york city cop. this january i returned with " 0 minutes" to see how they were doing. we pieced it all together to give a unique look at the toll the disease takes on both the patient and the caregiver. when you heard the word "alzheimer's," what did that do to you? >> i was devastate.
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>> reporter: what makes this story so unusual is almost every year for the past ten years, we've interviewed mike and carol as alzheimer's took over her brain. even though this is intensely personal, they wanted us all to see the devastating impact on alzheimer's on each of them over a decade. >> what's your husband's name? >> my husband's? >> yeah. your husband ease name. the guy sitting to your left. yeah. >> it's just devastating. you said to us in the break people have responded on twitter already saying this is hard to look at and i don't know. but we have to look at it. it's hit an overwhelming number of people p are we ready to deal with those numbers? >> no, we're not ready for it. there are 5.5 million people. there are ten other people who are deeply affected. it's costing hundreds of billions of dollars in direct cause and loss of income from
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caregivers who have to quit their jobs to help take care of them. >> carol's husband mike becomes her caregiver and this is ten years now, which is extraordinary. what is the toll on mike over this period of time mentally and physically. >> it takes a huge toll on him. it's so lovely. this is what i signed up for. you see him combing her hair and putting her makeup on and making bed. he said she used to do this. i signed up for your this. i'm not putting her in a nursing home, i can take care of her. but he can't oefrp the years his blood pressure went up, weight went up, he became anxious, got panic attacks. it got to the point where he couldn't do it on his own. i think that's a lesson. this is a big message. you may think you're tough. you know, he's a staten island cop, retired new york city cop until alzheimer's. you cannot do it alone. >> that's a message that everybody has to take away from this. >> i think it is.
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he had some help. first of all, his neurologist has been unbelievable. you're a physician but you cross over into friend also. she's been both of that to both of them. i find that same friction. i have the physician hat, the journalist hat, the person hat. >> i was struck by that number, ten years. that's a long time for an alzheimer's patient, isn't it? >> it is. the alzheimer's association said they don't know of another report where somebody with alzheimer's was followed certainly for ten years. the average time between diagnosis and dying is four to eight years. it can go as long as 20 years. >> are we just diagnosing alzheimer's earlier? is that part of this, or is it a unique case? >> i think in her case it's very unusual that she lived this long. there is hope.
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there are new approaches to diagnosis. one of the big things is we think we're treating people way too late. it's like giving somebody lipitor after their fifth heart attack and they're already in heart failure. it turns out the pathological changes in the brain begin 10, 20, 30 years before the symptoms even start. the other thing i want to point out is people have to ask discussions when they're still with it about what their desires are. if i get to the point where i have to be in a nurse home, is that okay. if you can't handle me alone and i become demented, sit okay to bring in outside help. it's so important. they're tough discussions and americans don't like to have discussions about end of life. we have to do it. >> dr. jon lapook, thank you very much. you can see all of jon's report and more tomorrow night on "60 minutes" right here on cbs. young computer geniuses are often cheered for their boldness and ingenuity until their
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efforts cross over. ahead, the group of teen hackers, the networks they penetrated, and the steep price they paid. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." i want the most out of my health and life. so i trust nature made vitamins. because they were the first to be verified by usp for quality and purity standards. and because i recommend them as a pharmacist. nature made, the #1 pharmacist recommended vitamin and supplement brand. ways to lthe northern belly fat. percussion massage. not cool. freezing away fat cells with coolsculpting? now that's cool. coolsculpting safely freezes and removes fat cells. with little or no downtime. and no surgery. results and patient experience may vary. some rare side effects include temporary numbness, discomfort, and swelling. ask your doctor if coolsculpting is right for you. and visit coolsculpting.com today
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when a group of teenage hackers started to infiltrate microsoft and its xbox video game division, it may have been a challenge and a thrill, but it didn't end so innocently. >> members of the group beforwe accused of stealing. the story of the young and the reckless is detailed in "wired" magazine this beak and available on newsstands this tuesday. we're joined by its author and editor brendan kerner. welcome. that's a kulikov.
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>> thank you. >> what happened exactly? >> the first was a scale of stealing $200 million of intellectual problem. secondly, the hacking was incredible to me. they actually organized a physical break-in burglary of microsoft headquarters of an xbox prototype. they counterfeited the console. >> can you take us through the journey? how does that happen where you're gaming and enjoying it and then you're doing something illegal. >> when he was 2 he was playing first-person on his parents games and at age of 13 he was creating games. wildly gifted, but i think his curiosity and drive for more and more challenge drove him to pretty dark places and took some pretty huge risks. >> you say he wasn't motivated by money.
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the most what he coveted was taking 60 million dollar games and making them behavior however he wished. >> they left hundreds of thousands of credit card numbers on the table. they stole documents that would have been worth millions of dollars for rivals to microsoft. they didn't use them to solve them. they built prototypes in their bedrooms instead. instead it was a thrill, a buzz, a kick of being in their bedroom and knowing that they, a gang of teenagers, really, was running circles around these multi-billion-dollar companies. >> it came through and the intellectual curiosity. is there a way to use this for good? let's say instead of what they were doing. >> one thing that came across to me several times in talking to the hackers, in school they didn't feel challenged. if they were fortunate enough to be in a school that had computer science classes, they were way
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more advanced than their teachers. there was nothing extra. it's actually an opportunity for the industry and the fast to develop organizations and programs to spot this talent, give them outlets, give them challenges to tackle and then recruited these kids in to their businesses. >> david was in his early 20s when he was arrested. did they sense at all that they might be putting themselves in legal danger? >> they did. they talked about the fact that the fbi was onto them. they were reading e-mails talking to the fbi, someone's inside our network, with need to investigate this. >> they weren't scared by this? >> to them it was a game. >> till it wasn't. >> till things went awry for them unfortunately. >> it's nothing knew they had this dapability. we talk about hacker conventions that go on, but it seems a little unique that you had this group that is so organized. how unique is that? >> it's not that unique.
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i think when people who live all over the world find each other online and find common interests that they don't share. they forge an emotional attachment and bond. they forged a real friendship with each other but they also portrayed each other. >> should we be scared, brendan, that a group of teenagers could do this? there's so many concerns about cyber security. there's another one. >> sure. on some levels we should be. not just the fact that networks are too porous and there are too many flaws. but the fact that once they're inside the networks, we don't kick them out. you had these teenage hackers get inside the networks. the fbi was aware and they stayed in there for months at a tomb. we need to change our philosophy about security and make sure we do high jeechblt people will get inside, with need to kick them out. >> it's fascinating that they were reading e-mails that the fbi was mr.
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brendan kerner. thank you. four-wheeled history hits the national mall. up next, the cars show casing some of the most historic rides in american culture. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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are you one sneeze away from being voted out of the carpool? try zyrtec®. it's starts working hard at hour one. and works twice as hard when you take it again the next day. stick with zyrtec® and muddle no more®. steve mcqueen may have had top billing, but the ford mustang fastback he race aid cross the screen stole the show. they're often credited with being some of the best in cinema history. adding to the car's mystique, it was thought to be lost for 40 years before resurfacing in 2014. the mustang is one of five cars being celebrated this month at the historic cars association in
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washington. all are on the historic vehicle register and are recognized as historically significant by the library of congress. the plymouth voyager revolutionized the car industry. chrysler's ce o'lee iacocca introduced this, the first minivan in 1983. the car saved chrysler from bankruptcy, changing the way american families travel. also featured, the last model t ford to be manufactured in 1927. henry ford and son edsel personally droesh this car nicknamed the tin lizzie off the assembly line. and a cadillac type 57 used in world war i that is celebrating its 100th birthday. >> the 1961 ferrari 250 gt
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california. rounding out the exhibition, another car with some hollywood history, the red sports car ferris buehler boroughed to use on his day off, only this car is just a replica of a 1961 ferrari gt 53, one of three used in the classic comedy. >> that is pretty. >> yeah. today is the only day that they're all together. >> on the mall. >> on the mall. >> wow, wow. can i say that the plymouth voyager is not nearly as sexy as the mustang on the mall. i'm sorry, plymouth voyager. and i geebt say this photo here o the mustang and the monument, there it is there with the monument behind it, that's just the coolest thing i've ever seen. >> it reminds you cars are pieces of work oftentimes. >> pieces of art. >> yes. still to come, seth rogen's movie is a comedy born of
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tragedy. how it's bringing laughs and positive change. for some of you, your local news is next. for your the rest of you stick around. this is "cbs this morning: saturday." i was raised in a largely white community. i identified more with white culture. and i began asking myself where is the burmese side of my history? where is that made manifest? >> alex, were you looking for your place in an american story or any story? >> i wanted to find myself situated in the american story. i think all americans, especially right now, want to find themselves in the american story. we're so fractured in the country. there's such a fraction about identity, who belongs here, what's the immigrant's story and how does it dovetail with the american story. that's a fundamental question right now, right? i wanted to find out what kind of american am i and who were my american forefathers. >> there's that cliche, we're a group of american immigrants. that's not the cliche you want.
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>> a lot is lost when you immigrate to america. what i did was go back to the homelands and find the ugly parts of the story and wrietd about this because i think part of becoming home is dealing with all the since and warts and citiz sizures. >> you say, hello, bad family. >> we did bad things on both sides in europe and in asia and i think it is about coming to terms with the things we left that were broken, that we didn't just arrive here on american shores virtual perfect immigrants, virtuous new citizens of a country. we had our own baggage. and part of this moment, i think, is reconciling that american baggage.
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we can now use a blood sample toh care, target lung cancer more precisely. if we can do that, imagine what we can do for asthma. and if we can stop seizures in epilepsy patients with a small pacemaker for the brain, imagine what we can do for multiple sclerosis, even migraines. if we can use patients' genes to predict heart disease in their families, imagine what we can do for the conditions that affect us all. imagine what we can do for you.
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welcome to "cbs this morning saturday," i'm anthony mason. >> and i'm dana. cobson. what's the hang-up. they look into if they colluded to stop cellphone customer from easily switching companies. and an inspiring football player who's turning heads ahead of next week's nfl draft. and funny man seth rogen talks about his filming and why a comedy variety show means more to him than his usual project. that's ahead. first the latest on our top story, north korea is suspends
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its nuclear and missile tests and says it wants to concentrate on its economy. kim jong-un is preparing to meet with south korean leader moon jae-in. >> president trump says he's looking forward to meeting with kim jong-un. errol barnett is with the president at his mar-a-lago resort. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. they're calling it progress and very good news. while japanese prime minister shinzo abe is act more cautiously. kim jong-un says as of today it would no longer conduct long-range missile test and close one nuclear testing facility, but it did not mention short raij tests or giving up its arsenal altogether. still it seens as positive
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development and a sign of good will as north korea plans to meet with south korea this week to discuss peace plans. president trump said he's looking forward to his own meeting with kim jong-un taking place some time before mid june. but he also noted he will walk away or refuse to go if it appears north korea is not serious about denuclear zachlgs president trump is also holding first state of his administration on monday when he weekends french president emmanuel macron. their program will be discussed just as iran threatens to restart its program if the u.s. leaves the deal, which president trump has threatened to do. anthony? >> errol barnett with the president in florida. thanks, errol. health officials are urging consumers to throw away any romaine lettuce due to any possible e. coli contamination. the warning from centers for disease control is lettuce from
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the yuma, arizona, region. that includes eating it in restaurants or buying it from grocery stores. into colludes whole head, chopped romaine or in salad mixes. it has sickened 53 people in 16 states. there are no reported deaths. the justice department has opened an anti-trust investigation into whether at&t, verizon, and telecommunications standards organization worked together to stop consumers from easily switching wireless carriers. they confirmed the inquiry in several state. they're looking into whether at&t and verizon suppressed a technology that allows customers to change carriers. one device maker filed complaints. it's nearly four minutes after the hour. now here's a look at the weather for your weekend.
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he's okay if you find him an inspiration. we'll look at him and a place in if fnl despite a disthabltd would have kept most players on the sidelines. that's ahead on "cbs this morning: saturday." how do you become america's best-selling brand? by opening new doors to big possibilities with the first ever ford ecosport. woman: my niece maria. maria: hi! woman: perfection! by connecting drivers to what's important. maria: i love that. and by protecting those who matter the most. the all-new ecosport. it's the big upgrade in a small package. from ford. america's best-selling brand.
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is not a robe. it's just really nice toilet paper. at the marine mammal center, the environment is everything. we want to do our very best for each and every animal, and we want to operate a sustainable facility. and pg&e has been a partner helping us to achieve that. we've helped the marine mammal center go solar, install electric vehicle charging stations, and become more energy efficient. pg&e has allowed us to be the most sustainable organization we can be. any time you help a customer, it's a really good feeling. it's especially so when it's a customer that's doing such good and important work for the environment. together, we're building a better california. go to work, go to work, go to work. >> oh, yeah, let's go. let's go. >> wearing a prosthetic grip on his arm, shaquem griffin put up an astonishing bench pressure in
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last month's nfl combine where potential draft picks show their skills. he bumped up his draft stock in nfl circles and his popularity outside them. griffin has spend a lifetime proving the doubters wrong and expects next week's draft will be no different, hoping his hard work and dedication will take him to the pros and his message to the masses. shaquem griffin paypllays footb the same way he approaches life. >> i'm in a good mood and when somebody tells me i can't do something, i just go and prove them wrong. >> griffin's got it coming the other way. >> that determined mindset is part of shaquem's dna. due to a congenital birth defect, he was born with a nonfunctioning pain-filled left hand. he was the one at age 4 who told his parents it was time to amputate. >> it was so sensitive to touch
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and everything else. i remembered the night i wanted to be dr. griffin. i kind of bumped my hand on the wall. i remembered i climbed up on top of the counter trying to get a knife out and cut my fingers off. my mom caught me in the kitchen. >> i was holding him, trying to get him back to sleep. i thought what is it i have to do. >> she held me that night and the next morning that's when she took me to the hospital. >> 4-year-old shaquem never looked back. >> i remember after the surgery the next day, my mom said don't get your fingers dirty and play with the ball. i came back inside with a bloody bandage and felt better. the joy to play with my brothers was more than everything. >> especially playing with twin brother shaquille. >> what was it like for you when your brother came home with one hand? >> he looked the same to me. i didn't see no difference, no change. i just seen my brother. >> what were these two like when
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they were little together? >> always competitive from day one. always competing against each other. who can eat the fastest, the most. who can run the fastest, who can catch the most balls. >> but not everyone sasha keep through his same eyes as his twin brother especially when it came to football. >> do you remember the first time somebody told you you couldn't play? >> i was 7 years oil. the opposing team weighed us in. they weighed me in and said i was overweight and i wasn't. next thing i found out the coach said it wasn't for one-handed people. that was when i thought, i'll shoal you what i can do and got my first interception during that game and ended up ending the game and going to the playoffs. >> he and shaquille played alongside each other in st. petersburg, florida. both earn ed scholarships.
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red shirted his first year he russ relegated to the sidelines watching his brother thrive. >> it was hard going through that. i refused to let myself downing refused to let my family down, i refused to let nigh brother down because he sacrificed for us. he said if one of us is playing football, we're both playing football. i said, i'm happy living through you. i was kind of good. now we're both living. >> shaquille is heading into his second season with the seattle seahawks while shaquem is looking to take his own nfl leap this year. shaquem capped 2017 by earned defensive mvp honors in ucf's peach bowl win overrn sealing an undefeated season, but he didn't let up. continuing his workouts, back alongside brother shaquille who pushed shaquem the way only a brother can. >> i'm telling you i going to
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beat his team. >> shaquem's chance to show off the hard work came with a late invite to the nfl combine where the question of being drafted is no longer if but when. >> they invieflted the right one to the nfl combine. eat going to show you. even got a lot to prove. against all odds. >> blowing up the mainstream press, by doing what his younger self had done, proving the doubters wrong. his 20 reps in the 225-pound bench press, more than twice the number he'd ever lifted in college. his 40-yard dash in 40.38 seconds, the best time at the combine for a linebacker in more than a decade, and at the same time his 30-pound lighter brother ran the year before. >> i knew it was going to be a fast time, but i didn't imagine it was going to be that fast in the same time as his brother. the same time. unbelievable. >> the rivalry between you guys really seems to just motivate the two of you more than
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anything. >> oh, yeah, definitely. it's never going to stop. we ooh going to be 620 years old or 75 years old with a walker. you might see us on twitter or a video with us on our walkers trying to see who can outrun each other. >> right now shaquem is days away from potentially going pro, but he says he'll never loose that childhood love of the game. >> i used to dream of it. i could sleep in the whole uniform with my helmet on, i would have did that too. just the joy of it. it was a rush for me. it one for money or being known or famous, i'm a famous nfl player. it's because i genuinely love playing snoobl and you say that now football can be a purpose for you. what is that purpose? >> i mean my purpose for me is to be able to set a standard and get away from people saying -- setting limitations on others because a lot of people say, she has one hand. i only set limitations on me, so let me show you what i can do. >> inspiration for others, the
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same way one-handed pitcher jim abbott, a former major leaguer once inspired shaquem. >> i remember a teacher told me about him. i thought, no way, no way. he showed me a video of him throwing a ball and i tried. it was an epic fail. i knew baseball -- >> not your thing? >> -- wasn't for me. >> but hoe was inspiring to you. >> oh, definitely. you can help a kid and he can help a thousand kids later. he helped me and i can help others. i never want to stop inspiring people to be the best they can be. football doesn't define shaquem griffin. >> the only thing i can say, don't count against this guy. >> no, i wouldn't. what a bond those two brothers have. i love the image of them trying to outrun each other in walkers. >> it will happen. >> great story, dana, thank you. he was already performing standup in junior high and it's been seth rogan's thing ever
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since. we'll talk with him next and why his new variety show means more to him than his usual projects. that's ahead on "cbs this morning: saturday." for adults with advanced non-small cell lung cancer, previously treated with platinum-based chemotherapy, including those with an abnormal alk or egfr gene who've tried an fda-approved targeted therapy, who wouldn't want a chance for another...? who'd say no to a...? who wouldn't want a chance to live longer. opdivo (nivolumab). over 40,000 patients have been prescribed opdivo immunotherapy. opdivo can cause your immune system to attack normal organs and tissues in your body and affect how they work. this may happen during or after treatment has ended, and may become serious and lead to death.
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we're on a mission to show drip coffee drinkers, it's time to wake up to keurig. wakey! wakey! rise and shine! oh my gosh! how are you? well watch this. i pop that in there. press brew. that's it. look how much coffee's in here? fresh coffee. so rich. i love it. that's why you should be a keurig man! full-bodied. are you sure you're describing the coffee and not me? do you wear this every day? everyday. i'd never take it off. are you ready to say goodbye to it? go! go! ta da! a terrarium. that's it. we brewed the love, right guys? (all) yes.
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yeah. >> oh. >> your legs lifted off the ground. >> oh, my god. that is bona fide badass. you've got to keep that tape. it's badass. >> do you need that as evidence? >> you can take the hill as champ, seriously. take that. >> are there any ladies we'd like to show this to? >> that was his scene from "super bad," the 2007 comedy co-written by seth rogan. his laid back manner has managed to deliver some hilarious moments in film over the last ten years. >> lately he's used humor to
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benefit a cause. good morning. >> good morning. he's known for movies like "knocked up," and "the 40-year-old virgin." this year he and his wife created a film. we met up with he and his wife to talk about it, his career, and even that controversy involving north korea. >> my cousin is like your biggest fan in the world, and i was wondering, could you just make a vild owe real quick for him where you say his name and say 4/20 for life and do your stupid [ bleep ] laugh? >> it's a really fresh updating of the classic variety show. is that what you were going for? >> we wanted to make a show where you don't know what's going to happen, where it's completely unexpected from one moment to the next. >> what's up, man? >> i'm dying out here, seth. >> dude, i can tell. you're bombing. >> we put a lot of thought into how to not make it feel like
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some uptight stuffy charity event. >> reporter: what it is is hilarity hilarity for charity. what it is a benefit. >> police welcome my wonderful life lauren. >> he's in the event with his wife. >> i was 25 at the time and felt very alone and scare and didn't feel like i had anyone to connect to who really understood what i was going through, and a few years into it, we decided along with some friends to start this event doi. doing this work has given us hope. >> the charity made it feel like we were going from watching terrible things happen to actively take steps to try to stop the things from happening. >> reporter: the cause brought rogan to washington, d.c., for a different kind of performance. >> the situation is so dire that it caused me, a lazy,
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self-involved, medicated manchild to start this organization. >> what's your ultimate goal with the charity? what's your hope for? >> it's to help people tomorrow by funding great research that's going to make great strides and treatments and cures for the disease and help people today by providing them care. >> there was a woman who came up to me on this trip. she said the only reason i'm on this trip is i have one of your grants. >> reporter: rogan's story began in vancouver, canada, where he started performing standup comedy when he was just 13 years old. >> my name is seth rogen. i'd like to tell you about myself. i'm a two-time "playgirl" centerfold. no. that's not true. i am jewish. >> he joined his wrietding partner and they wrote the mooev "super bad." >> you look like a super
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pedophile in this. number two, it doesn't have name. it's mclovin. >> one name? one name? >> how was it? >> similar in a lot of ways. the jokes we wrote when we were 13 were in the movie. it was written from such a pure emotional place, like we were living it. >> i got your back, you've got mine. >> oh, no. it's the cops. >> come on. >> almost all of it was based on a party we went to one night. something happened one weekend. >> reporter: rogan's big break in front of the camera came when he himself was in high school landing a role in judd apatow's 1999 series "freaks and geeks." they continued to work rogen wa
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>> are you a virgin? >> not since i was 10. >> that makes sense. you're a virgin. >> has it impacted your career? >> "knocked up" impacted my career. they happened at the same time. >> fetch. >> he's playing fetch with my kids. he's treating them like they're dogs. >> "i went into that summer being a guy who was really trying to make it in hollywood and i came out of it being a guy who had starred in an incredibly successful movie and written an incredibly successful movie. it completely changed my career. >> reporter: but nothing got more attention than when he took on the north korean leader in 2014 and the irreverent comedy "the interview," about being given the assignment to kill north korean leader kim jong-un.
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>> you want us to assassinate the north korean leader? >> yes. >> what? >> kim jong-un was not amused. it became a national event. >> it was pretty stressful. there were a few things upseth about it. the way sony handled it, it was not good. they wanted to pull the movie before it was a correct decision to do it. they were not packing us up. >> reporter: the film was also widely seen as sparking the sony hacking scandal when sony's private e-mails and other detail were posted online. >> honestly if you ask me, i don't think north korea hacked sony. i think it was somebody who hated the sony corporation and i think for sony, it's probably a better story than north korea hacked them than somebody who hates them hacked them. >> reporter: the movie was streamed through home streaming. >> do you regret having done the
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film? >> no. if anything i regret how i was convinced to talk about the film when it came out by sony who kind of tried to make us seem as though we weren't trying to make a controversial move and it wasn't something we expected to be incendiary, which is come pleitzly untrue. we knew exactly what we were doing. it was incredibly well researched. >> it didn't keep them from making means. >> is there anything that surprises you that it actually got done and was successful, what you've done? >> sausage party. >> i was trying to say frank. >> who? >> i'm frank. >> i'm surprised anything we do goes well. it's not lost on me. if there was one movie that was chosen to ha with, that one. it took ten years, which is way too long to make a movie on a talking hot dog movie. >> what's the length? >> it should not take more than six months.
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so i went 20 times longer than we should have. >> hilarity for charity is on netflix now. i should say it's very adult, but very creative. his wife lauren wrote and directed "like father kws which will bes out this summer. >> i love that. it's so interesting to hear how stressed out he was by north korea. >> you forget. when i was doing my research for this and talking to him, you forget about that time when there were threats to people going to see the film. it was the big news every day, and he was personally getting a lots of threats. >> and that's what comedy does. you walk that very fine line of going against everything maybe you should j be. >> that's right. >> all right, jamie, we appreciate it. heating things up with the flavors of latin america. up next chef lorena garcia blendss her food into an award winning sample. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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i want other women, other people to feel good about themselves, and i think walking out of this movie, you really do. >> wouldn't it be great if cottage cheese cellulite these would be the norm? >> that is the norm. >> drake has a song he sings, you get on the scale, worry about the pounds, and men never notice. >> right. and then kendrick hasta song. he doesn't want to see photoshop. he wants to see the lines. here i am. >> you got back larchlt someone said did amy schuler really thing a blow to her head would uplift her about her body? >> that's saying women need a brain injury to feel confident.
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that's a huge exaggeration and met for, but basically we all struggle with self-esteem, and when they see the movie, i know they're understand. >> deejay, hit it. >> you do seem to feel very comfortable in your own skin. >> yeah. >> you do. >> yeah. too comfortable. >> most people would say, you can take out a little roll or a piece of cellulite. >> i'm done with that. doing know how to do those things on instagram, when they call someone out. the last couple of years i've really felt good about myself and haven't tried to jauvgts you know? >> but, amy shchuler, what did t take to get there? >> being a woman who uses her voice and expresses views that people disagree with. immediately they go to your appearance. i think a lot of women, they don't use their full potential, their full voices because they're afraid of being insulted.
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this moaning on "the dish" chef lorena gar ya, she learned her heart was in the kitchen. after earning a culinary degree, she took cooking jobs all over the world. >> that helped develop the latin cuisine she serves at chica, her hot spot in las vegas. chef garcia, welcome to "the dish." >> thank you so much. i'm excited to be here. >> we're so excited by this table. >> yes. we brought you chica right here. i'll tell you what we brought here today.
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we were in competition with this, it's absolutely delicious. this is my version of mac and cheese. >> i'll start there. >> instead of macaroni, i use corn. and this is creamy. this is one of my biggest sellers. a black lentil quinoa with shrimp. then you have our house guacamole. >> all delicious. >> this is my cocktail. it's my version of gin and tonic. >> you starltd cooking essentially at a very young age. you do have that first food memory you can share? >> yes. i remember i was about 6 or 7
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years old and i decided to go into the kitchen and make those sopa pias you see there and eggs and coffee and called my dad and brother. i thought i was doing a big thing. we had a picnic in the living room. the kitchen was a total mess, but i had them breakfast. >> you mentioned chica at the venetian in vegas. you're the first latina chef. >> yes. >> which is dreamily important to you. >> yes. i'm extremely happy, could not be happier. i grew up in venn isha. i have been very grateful. >> what's the biggest challenge? >> there have been a lot of challenges. keeping it las vegas, it's las vegas. you have to be up to par. so for me it's important for me that the quality of the dishes i make for two, three, four people is the same we make for five,
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six other people. >> and you traveled globally and work globally to sort of get what your style is. how did that influence you? >> very much so. as soon as i finished culinary art and while i was going to school, i traveled to school, went to paris. i trained at the ritz. i spent months and months in the south of italy. that's my kind of french style and then south america like venezuela, argentina, mexico. >> you followed in your mother and brother's steps and went to law school but you thought you made a mistake? >> the first offer i got, i went into the law firm and i saw the books going to the ceiling, i thought, this is not for me. so i resigned the first day i got hired. i called my mom and dad and said, guys, i'm going to k
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culinary school. >> it all worked out. >> i ask you do sign this dish and ask who would you like to have your meal with me? >> i'd love to dine with michelle obama and pick her brain. i think she's unbelievable and amazing. >> terrific choice. >> as are you. this meal is spectacular. thank you. >> thank you so much. my pleasure. >> for more on chef lorena garcia, you can head to "the dish" on cbsnews.com. >> now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. he's collaborated with music legends and produced move for "indystar"s and fooer john misty. up next on our "saturday sessions," l.a. sing
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singer/songwriter jonathan wilson. we'll talk about his behind-the-scenes work and he'll perform front and center on our "saturday sessions." you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." with taltz. r skin for people with moderate to severe psoriasis, up to 90% had a significant improvement of their psoriasis plaques. with taltz, 4 out of 10 even achieved completely clear skin. don't use if you're allergic to taltz. before starting, you should be checked for tuberculosis. taltz may increase risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them. tell your doctor if you have an infection, symptoms, or received a vaccine or plan to. inflammatory bowel disease can happen with taltz, including worsening of symptoms. serious allergic reactions can occur. ready for a chance at 100% clear skin? ask your doctor about taltz. try it for as little as $5 a month. ask your doctor about taltz.
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♪ the 2018 camry. toyota. let's go places. you got this, come on... like a superhero! 1, 2...jump! come on jump! dogs bring out the good in us. pedigree® brings out the good in them. ♪ pedigree® brings out the good in them. a few problems actually. we've got aging roadways, aging power grids, ...aging everything. we also have the age-old problem of bias in the workplace. really... never heard of it. the question is... who's going to fix all of this? an actor? probably not. but you know who can solve it? business. because solving big problems is what business does best. so let's take on the wage gap,
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the opportunity gap, the achievement gap. whatever the problem, business can help. and i know who can help them do it. ♪ in this morning's "saturday sessions," jonathan wilson, hig collaborations, wilson is one f
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the most talent and sought after producers but he's also a recording art iftd in his own write rite. >> and he's out with a new album. and we'll hear from his own selection but first i talked with him about the art of songwriting. ♪ there is feeling in the california air ♪ for jonathan wilson, songwriting is about patience. how does it come out for you? >> you put feelers out and prayer. >> it can tay months, even years. >> i have songs in the back of my head that are still not done from the year 1999. ♪ from this old furniture town a long time ago ♪ >> wilson moved to los angeles as a teenager trying to make it big in band. >> how did that work out? >> it didn't, no, it didn't. i bachksly tucked my tail and went back to the south where i'm from. >> but the north carolina boy had l.a. under his skin and
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worked his way back to the west coast. he set up an analogue studio in laurel canyon, once the home of joni mitchell and jackson brown and grew obsessed with their sound. >> what did you love in that laurel canyon set? >> sort of a spirit of that time. 1969. i was trying to conjure the vibe. ♪ close your eyes and try to make the diamonds make the night ♪ >> that vibe flowed through his gentle spirit and he debuted his album in 2011. wilson was also making a name for himself as a producer. that same year he produce and played on the same album "father john misty." >> i don't think that we really expected it to blow up at that time, and then it just, you know. it was like wow.
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>> you must like collaborating. >> yeah. for sure. >> roger waters would record much of his later solo album in wilson's studio and invited wilson to tour with him. he played lead guitared on waters' pink floyd songs. while touring the world, wilson was working on a new solo album of his own "rare birds" that moves him beyond the laurel canyon sound. and what about song writing? >> that's the hardest part. >> it is. >> yeah. >> why? >> that's the part where you have to put your name on the dotted line and say, this is it, this is my song. >> and now from his new album "rare birds," here is jonathan wilson with "there's a light."
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♪ there's a light that shines on me, yeah, yeah ♪ ♪ and all my friends and family will agree ♪ ♪ hey, look, it's over you, it's shining brighter still ♪ ♪ hey, man it's overdue but it is your spotlight still ♪ ♪ there is a feeling in the california air there is lust for peace and righteousness everywhere ♪ ♪ lust for me and you and for our spirits too ♪ ♪ there is a reason that we play among the stars, oh, yeah a reason that we are just who we
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are ♪ ♪ a reason that we thrive belief to keep alive a reason that we sing our song and everything ♪ ♪ there is a garden in the expanse of your mind ♪ ♪ and a harvest will speak volumes in due time flowers they will bloom and brother so will you ♪ teach us so we radiate ♪ ♪ return us to our newborn living state ♪ ♪ there is inspiration in everyone you meet ♪ ♪ in every human being on the ♪ they all sing a special song
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and when you sing along you are this for them one note will start the feeling ♪ ♪ today you will grow and though your heart was filled with stone ♪ ♪ the chains that were so limiting well now they're gone ♪ ♪ you cut them right in half with your dream and with your laugh ♪ ♪ you are the sky you are the sun ♪ ♪ you are america and you are everyone ♪ ♪ ♪ you are the miracle of love with all your children at your feet you are the ocean from above so clear so deep ♪
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♪ go ahead and keep us floating in midair in service to the feeling of creations precious secret, love ♪ ♪ believing in each other as we dance into eternity ♪ ♪ ♪ dada, dada, dada, dada da, da, da, da, da da, da, da, da, da ♪ ♪ there's a light a light that shines on me
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and all my friends and family will agree ♪ ♪ hey look, it's over you it's shining brighter still ♪ hey, man, it's overdue but it's your spotlight still ♪ >> don't go away. we'll be right back with more music from jonathan wilson. 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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have a great weekend, everybody. we leave you now with more music from jonathan wilson. >> this is "over the midnight." ♪ ♪ ♪ we are traveling over the midnight we are holding our hearts with are in flight ♪
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♪ and our shoes, they might as well be nails in our minds play 1,000 pretty songs for us ♪ ♪ and there's nothing up here that could be savage, huh-uh there's no fear, no hatred, no killers, no guns ♪ ♪ and besides, you're wearing red ruby lipstick, uh-huh so i touch you and smile while you laugh ♪ ♪ while these idiots all lose their power and we dance as we cover our trail ♪ ♪ yeah, this world it is burning
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but don't it feel incredible whisper in my ear and tell me what you see in the flames, the flames ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ there's a freak leading out of my driveway ♪ ♪ he's a stranger with a kind hippie face ♪ ♪ there's the muscled ghost
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and it's riddled with torment can you roll babe here's some papers and grass ♪ ♪ and besides we've got the whole town hello to roam around in and they've overdubbed our voices in french ♪ ♪ to the beverly hills for our margaritas you look so pretty in the polo but you're smashing in pink ♪ ♪ yeah, this world it is burning but don't it feel incredible whisper in my ear and tell me what you see in the flames, in the flames ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ in the flames, in the flames ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ we are traveling over the midnight we are holding our own we are in flight ♪ ♪ and our shoes they might as well be nails our minds play 1,000 pretty tunes for us ♪ ♪ and there's nothing up here that could be savage there's no fear, no hatred no killer, no guns ♪ ♪ ♪ don't hear no guns ah, ah
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we fear no guns ah, ah don't hear no guns ah, ah we fear no guns ♪ ♪ we hear no guns no guns ah, ah, ah ♪ ♪ no killers, no guns ah, ah, a ah ♪ ♪
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bay area land a handful of people in the hospital.. as thousands turn out for one of the biggest smoke-outs in the country. 420 celebrations in the bay area land a handful of people in the hospital as thousands turnout for one of the biggest smokeouts in the country. a promise to clean up the streets of san francisco. the mayor's new plan to deal with the homeless crisis. north korea makes a surprising announcement about its nuclear weapons program. good morning. it is going to to be a gorgeous day. this is a weekend a lot of folks have been waiting for. you can show you this live shot and be done with the forecast. it is beautiful. mostly clear skies. we are off to a chilly star

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