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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  August 11, 2018 4:00am-5:59am PDT

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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it's august 11th, 20118. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." overnight a plane crashes into puget sound. we'll have the latest on a security breach and why police think he did it. president's former white house aid says she's heard the president use racist language including the "n" word.
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the white house says sh's lying. omarosa says there are tapes of it. >> a routine deadly stop nearly turns deadly. plus a historic island nearly swallowed by the sea. we'll tack you to a northeast fishing town that experts warn is decades from disappearing completely. can it be saved. >> that's the question. first we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. >> what the hello? what is happening right now? >> just did a loop-the-loop. >> a stolen plane crashes in an apparent suicide. >> apparently a ground service agent stole it from the airport. >> the conversation was reported. >> let's try to land that airplane. >> i was kind of hoping was
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going to be it. >> she claims there are tapes of him using the "n" word. >> in southern california, the holly fire continues to grow. >> the man accused of starting the fire shows up in court. >> landmark verdict against monsanto. >> a jury has awarded $289 million to a former groundskeeper who said he got cancer from roundup. >> four people are dead including two police officers a after a shooting in a small city in canada. >> a suspect is in custody. >> a huge sinkhole open up in a lancaster county, pennsylvania, shopping centering swallowing six cars in that. took part in the in my feelings challenge. it didn't go as planned. >> -- and all that matters -- >> the one-year anniversary ended in violence. >> i'm sorry somebody had to die before we paid attention honestly.
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>> -- on "cbs this morning: saturday." sox land, sox land. light it up. >> daniel walks it off for the only run tonight. >> and that was a rocket out of the park. i'll i'm still thinking of those poor police officers in the in my feelings challenge. >> not a good luck. welcome to the weekend, everyone. e i'm dana jacobson along with michelle miller and tony dokoupil in for anthony mason who's on vacation. >> he might be at the beach, where i was. >> he got the better owned the deal. you got the better end of the deal. we begin this morning with one f night. authorities say an employee of horizon air stole an empty
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turboprop plane from seattle, tacoma, international airport before crashing it on ketron island, puget sound, southwest seattle. amateur video shows a plane being followed by f 15 fighter jets before the krarchlt cbs correspondent kris van cleave is in washington with the latest. good morning. >> good morning. officials say it does not appear to be an act of terror. he was suicidal when he stole the plane. it was not in service. it was parked if a a minute nebs area last night. investigators believe the crash occur because the man who lacked flying skills was trying to do stunts. cellphone video captured the stolen twin engine horizon earn does what appears to be a midair barrel role before dropping down perilously off the coastline. >> how does he do it? >> the passenger plane goes
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sideways perpendicular to the grown and fell a few feet above the ground. >> reporter: in radio communications they refer to the man flying as which as they talked with him, it became increasingly clear the airplane employee wu not going to safely laend the plane. >> i know a lot of people care abt me and it's going to disappoint them to hear that i did this. just that broken guy. got a few screws loose, i guess. >> a pair of f 15 fighter jets were scrambled from a base in oregon and intercepteded the turboprop within minutes. they could be seen from the ground. >> one was low and one was highway up in the air and they followed it around and a few minutes later we hear a loud explosion noise. >> reporter: the hour-long flight ended in a cash on island, a small island with a few residents.
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officials don't believe anyone was hurt and the fire does not pose a threat to anyone. it does not appear the man w stole the plane did not survive the crash. >> it appears he did something wrong, something foolishing and paid with his life. >> a spokesman for norad said the fighter jets did not fire on the stolen plane. flights out of sea-tac were held off. the fbi will lead the investigation for now. tony? >> kris, you mentioned the plane was in a maintenance position at the time the plane took off. >> how was this individual able to control the plane and getet on the runway? >> we know he worked on the ground. it would not be unusual if he worked in maintenance to know how to power on the plane and free flight procedures to get the plane going. if you've got basic knowledge, you'd certainly be capable of
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taxiing it out on the runway. landing it is a lot trickier, of course. >> kris van cleave, thank you. there is apprehension in two city this weekend on the one-year anniversary of a white nationalist rally that left one person dead. organizers admit as many as 40,000 could attend. meanwhile 120 miles to the southwest a state of emergency has been declared in charlottesville, virginia, where last year's violence occur. jeff pegues reports. about 700 are part of the heightened security. part of the city has brn locked down, cutting off all vehicular traffic with check points until
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monday morning. >> nothing would excite us any better than for this to be noneventful, folks to go home, am for this to be peaceful. >> one year ago white nationalists angered by a plan to remove a confederate statue marched through campus chanting. they made their way through charlottesville streets. violence ensued for hours. heather heyer was killed. james alex fields was indicted in haier's death and faces charges. at least five counterprotester groups were also granted permits. washington, d.c., mayor muriel bowser. >> the only right message and the message i hope we carry as
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washingtonians is love, inclusion, and diversity. >> reporter: guns will be prohibited from the demonstration zone in washington, but they're allowed within downtown charlottesville. uva student aaron patrick sharp. >> so what is your concern heading into this weekend? >> the main concern is making sure there is total safety for civilians here in charlottesville and the police protection does their job to protect community members and officials. >> reporter: they won't say if the police presence here is just as a precaution or in response to a specific threat. for "cbs this morning: saturday," jeff pegues, charlottesville, virginia. a new challenge is being made to special counsel robert mueller's investigation. it came when one man refused to testify to a grand jury on friday. andrew miller's attorney says that deputy attorney general rod rosenstein did not have authority to appoint mueller to
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lead the investigation into the trump campaign's contacts with russia. paula reid has more. >> reporter: andrew mill and for refusing to testify before a washington grand jury. his lawyer, paul, said he con tested the subpoena so he could challenge the special counsel. special counsel robert mueller is investigating stone as part of his now 15 months' long probe into russian election interference. stone issued a statement saying stone has no knowledge or evidence of russian collusion, wikileaks collaboration, or any other illegal collaboraration o my part. stone and trump have enjoyed a decade-long friendship. he said he knew in advance of hillary clinton emails being released by wikileaks.
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he's also familiar with guser is 2.0. he said it was run by russian intelligence. mueller is one of the witnesses kelkted to stone who have been called to testify before the mueller grand jury. kristin davis was also to appear on friday known as the manhattan madam for running a prostitution ring. she's known stone for years. he's the godfather of her son. earlier in the week he called into jay suck lowe's show. but with a parade of witnesses going before the mueller grand jury, its is unlikely itz will wrap up. for "cbs this morning: saturday," paula reid, alexandria, virginia. now to the west whether there are 100 fires burning in
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the west. only 17 are contained. in southern california crews gained ground overnight over the burning around the national park. forrest clark appeared in court on friday but arraignment was postponed. he's being held on $1 million baseball. jonathan vigliotti is in lake elsinore with the latest. >> reporter: good morning. we've been here for the past couple of days and at least for now we've seen signs of relief. the temperature has drop, the winds have calmed down and along with all that, flames. it's the nightmare this community fear, bearing down on homes in lake elsinore. homes dwarfed by the perilous flames edging dangerously close, and this, last-ditch efforts to
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save a neighborhood. what's amazing is all of those were spared. >> why do you do this? >> i don't know. it's something you enjoy doing. we saw it firsthand, flames reaching into the hands of p.j.'s home. his home was safe. even were more than 1,000 firefighters battling the flames, some homes refused to uadan pritche watched his mobile home burn down. >> do you feel lucky? >> i do. i feel extremely lucky. >> reporter: numerous hot spots remain. about 20 thousand remain understood that evac yachlgts it only takes a little but of wind
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to turn these massive waves into flames. >> jonathan vigliotti. thank you very much. now to northern california where hundreds of residents were ordered to leeb their home last night as crews battle a fast moving grass fire about the 00 mile -- 200 miles away. one home is 10% contained. environmental rules are applauding. a jury found a company at fault for allowing a man to contract cancer after using its popular weed killer for years. john blackstone reports. >> reporter: johnson done have long to live. his cancer was cause by
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monsanto's weedkiller roundup. a jury agreed. >> did you find by clear and convincing evidence that monsanto acted with mass or oppression in the conduct upon which you fab your liability of mr. johnson. yes. >> he was awarded nearly $290 million in damages. >> this has been been very hafrmtd they knew it caused cancer but hid that cause. >> i'm so glad that this jury held them accountable. >> reporter: johnson had held a job as a groundskeeper in a school district. he used rounldsup 30 time as year spraying hundreds of gallons of it.
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dur the trial there was no evidence that it caused cancer. but after the jury, he felt glyphostae was safe. >> it doesn't change the overwhelming evidence and 40 years of safe use around the world. >> reporter: but johnson's lawyer asked the jury to held monsanto punnerable. >> i'm glad to help. >> dewayne johnson's case was separated from others. he was allowed to go first because of the advanced statement of his disease and that he my not live. monsanto says it will appeal this vir death ameds concerning
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of tension in washington this weekend. add to that his co-star omarosa man gaultd newman said she heard mr. trump use racial insults. errol barnett is traveling with the president this morning. good morning. >> good morning. despite it, two of her expertsing amro -- experts is now poitzed. there's a draw mat eck twist as two reality tv stars clash over the divisive issue. racing over the deadly charlottesville. >> you heard the tape? >> i heard the pr of the united states use not o.j. the "n"
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word, other horrible things. >> speaking on national public radio about her book called "unhinged: an insider's account of the trump white house," manigault spoke about the president on "apprentice." despite her book on tuesday where she used account of such a tape where trump used the "n" word multiple times. the man gaultd newman writes president trump is a racism, misogynist, and a big got. it is a far cry from her time as the president's top cheerleader on african-american issues. the white house resisted efforts to stay violent onto friday with secretary sarah huckabee sanders
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speak back. >> president has not responded directly to the claims. instead he had dinner with apple ceo tell cook. it's unclear how long that will last as she'd simt to venn. >> looks like no golf today snoochl you cannot make this up. >> it would be tossed out. >> you'd think he said, she sach sachld. >> she contradicts herself in her own book. >> absolutely. with need the tapes. >> the judge has thrown out the plea deal for the two men charged in the deadly warehouse fire in oakland, california, two years ago.
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friday's announcement followed two days of emotional statements from family membered and friends of the 36 members kill filled in prison. the toronto "globe & mail" reports a canadian man is arrested in the connection of the fatal shooting of four people including two police officers in new brunswick. five shots brought the police to the man's high-rise apartment. the suspect is being treated for serious injury. no word on a memo tev. and the "oregonian" reports that a man who started arson made his first appearance on friday. the fire was part of a series of ecosaab taj attacks. he was brought back to oregon
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this week all about to catch a cbs it. more women have oned for yoga pants. i am not one of them. it's not clear if the company will sell off or spin off the classic brands which once made up of 25% of the jeans markets. >> predeath that jeans will make a comingback. and the guardian reports police in germany came to a man's rescue after he was chased by a rodent. it turns out a baby squirrel was in hot pursuit of the man until apparent exhaustion kicked in. that's when it chose to lie down and photo sleep. >> the man or the squirrel?
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>> you ask again. the guy had just given him a little love. >> i guess never underestimate how scared a baby squirrel may be. >> watch out. >> here's look at the weather for your weekend. is it a new tactic in criminal justice reform? instead of protesting take over theprosec's oice athe take a l at the surprising election
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including ferguson and see the demonstrations that followed. and 3 million users gone in a snap. we'll look at the latest sign of trouble for social media companies and why some say they've reached their peak. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." the nature of a virus is to change. move. mutate. today, life-changing technology from abbott is helping hunt them down at their source. because the faster we can identify new viruses, the faster we can get to stopping them.
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they are known as the big cats, the lions, jaguars, and other rare felines that inhabit the world. and one man devoted his life to protecting them. an incredible story. we'll remember a pioneering conservationist who helped safeguard these endangered species. and what started as a small collection of mementos from the happiest place on earth soon turned into a very large collection. check that out. later we'll take you to this
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unusual exhibit and tell you what the owner plans to do with
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the death of your son, trayvon nar tin, certainly launched a movement. what was it like for you the first time you went anywhere, crowds, thousands of people saying i am trayvon martin or screaming his name? how did you process that? >> well, it was here in new york. >> this is not about a black-and-white thing. this is about a right and wrong thing. >> you looked so strong during that time. i often marveled, does she feel as strong as she looks. >> i did not. they didn't see me when i was very emotional. they didn't see me when i was depressed. and so where so many people were telling me how strong i was, i didn't feel it on the inside. so i started speaking to mooegs,
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i started speaking to god. i started saying to myself, i am strong, i am strong. and then i started to feel like i really was strong. >> how do you grieve and recover from the death of a child? >> ihood a great deal of support early on. i started like reaching out to other mothers that had kids that were victims of senseless gun violence and it kind of took the edge off of what i was going through. i had so many people that were positively lifting me up. even now when i have my bad days. >> to you still have bad days in. >> absolutely. i'm going to have bad days the rest of my life because it feels like something -- >> what does it feel like? you're trigger pid a memory? >> it doesn't have to be a memory. it doesn't have to be something i saw. i could wake up that morning and have bad feeling because it feels like i'm missing something.
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i'll learn to walk again, and this is one of my first steps, running for ferguson city council for 2019. >> all right. yeah. welcome back to "cbs this morning: saturday." you heard from leslie mcspadd mcspadden-head. she is the mother of michael brown, the teenager who was shot and killed by a police officer in ferguson, missouri, four years ago this week. the ins stent sparked protests in ferguson and around the country.
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her run for city council myrirrs that of wesley bell, a concerned ferguson citizen who won a council seat and is now poised to take on an even bigger public office. st. louis pr what makes the win so stunning is that four years ago bell stood on the front lines of protests in ferguson, missouri, trying to quell anger after the shooting death of michael brown by police officer darren wilson. bell promised to deliver change to policing in his community after grand jury found there was not enough evidence to indict wilson. >> i would like to introduce you next city councilman of fernson. >> reporter: change came after a strategic door knocking campaign
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earned him a seat on the ferguson city council. >> what was it that you saw the need? >> i saw a need for leadership. >> reporter: three years later, he's poised to lead most impactful crime-fighting office in the country. >> how did you win this seat? >> we came in with the mindset we wanted to focus on the issues. we wanted to give people a reason to be inspired to go to the polls as opposed to the fear and antagonism that we see with a lot of elected officials and that message resonated as you can see. >> reporter: bell ran on a criminal justice reform platform, one that included devoting resources for treating addiction and mental health, curbing the revolving door of mass incarceration, and moving focus from misdemeanor traffic tickets to serious crimes. the city of ferguson has been
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under a federal consent decree since 2016. in that time, the monitor 1, th nearly 8,000 misdemeanor cases filed against citizens. >> here's the thk, with 'not going to focus our resources, our prosecutors on nonviolent, for example, possessions of marijuana. instead we were going to reallocate those resources. our job is to make the county safer. >> was it important that you unseat this prosecutor? >> i've been practicing for 17 years. i've seen the policies with this office with respect to look of commitment to diversionary programs and the cash bail system with respect to nonviolent offenders who are going to be released anywaying but still being held on bonds they can't afford. to me this is a matter of
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principle. this is my home. >> reporter: family, friends, and michael brown sr. paid tribute to the teen and this election outcome. >> the whole city is happy, man, that wesley bell made it in. we'll get a chance to get a fair trial. >> reporter: but that's no guarantee. though he's criticized mcculloch's investigation, bill has not committed to reopening the case. he has tried to ensure a death like brown's won't happen again. >> ferguson brought in awareness. what we've seen in the last four years is a community that is having the difficult conversations, the uncomfortable conversations which i think are important. >> he has tremendous support primarily because he's so measured in how he talks to people, relates to people. he was a city counsel member, a
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lawyer, a judge. and nohe's preparing to be chief prosecutor. >> it's a great model of you can protest. what's the next step. michael brown's mother. >> right. working within the system. i think people are seeing you have to work inside the system often to change the system. so we'll see what happens. >> great piece, michelle. >> thank you. it's an island that seems to be sinking into chesapeake bay. later. it's about 35 after se e the hour. here's a look at your local weather.
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as the nation prepares for political rallies in washington and charlottesville, virginia, tomorrow, the removal of confederate statues has been a major driving force in political violence. k078ing up on "cbs this morning," we take you to the secret storage facilities to show you where the removed statues are now hiding. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." to most people, i look like... ...most people. but on the inside, i feel chronic, widespread pain. fibromyalgia may be invisible to others, but my pain is real. fibromyalgia is thought to be caused by overactive nerves. lyrica is believed to calm these nerves. i'm glad my doctor prescribed lyrica. for some, lyrica delivers effective relief from fibromyalgia pain... ...and improves function. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions,
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welcome back. as we reported, the week marks the one-year anniversary of the rally. last year's rally found violence stemmed from chaos and passive rew e response by law enforcement. it blamed it all on poor preparation and poor cord nation between the city and state poli police. >> the confrontation last year began as a protest rally. it began as a demonstration to remove a statue of confederate general robert e. lee. that statue still stands in charlottesville. they find it doesn't end the legal controversy. mark strassmann has >> ever since i was a child,
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i've seen the statue. >> he met us by a pedestal in a park where a con fe rat statue once stood until they took it down and hid it last december. the county commissioner led a drive to remove two here. one of general davis and the other or forest who became the first leader of ku klux klan. turner took us to see the statues if we promised not to reveal their location. >> you make this right here and we'll have to cut the cameras off. we're about to get to it. >> we're that close? >> yes, sir. >> shall we go? >> president davis here, general forest, and this has been their home since december. >> yes. >> why the secrecy. >> you have some people who are very upset. >> reporter: lee miller is upset.
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he's the spokesman for the sons of confederate veterans who has sued to put the statues back up sneet's a lack of preev yags for the great history. since the unrest in charlottesvilles, 36 cities have removed them. more than 700 still stand nationwide. and we need to wait until the litigation ends, but right now this is the best place for them. >> until the court rule, the statues will stay sealed in the box like a coffin. mark strassmann, cbs news, memphis. a couple of things stand out in that piece. one, strassman reports there are hundreds of these statues still out there. two, yo view the son os a confederate guyayin it should be echoed. good people on both sides. >> location, location, location.
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these statues are in very prominent places in big city as and small, on government land in some cases. the question is theme people who were memorialized, were they traitors to america? that seems to be the question that a lo of people that people are throwing at this whole issue. >> i think remembering history or honoring that, those may be two different things as well. >> it's not over culturally or legally either yoo coming up next, a social media growth disappearing faster than a vanishing message on snapchat. up next, all the major platforms surprised wall street in the past few weeks with their latest user numbers. we'll see what's behind the trend. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." mbc doesn't take a day off, and neither will i.
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"freedom" is a good song to
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come into. facebook and twitter were already taking a beating on wall street in recent weeks. one factor being the slowing of declining user numbers. then came this week's report from snapchat of its own, a big drop-off in daily active users. the trend has some wondering if the once-unstoppable trend of social media growth might be reversing course. >> we welcome in lauren goode, senior writer of "wired magazine." >> thanks for having me. >> what does that mean for snapchat specifically? >> it's a good question. snap has. had particularly good earning reports since it went public. it's a recent redesign. >> we've heard a lot of rumblings. >> absolutely.
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it was not well received. i think the bigger question is if this hints at some larger social media fatigue and this is evidence of that. >> you're hitting it. in order for the companies to flourish, they've got to be used by people. have we hit that hard stop is the saturation point among us? >> i think the saturation point is the big question right now. if you look at the fact that facebook has more than 2 billion users on its platz form, you mietz think. that the point. there's only so many people in the world and so many who want to use social media and platforms like snapchat and facebook. some companies need to think less about this userabgageme em ismount ofme a cytite, corre?
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>> that's right. >> how do they for lack of a better word, police it sh. >> it may be two different things. one may be the feeling people get when they're using social media, if it's making them happy, if they're nothing feels great after using social media. and then you're wondering if what they're seeing on social media could be harass mnlts. >> we've talked about disinformation not just weeks or months but since the election and the role facebook and twitter may have played in that. how is that impacting how people view the social media sites?
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>> it dpebds how rare it is. it's a huge topic especially as you see earlier this week, big tech companies like apple, facebook, youtube. it removed some of the content from his platform that could be considered dilgs information. a is that become. there's being wromg with malice. >> thank you so much. >> he overcame his speech problem to help with animals. we'll make a pioneering conservationist who went through to save other big creatures. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." for adults who have type 2 diabetes and heart disease...
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this is a rare sight. >> known as the indiana jones of wildlife protection. zooologist alan rabinowitz was a tireless force in protecting endangered animal app their ecosystems, particularly big cats. rabinowitz who died this week at the age of 64 saved the lives of countless tigers, jaguars, and other at-risk speciesies by getting their protection onto the agendas of leaders in asia, africa, and latin america. dr. howardg frien of ra pd rabinowitz for "60 minutes." >> one night alan and his team snared this young lady and put
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her to sleep for a while. >> this is the same cat we saw swimming this afternoon. >> it's likely. it looks like it probably is. >> born in brooklyn, rabinowitz had such a stutter he couldn't relate to peers and teachers s but he could with the cats. it was there that he vowed to become the voice of the voiceless. in if following years rabinowitz overcame his stutter and fulfilled his quest. he created thest reserve in myanmar, set out the jaguar corridor, a series of protected areas that run from mexico to argentina, andoupanth
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organization dedicated to savin. in addition, rabinowitz is credited with discover i four new species of mammals including the tiny leaf deer, the most primitive deer species in the world. the personable and often funny rabinowitz also wrote books, made documentaries, and mentored thousands of young scientists. >> to put it simply he made a difference, didn't turn away from a challenge and keep his focus on the conservation of the animals that he lovet so mum. >> the work he did to help them, it's amazing to think about. >> when you think about the young people he touch and really incentivized. >> a brooklyn boy from the brooklyn zoo.
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my kids go to that zoo. coming up. more on the breaking news, the airline worker who stole a commuter plane. . >> coming up, you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." a career grand slam. he would close it out here at the age of 25. the game is young and talented and fearless and this is the last major championship of the year. >> you mentioned justin thomas, number two. dustin johnson is number one. to you consider him a contender? >> vlad, you listened. he's the odds-on favorite. it's a tough thing to predict. not like when tiger was on top of the world. dustin has won three times this year, most recently in froenlt with the rbc canadian open.
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he's got an art nall of weapons. yeah. you're looking at the world golf rankin rankings. brooks koepka stace under the radar. he's going be tough this week. if i had to pick one, it would be the one on the right. rory mcilroy. he was close. he did not play well on sunday. he's won four major championships including this one twice. that would be my pick, but take it for what it's worth. >> take it for what it's worth. i'm not going until we say congrated. why? because they say your legendary voice has brought the legendary voice to the homes of the am bass gore game. >> we should introduce you as ambassador every time you're on there. ambassador nantz. >> i know. i love his name. >> gayle, your reading it means even more. so thank you very much. in 2017,
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california had the worst wildfire season on record. scientists say, our weather is becoming more extreme and we all have to be better prepared. that's why pg&e is adopting new and additional safety precautions to help us monitor and respond to dangerous weather. hi, i'm allison bagley, a meteorologist with pg&e's community wildfire safety program. we're working now, to enhance our weather forecasting capabilities, building a network of new weather stations to identify when and where extreme wildfire conditions may occur, so we can respond faster and better. we're installing cutting edge technology to provide real-time mapping and tracking of weather patterns. and we use this information in partnership with first responders and california's emergency response systems. to learn more about the community wildfire safety program and how you can help keep your home and community safe, visit pge.com/wildfiresafety
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welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm dana jacobson with michelle miller and tony dokoupil is in for anthony mason. residents of the east coast are wondering how long they can hold on as the waters around them close in. what they can do about their plight, and why their expeditious may become more common elsewhere. then wines that mimic the best, put to the test. so-called replica wines are grown in the field, but designed in the lab.hey're made and how they fairreed in a taste te.
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and nothing fake about these items, though they come from a land of make believe. we'll preview a unique auction of objects that were once actual pieces of disneyland. that's ahead. but first our top story this hour, an apparently sue sieled a airline worker crashed a stolen plane near seattle last night. witnesses watch and took video as they saw the passenger plane flying erratically and even at one point inverting in midair. >> two f-15 fighter jets intercepted the twin engine turbo prop within a few minutes of the unauthorized takeoff. it went down on ketron island, southwest of seattle. kris van cleave is in our washington, d.c., bureau with more. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. it happens when a 29-year-old
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employee who worked on the grounds stole one of the regional carriers sea-tac airport. it was not in service at the time. instead it was parked in a maintenance location. the man took off and flew for about an hour. he was not an experienced pilot and it became very clear he was not going to land the plane. he proceeded to roll the airplane, losing kroesh and crashing into a sparsely populated ketron island. they believe he was the only one u onboard the plane and did not survive the crash. the fbi will lead this investigation for now. so fair they have not'd feed the man twho took to the new
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investigation. roger stone was held in contempt after intentionally refusing to testify before a washington grand jury on friday. miller's attorney is questioning the constitutionality of the whole investigation. >> it's billionaire a week of major political developments in washington. for a closer look we turn to shelby holiday. good morning. >> good morning. let's start right there. andrew miller. you wrote on friday about roger stone. what can you tell us? >> yes. andrew miller is intentionally denying his subpoena. it seems to be a strategy. he had already challenged the special counsel's thortds. a judge threatened to challenge that down. we sought a close acquaintance yesterday. roger stone is under scrutiny
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because he communicated with wikileaks and guccifer 2.0, which was a russian front for russian intelligence, hacked emails and distributed them on wikileaks. randy creditco may be able to shed light on that. it's unclear what davis would know. >> still up in the air as this potential sitdown with the president. what do you know about this? >> anyone reporting on this will say we'll believe it when we see it. they've been going on since januarier the possible scope of an interview. there have been counter offers. we don't have the special counsel's side of the team. they don't want the president to
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be asked about obstruction of justice. they also suggested he write answers to the special counsel's questions. any prosecutor you talk to says mueller will unlikely not go for that. >> they talk about it. a trial that is going on now, a paul manafort trial, it's a tax fraud case, but it could be tied to another case on collusion down the line. walk us how the man i fort case could be linked. >> another. >> this started with the ostrich vest and flashy things he was buying, but they quickly got into his financial troubles. two things are very clear. there's a piper trail showing paul manafort was master-minding
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some of these alleged schemes to launder money, get fraudulent loans, lying to banks. another thing that sticks out is there's a lot of back-and-forth and constantine. he came to the u.s. to meet with manafort in 2016 while manafort was campaign manager. >> i'm telling you the devil is in the details. >> exactly. >> shelby holliday thanks for having us. >> crews are gaining ground on the fires burning around. containment doubled from 5% to 10% overnight. it forced 20,000 residents the
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their home. the suspect accused of setting the fire appeared in court on friday. he's facing 1million bail. body cam video shows the every day dangers of police officers. more than four dozen were fatally shot win the line of duty. it shows a shoot-out and man about to be sentenced for their attempts murder. this is the moment he opened fire on two troopers.thatrate k to shoot back, taking bullets to the leg and neck before leaping to find cover. a dramatic turn after being
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pulled over for apparent speeding. when the troopers tried to arrest him. he resisted. he shot him with a lane of taser falls flachlt for a few seconds corporate kelly appears to be in control, but moments later the troopers are punching and kicking, all but begging cleary to put his hand behind his back. somehow he finds his feet again, grabs a pistol from his car and opening fire before driving off. corporate kelly applied his own tourniquet at the scene and was clinically dead and not breathing. he spent 12 days in a coma and
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is resting. the suspect is down the road and is spending life for attempting murder. >> i can't believe what we. >> two straight minutes of fighting. i doesn't exclusively go that way. >> and then apply the tourniquet. >> no, no, no. you were legally dead. >> he actually doesn't remember the incident and hasn't seen the tape. >> unbelievable. corporate kelly. all of us need to have what he has inside of him. it's about nine minutes after the hour. here's a look at the weather for your weekend. it's an island in the chesapeake day and in desperate straits.
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up next, a haunt for generations of crabbers, and their families may not survive for lochlkt we'll see what's fighting its existence. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." the clock is ticking on irreversible joint damage. ongoing pain and stiffness are signs of joint erosion. humira can help stop the clock. prescribed for 15 years, humira targets and blocks a source of inflammation that contributes to joint pain and irreversible damage. 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 certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection.
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about 100 miles from washington, d.c. is tangier island. crabs has made it for more than 200 years. that way of life and the island itself could be coming to an end. in the new book,ty ooh land could be one of our first climate change casualties. chep read has the story. >> reporter: on a clear day, a peaceful bode right will bring you to tilikum peeng.
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their islands is sy december appearing. >> what inspired you to write a book about this island? >> you are facing the ed times or try to grapple with them. >> he recently returned and spent 14 months documents a vanishing community and way of life. >> this is a matter of crisis and the first of many urban downs. it's a request wlit's too late. if it is, tangier will be the first place to go. >> since 1950,'s lost so of ids lands mall.
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-- mass. >> is it too late for tangier? >> no, not without heroic intervention, but it would have be truly her row win. >> i can't imagine anyone else. >> the u.s. army corps of engineers plans to build a 3 $300,000 jetty. they want to examine how to protect tangier. solutions could be a seawall around the island, break waters, or relocation ofidents o other parts of the island or the mainland. the price tag could be hundreds of millions of teenage dollars. >> can you imagine this not existing? ? >> no, no, i can't. i don't want to visit the
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thought hat this will all be gone one tay. >> james is skij known as ooker is also tainjin's mayor. so these guys are not going to bite me. >> nope, nope. >> this is a soft crabbe. >> yep. >> he admitted the island is disappearing, but he claims erosion, anyhow noting. in talking with a lot of people, it's a nads to mem them poo people are in. they cannot grasp the cop 70s of eruption. >> do you envision ady or try not to when people would have to start evacuations. >> >> i think a loflts folk say.
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why don't you move to the mainland and start over. that's foolish talk, to leave your hoemg and chr-- home. >> he wants to build a wall around that island. >> he said america first. that's just common sense. he's the president of the united states. he should be the president first. >> reporter: far author smith taj j-- tangier island. >> a lot of places are going to see that. yeah, this is coming down the rhodes for an awful lot of the k and gulf coast. >> and yarp yer.
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i machb among them. >> one of the questions we have to ask ourselves is head count the own trit payment. that's going to be really ugly, a tough process to go through. >> for "cbs this morning: saturday," tangier island. up next, we'll goen side the world of so-called replica wine. >> announcer: this portion sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ahh, another truckload of toyotas. what a sight! yeah, during toyota's national clearance event, we've got the last of the 2018s... ...and super-low apr financing. maybe that's why they go so fast. [wind blowing; chains rattling] ok. that's got to be a record. right now at toyota's national clearance event, you can get incredible deals on the last of the 2018s. offers end september 4th. to learn more about all our great deals, visit toyota.com.
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. we're used to the idea of great works of afrt being reproduced. but how about great bottles of wine? science is helping to replicate some of the world's most popular vintages by closelydy thr flavor profis the lab reduceice.barr peen has the sto
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wine is bottled poetry, wrote robert louis stevenson. but for this story, blend in a little shakespeare who said what's in a name? the name here is replica as in replicas of famous wines, made to taste the same but easier on the wallet. >> what would the replica version of a $50 wain cost? >> $20. >> here they want to analyze it down parts per bill yion overse by sean callan, director of operations and quality. fhemi in we and its lot of different things. >> and these chemicals tell us things like what?
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> aroma? taste? >> yeah. both taste and aroma. it tastes buttery, oakie, notes of green apples in it. >> reporter: callan and his team create a chemical map of the distinctive flavors and romas. then replica mixes its grapes to match the analysis. >> i finalize it. if it's really close and they say, hey, we've got three or four different blends, i'm the final say. >> reporter: skimmerman invite med for a blind taste test. which was the replica, which was the original. it was a week talk.
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would it have all the things you described? the tann in taste, the dry taste? >> yes. >> both of these wines have all of those elements. what i can tell you is we've spoken with thousands of consumers around the country about our wines, and the reaction is just overwhelmingly positive. >> reporter: the truth is in the tasting, so to find out, we invited some friends and neighbors over to our home in denver, colorado, to see if they liked the replica or the real. we matched the original to its replica counter part using our costs for the real wines and replica's suggested preece is for theirs. first, chardonnay, far niente
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versus the replica called per sempre. which one do you like? >> i like the real one. >> rombauer's shard anyway. six preferred the real, only one the replica. >> the ram bauer was better, it went down smoother. >> then meiomi pinot noir and replica's misbehaviored, a clear victory for replica winning four to two with one tie. finally the prisoner against replica's pickpocket, six to one for the real thing, the replica didn't match up. >> i feel like it's not as smooth. >> reporter: some of our tasters said they would buy the replica because it cost less and that's the point. >> you're not really aiming to make the royce royce of wine
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you're really much more like the subaru, ford of wines that most of us will buy and take home at night for our friends. >> i mean it's a perfect analogy. >> reporter: a roman author once but it's wine buyers who with finally decide if truth really can be had at half the praise. >> that was a ticket to a party. >> he threw a wine party and inviteded all his friends and family on cbs's dime. >> i'm so torn by this. knowing two of those wines really well, i find it hard to believe i would take it cheaper over the taste because i know that taste so well. >> we needed a blind taste. >> exactly. >> if it's cheaper, what are you going to do. there may be no greater thrill for fans of disneyland than owning a piece of the park. up next, we'll feature a very special auction that once graced
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the happiest place on earth. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." it's an incredible circumstance. did you really trick david duke into taking a picture with you? >> that happened. >> that happened. that's incredible. is it exactly as depicted in the film? >> i wish spike would have spent a little more time on that one. >> it's amazing to me how much this story imitates real life. that's what took me aback when i saw this movie. >> well, my co-writer kevin wilmont and i felt if this film was going to connect, we would have to put stuff in it that would make it like you and
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everybody else. it was to be a pbs documentary and that led to the dakota of the movie. >> ron, you talked in an interview about your relationship with david duke and at that time, not many people in the country knew who david duke was. he took a liking to you, at least over the phobe. you said that had you gone public with this investigation, you firmly believe that dashds duke would not have gone on to have the political career and have become as powerful a figure as he did become. >> i'd like to think that that might have been possible because he would have had to have answered to the people he was trying to apeople too why he got conned as black man. i feel like had we gone public, we might have been able to impact that. i don't know. but i have a feeling we might have.
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it is a rare opportunity for fans of disney memorabilia. i'll say. for the past 63 years, disney land in anaheim, california, has drawn millions of visitors from all over the world, becoming known as the happiest place on earth. spent many a birthday there. now fans have a chance to take historic pieces of disney home to their place on earth. jamie yuccas reports with the dream assignment from los angeles. >> reporter: this former sporting goods store is 40 miles and more than an hour's drive away from disney land, but once you get inside -- >> this is from mr. toad's wild
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ride. this is from peter pan's flight. >> reporter: it's easy to imagine you're right in the middle of the happiest place on earth. >> everybody has their own hometown, but everybody's collective hometown is disney land. >> richard kraft is los angeles talent agent who has spent the past 25 years collecting more than a thousand disney land artifacts. >> because i'm deranged and obsessive, one poster became every poster. then it became ride vehicles and there was no stopping. >> reporter: like many grownup kids, kraft has indelible childhood memories of his family's visits to disney land, but for the kft family, those trips were much more than a s simple vacation. >> i had an older brother with crohn's disease, so we had to wait for day that he was feeling
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well. so a trip to disney land was like the best day of the year. it was disney land and my brother being healthy. >> reporter: 25 years ago kraft's brother david passed away and richard consoled himself with an impromptu trip to disney land. now kraft has amassed a collection including everything from larger than life sea serpents to the creepy stretch paintings from the haunted mansion. but soaring above it all is kraft's pride and joy. >> everybody on plan its earth has been in this dumbo, is that correct? >> reporter: an 800-pound dumbo which for many year us has hng in mr. kraft's living room. >> his ears were 8 feet long and would not ogical thing. we moved and bought a house with french doors. >> reporter: it's all on display
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for a free exhibit and then it will go up for auction. >>'ve got to send it back out into the world. i keep hearing the kbrt poet elsa, let it go, let it go, and i'm just following directions. >> mike van eaton is staging the exhibit and auction. he predict this an ma tronnic bird from the enchanted tiki room could go up to 1$100,000, and dumbo could fetch up to twice that amount. >> these items really trigger a lot of childhood memories for people. >> reporter: kraft insisted on staging this free exhibit before the auction so he could share his happiness with as many people as possible. so far in first week we had 10,000 people come through and we had 10,000 legitimately happy people. >> reporter: and as for the collection itself? >> i hope it all gets happy homes. >> reporter: if it weren't happy
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already, artifacts like these will likely do the trick. for "cbs this morning: saturday," jamie yuccas, long. >> dibs on dumbo. >> i want dumbo. >> i lost a bear there in 1985. if anyone sees it, let me know. >> we will do that. now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. up next, "the dish." >> stay with us. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." feel the clarity of non-drowsy
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and added one handed pumps. gentle means pure, gentle means safe, gentle means love. the new johnson's®. the doctor just for a shot. with neulasta onpro patients get their day back... to be with family, or just to sleep in. strong chemo can put you at risk of serious infection. in a key study neulasta reduced the risk of infection from 17% to 1%, a 94% decrease. neulasta onpro is designed to deliver neulasta the day after chemo and is used by most patients today. neulasta is for certain cancer patients receiving strong chemotherapy. do not take neulasta if you're allergic to it or neupogen (filgrastim). an incomplete dose could increase infection risk. ruptured spleen, sometimes fatal as well as serious lung problems, allergic reactions, kidney injuries and capillary leak syndrome have occurred. report abdominal or shoulder tip pain, trouble breathing or allergic reactions to your doctor right away. in patients with sickle cell disorders, serious,
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sometimes fatal crises can occur. the most common side effect is bone and muscle ache. ask your doctor about neulasta onpro. pay no more than $5 per dose with copay card. time now for a special edition of "the dish" with bruce and eric. they soon became the pioneers of the scene. >> you're definitely using your fingers and having fun. >> from fondue to pooh-pooh platters to their famous fri is of eating.
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>> ever since we were young, ribs were always the highlight for me. it was a situation of let's make things that we love. >> there you go. >> reporter: the chefs behind this food were actually trained in pearce, but they found cooking in three-star restaurants far from satisfying. >> one of the things that really struck me was that none of my friends could come to those restaurants. they were so expensive, so exclusive. >> why don't we take the neck and apply it to everything we learned and open it to everyone. >> they opened on november 3rd, 1992. kimball cramer showed up a few days later. he as been coming back.
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>> i saw a new restaurant, walked in, and liked it. food was outstanding. i was looking for a hangout place and i knew i had found it. >> it all began with this tiny little hole in a wall. these were two apartments that we joined together. i kind of hads idea of making it a good res strauns. >> they started with a simple notion. >> what is it. it all kind of came together. it was more of an idea, and i think that's what blue ribbon meant to us. it was this concept. this heart and soul of everything we had done growing up as kidses. >> you used to actually play restaurant. >> we played restaurant, but we pretty much playing benihana, the whole concept. >> seeing the chef in front of us was the coolest thing. we always tried to order shrimp
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cocktail, which my dad would not let us do. >> they credit their fare for their insatiable app tut. >> there were stops along the way, pizzas in new haven and clam chow ter at this place. where are we going to chinatown in new york wrchl do you get the best phenomenon do. >> as they were getting ready to open blue ribbon, there was one key ingredient yent missing. >> we didn't know what it was going to be. but weeks before opening eric's wife was like, guys, we need to prinlts menus, lists. what are you doing. >> reporter: it would become a late night hangout for up and coming chefs coming off their chefs. >> it was the time when the
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entire culinary scene was giving birth in a sense. whether it was daniel an his team or mariel and his team, we all hung out at the bar. this dish resonated with the chef world more than any other dish. >> reporter: it's the meal they would eat in paris. >> we would look at each other and think it's ridiculous. it's better than foie gras. >> it's delicious. >> it's crazy. >> it's a dish we should never mess with. sitting here and thinking how many different people have sat over the years from president
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clinton to mick jagger. >> the chefs we grew up learning about and idolizing, anybody coming in and saying this is the best place we ever came to. >> it wasn't like this was the best dish i ever had. it wasn't that. it was that they saw something different in blut ribbon. >> and really if that booth could talk, those are the stories you want. grtz guys, great food. >> that's great. i love it. it's music that's been describing as haunting and gorgeous. up next, lord huron debuted in the top ten. you'll hear them next. my digestive system used to make me feel sluggish
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but now, i take metamucil every day. it traps and removes the waste that weighs me down, so i feel lighter. try metamucil, and begin to feel what lighter feels like.
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sessions," lord huron. ben snyder launched it as a school product and joined him for live performances and the band was born. last spring they released their third full length album. now to perform from their new collection here is lord huron with "never ever." ♪ ♪ i will wake her in the morning once the dew has drieds i will say it to her face you're a conjured lie snoetsz a figment of my mind baby i don't mind are you dead or are you alive ♪ ♪ she was gone without a warning
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long before the sunrise i will paint the perfect face i will draw her eyes with the pigment of my mind ♪ ♪ i will trace her lines because i have traced them thousands of times ♪ ♪ ♪ all my days are filled with mourning all my nights are empty ♪ ♪ i just stare out into space
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searching for her eyes in a never-ending sky ♪ ♪ leave me where i lie i don't care if i live or die ♪ ♪ ♪ i will never ever love another one the way i loved her if i ever learn to love again ♪ ♪ly wait until the end because i i don't know where, i don't know when but maybe i'm going see her again ♪ ♪ i will never ever love another one the way i loved her if i ever learn to love again i will wait until the end ♪ ♪ because i don't know where, i don't know when but maybe i'm going to see her again ♪ ♪ i will wake her in the morning
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i will wake her in the morning ♪ don't go away. we'll be right back with more music from lord huron. 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 lord huron. >> this is "moonbeam." ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ i had a dream that you came to
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me shining down through the clouds like a moon beem there you were ♪ ♪ and you wore nothing more than your raven hair in the air like a moon beam yes you were ♪ ♪ and you pulled me from a nightmare with your eyes and your silver touch ♪ ♪ shone a little bit of light there now the darkness don't scare me much ♪ give those doe eyes ise but i know i wanna love you
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yes i do ♪ ♪ we can dance to the beat while i tap my feet on the stars you're gonna like me yes you are ♪ ♪ when you saved me from a bad dream i was drifting through time and space but i landed on a moonbeam take me out of this place ♪ ♪ the world is dark the night is long i could use a few laughs and a couple of songs ♪ ♪ the sun will rise above the hills you'll be leaving me soon like hell you will the owl gazing at the moon snets is the feeling that i get when i'm looking at you the sun will rise and fade in the stars snoetsz and you're leaving me soon, like hell you are and you're leaving me soon, like hell you are ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ i had a dream that you came to me shining down through the clouds like a moonbeam ♪ ♪ there you were i had a dream that you came to me shining down through the clouds like a moonbeam ♪ ♪ there you were ♪
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>> whoo-hoo. for those of you still with us, we have more music from lord huron. >> this is "when the night is over." ♪ ♪ ♪ my one and only love i've been lonely long enough ♪ ♪ will i find you
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when the night is over tell me where did you go ♪ ♪ i've been searching high and low i have only till the night is over ♪ ♪ ♪ in every window i pass your reflection in the glass ♪ ♪ makes me wonder if my mind is going shadows shifting in the rain slowly driving me insane ♪
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airport. an airline mechanic allegedly takes off without passengers.. and comes cr a plane stolen from seattle's airport, an airline mechanic allegedly takes off without passengers and crashes. >> a jury awards a dying bay area man almost $300 million, his landmark victory over monsanto. >> a judge has ruled in a high- profile case, why he rejected a defendants of the ghost ship fire. >> good morning, we will get started with the check of our forecast. we're going to get to see a bit of a cooldown over the next couple of days. here is a live look outside

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