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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  October 20, 2018 4:00am-6:00am PDT

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michael hall stars in god friended me. . good morning, it's october 20th, 2018. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." a stunning about-face, saudi officials change their story and confirm the death of a u.s.-based urni u.s.-based journalist inside their consulate. building a wall of support, president trump uses the current migrating caravan to spark republicans in the midterm elections. a new cbs poll may show he's doing it. millions of dreams are
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crushed over a billion dollars jackpot as no one wins the mega millions drawing. wait till you hear how high the jackpot is now for the next one. fishing for answers, more and more of the seafood you eat is being mislabeled. find out why the problem is not being fixed and how it could hurt your health. and she is breaking ground in a sport where broken noses are no big deal. we'll introduce you to the ultimate fighting championship's only cut-woman and share her incredible road to get there. but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. now they're engaged in a cover-up to protect the crown prince. we'll see how that works for them, but i call this another nice try. >> saudi arabia admits jamal khashoggi was killed. >> the saudi government claiming he died in a fistfight at the consulate. >> saudi state television says 18 saudi nationals have been
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detained. >> it's only a first step but it's a big first step. the justice department filed the first criminal charges related to the upcoming midterm elections. a russian woman is accused of interfering -- >> anything from this magnitude comes from the kremlin. paul manafort showing up in court in a wheelchair. >> the judge set his sentencing for february. >> these some hardened criminals coming out. chaos at the mexico/guatemala border as a caravan of migrants pushes its way to the u.s. >> we're not criminals, we're coming here because we want to work. no one won that mega millions jackpot. the next drawing will be worth $1.6 billion. drivers doing a double take on a small plane made an emergency landing on a freeway. and all that matters. >> base hit to the right and the brewers have the lead. >> the brewers survive a 1 or go home situation with a 7-2 win over the dodgers. on "cbs this morning,"
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saturday. at five, at 3, durant for the lead. he puts it in, he puts it in. >> the former money of the utah jazz tipped in the durant miss. >> up and in for the win! 124-123, warriors. 124-123, warriors. wow squlam captioning funded by cbs and welcome to the weekend, everyone. nobody won that jackpot. can you believe it? >> i sort of can but i wanted it. >> now there's 1.6 billion out there. >> and the power ball. >> that's right. >> the entire opportunity still waits. welcome. we begin this morning with the changing story from saudi arabia over the death of "washington post" contributing columnist jamal khashoggi. the government now says he died in a fistfight in the saudi consulate in istanbul, turkey. >> the announcement came more
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than two weeks after khashoggi entered the consulate and was never seen again. president trump described it as a good first step. >> sarah huckabee sanders says the u.s. will closely follow the investigations into his death. holly is in istanbul with the latest. holly, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. it's been 18 days since jamal khashoggi walked into the saudi arabian consulate just behind me and then disappeared. since then, saudi arabia has denied angrily that it abducted, harmed, or killed khashoggi calling those allegations baseless and lies. now suddenly the country is admitting that khashoggi did die inside that building, but the saudi version of events leaves many questions unanswered and many people unconvinced. in the middle of the night local time, saudi arabia finally admitted that jamal khashoggi had died inside the saudi consulate. in the words of an official
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statement, after getting into a fight and a quarrel that led to his death. the kingdom expresses its deep regret, it went on, 18 saudi nationals have been arrested by their government and several officials have been fiertred, including the former deputy head of against thought to have been close to crown prince. it has left people deeply skeptical. he was a journalist that was outspoken about the saudi government and he entered the consulate here to get paperwork he needed to marry his turkish fiancee. he had been living in exile in the u.s. over fears for his safety. but the saudi explanation was a good first step, proclaimed president trump, and once again argued against canceling lucrative military contracts with saudi arabia. >> what i would prefer that we don't use as retribution,
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canceling $110 billion worth of work which means 600,000 jobs. >> reporter: turkish officials speaking anonymously have told journalists they believe he was tortured, murdered, and onsula by a 15-man saudi team that left turkey soon afterwards. several of them reportedly had links to the crown printce, including one who accompanied the prince to the u.s. this year. the prince in what some will see as an irony has now been put in charge of a committee to reform the country's intelligence agency. there's still no word from the saudis on what they did with jamal khashoggi's body. michelle. >> holly williams in istanbul. good question. thank you. this morning, thousands of immigrants are hoping to continue their trek toward the u.s. border from central america. their caravan is at the border separating guatemala with mexico. last night in arizona, president
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trump warned that the caravan must be stopped before it reaches the united states. the presidents of honduras and guatemala will meet today to talk about returning the migrants to honduras. chip reid is traveling with the president and is in phoenix. chip, good morning. >> reporter: well, good morning. one of the president's most memorable promises during the presidential campaign was to build that wall on the mexican border. but so far little progress has been made, and polls suggest the issue of immigration may hurt his party's chances on election day, which is just 2.5 weeks away. >> the democrat party is openly inviting millions of illegal aliens to break our laws, violate our borders, and overwhelm our nation. >> reporter: trying to fire up the republican base before the midterm elections, president trump focused on bashing
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democrats. >> democrats produce mobs, republicans produce jobs. >> reporter: and changing immigration laws. >> we other going to let people in based on merit. >> reporter: after touring luke air force base in arizona, the president harshly criticized a caravan of migrants hoping to make their way to the southern u.s. border. >> these are hardened criminals. these are tough, tough people. and i don't want them in our country. >> reporter: the migrants tore down a fence in guatemala. but were blocked by police at the mexican border. the president's rhetoric denouncing immigration does not appear to be working in his favor. according to a recent cbs news poll, only 39% of registered voters approve of mr. trump's handling of the immigration. at a roundtable with arizona republican senate candidate, martha mcsally, mr. trump once again stressed the importance of a border wall. >> we need a wall. we have to have a wall.
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we're building the wall now, but we should build it very fast. frankly we should build it even higher. >> reporter: and while signing a presidential memorandum, i had a message for those in the caravan. >> they might as well turn back. they're not coming into this country. >> reporter: the president's western swing continues today in nevada where like here in arizona a republican candidate is locked in a tight senate race. anthony. >> thank you, chip. and here with insight on these stories and more is caitlyn conant. good morning. >> thanks for having me. >> thanks for being here. let's start with what chip alluded to. we're less than 20 days away from the midterms. the president is banging the drum on the immigration issue which is bread and but the we are his bas-- butter with his b. how are the democrats responding to this? >> there's no question, as you said, for the republicans this is the top issue or the top issue to them. they are heading into states where democrats are on the defense. they're trying to hold on to
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their senate seats in ten states where he been no 2016. he's going in and trying to convince his voters that if you don't hold on to republican majority and we don't keep this, that unfortunately the democrats are going to come in and he's trying to scare them and say, you know, they will have open border policies, they will call to abolish i.c.e. and the democrats are trying to say we're here and we want compromise policy on immigration. so there are two conflicting messages, obviously. >> anthony mentioned the 20 days till the election. have we gotten any indication in these mid terms the way that things may sway? >> i think a lot remains to be seen and a lot can happen in the final weekends. but what i will tell you is that while we talk about the trump tweets of the day and whatever the latest scandal is, the campaigns on both of republican and the democratic side have been relatively consistent. and they have been talking about pocketbook issues, healthcare and economy remain the top issues for voters. and you have republicans running on basically a record of results
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and saying the economy is great. if you want to keep that, vote for republicans. and the democrats will just be the party of resistance. and meanwhile the democrats are running on healthcare and they're saying, you know, if you elect republicans to back to the congress, they are going to take away coverage for preexisting conditions, it's going to hurt you and your loved ones who are suffering. their message has been very consistent overall. >> are there any races in any of these swing states that really are the barometer to what will happen come november 6th? >> there are two trends that i'm specifically looking at. one is women voters in the suburbs. so one area where both the republicans and democrats say could be a bell weather that will be able to tell who's going to take back control of the house on election night is minnesota. you've got the twin cities, the suburbs there in st. paul, minneapolis, and you've got two republican congressman, jason lewis and eric paulson who are trying to hold on to their seats. and then another place is this
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deep red states where there's a big question of enthusiasm. and the democrats seem to have an edge in an enthusiasm gap, but the question is whether that enthusiasm actually translates to people showing up to the polls. so you have stacey abrams who's a democrat running for governor in georgia. and she is going around canvassing the state talking to every voter, not taking anyone for granted. then the senate side, same thing. beto o'rourke in texas who is is really hoping that he can talk to voters who haven't showed up in the polls the last few cycles and that they'll go and vote for them this fall. >> a new cbs news poll got released friday and one of the questions was rartding how voters processed the last year of politics. what did we see in that? >> we saw that voters are hopefully watching us. they're having the same conversations we are and talking about politics. and what the democrats and republicans are hoping is that that engagement, that enthusiasm translates to people showing up at the polls this fall. >> all right. thank you so much for being with
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us this morning. >> thank you for having me. a russian woman is the first person facing criminal charges linked to the midterm elections. coming up next month, she's accused of overseeing a major kremlin-backed effort to run what the u.s. government says is information warfare on social media. jeff pegues has more. >> reporter: court documents say 44-year-old elena alekseevna chush chush w khusyaynova was to sow discord in the political system. following the russian ole gart of vladimir putin, the target was next month's midterm elections with early voting in many starts already underway. former head of the justice department's national security division john carlin said russia is spending millions to undermine american democracy. >> we're under attack now and our elections are at risk. there's no way this is taking place without the knowledge of putin himself. >> reporter: through the use of
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fake american online personas, they focussed on devicesi on di. one pro trump facebook account posted this image of president obama saying he created $3 billion of new regulations while president trump wiped away $22 billion worth of regulations. that same account posted this anti-illegal immigration message arguing that deporting illegal immigrants saves americans money. deport them all, it said. this operation was very similar to the russians interference in the 2016 presidential election, something that president trump has been reluctant to acknowledge. his noshl security adviser john bolton will travel to moscow today and russian interference in the midterm elections is likely to come up. for "cbs this morning: saturday," jeff pegues, washington. former trump campaign manager paul manafort as a
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february sentencing date on fraud charges. manafort appeared in a virginia courtroom on friday for a post-trial hearing. he was in a wheelchair and was wearing a green jail jumpsuit. his attorney says manafort suffers from significant health issues. manafort is cooperating with special counsel robert mueller's investigation into the 2016 russian interference in the election. the lottery drawing will be the biggest jackpot. an estimated $1.6 billion. the prize grew to a billion on friday but no one matched all of last night's numbers. 15, 23, 53, 65, 70, and the mega ball 7. that means we all still have a shot. >> tonight's mega millions jackpot is an estimated $1 billion. let's see if i can make you a billionaire tonight. >> but there was no winner in what had become the largest mega millions jackpot since the game
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began in 2002. the odds of hitting it big, 1 in 302.5 million. lines formed across the country yesterday as people bought tickets for a shot at what was the second largest lottery prize in u.s. history. >> 1 billion mega? $1 billion? >> it's one bill. one bill. >> there hasn't been a mega millions jackpot winner since july and now they say it could soar to tie the all-time record of $1.6 billion by tuesday. there is good news for one lucky player in morgan hill, california where at this gas station a ticket matching five of six numbers was purchased. it's one of 15 tickets that's good for a million dollars. but hitting it big doesn't always mean sustaining the li lifestyle. nearly one-third of lottery winners declare bankruptcy, that's why cbs news business analyst jill schlesinger says
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it's important to plan ahead. >> assemble a team of an attorney, an accountant, a investme investment adviser. take a little bit of money and have fun. but you work towards your goals and your objectives and you make sure that you don't go nuts, especially early on. >> sometimes easier said than done i'm guessing. if someone win's tuesday's jackpot they will have the option to choous choose between the 1.6 billion annuity or $904 million in cash. if you feel lucky you can try the drawing that's $470 million. >> i've assembled my team to handle the money, i'm ready. i'm ready. >> you didn't win. >> you didn't get a single number, did you? this just tells you how hard this actually is. now it's 1.6 billion. >> i'm speechless. >> if i win power ball tonight i'll share. >> okay. i'm ready. >> i promise. >> i've got my team. i know thousand spend money. >> all right. that's never the problem. well there are fits. more rain is expected across
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flood-ravaged parts of central and southern texas through the weekend. governor greg abbott says emergency officials are keeping a close eye on rain-swollen rivers. on friday he added three dozen counties to the state disaster declaration in addition to the 18 named earlier in the week. many roads remain impassable. some reservoirs are now completely full. the polls are open through outmost of afghanistan this morning as voters cast ballots in today's parliamentary elections. but the voting is overshadowed by security concerns after this week's deadly ambush attack on the police chief in kandahar. charlie d'agata is in the capital. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. already here in kabul there have been multiple explosions, including homemade bombs, even mortars. dozens of people have been taken to the hospital including one child who was pronounced dead on arrival. they boosted the number of orfr
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70,000, but there have been some technical glitches that havement that some voting will be carried over into tomorrow. they made repeated threats to security forces and to shut down roads leading to these polling stations, but it appears that afghans by the millions are turning out to vote, at least where they can. some 2,000 polling stations were closed down before voting even started. now, this is how much it matters to the united states. america's top commander here, jenn scot general scott miller took the streets after an assassination where the general had to pull his own sidearm. the general told afghans they should be proud of their security forces and urged them to get out and vote. ultimately, the results of this vote may matter less than the number of people who decided to take part in it. anthony. >> charlie d'agata reporting from kabul this morning. thank you, charlie. time to show you some of this morning's headlines. the sun sentinel of florida
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reports the mother of nikolas cruz, the accused gunman in the douglas high school in park land was thought that he was too disturbed to ever live on his own. new documents released reveal that linda cruz apparently indulged in her son's passions for firearms, even taking him to the gun shop where he bought an ak-47. linda cruz died from pneumonia last year. three months later he allegedly killed 17 people in the high school. a new jersey man has been arrested for allegedly body slamming a protester last weekend here in new york. it happened outside a venue where a member of the racist group proud boys was speaking. police made the arrest after combing through photos and videos posted on youtube that showed the violent sclaclash wi leftist anlt tie fascist group. they say he was the most vicious of all the attackser. alaska governor bill walker
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dropped a bombshell with just 18 days to good until election day. the independent candidate nnounced friday he would be suspending his campaign and throwing his support to former democratic senator mark begich. walker said his team realized he could not win a three-way race. his departure comes just days after the state's lieutenant-governor stepped down for what he called inappropriate remarks he made to a woman. the bbc reports two satellites developed in europe and japan are on their way to mercury this morning. they were launched in space from south america on friday the 'the collaboration is expected to give scientists a better understanding of the planet closest to the sun. patience is an important component to the project. arrival at mercury is not expected for another seven years. and, the newburyport news of massachusetts says a 12-pound
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meet right from the mo meteorite fetched $6,000. was found in africa last year and it was believed to be a treasure from first sight. the action nears say the meteorite's large size is unique plus it has what's known as a partial fusion crust that's caused by the tremendous heat the rock is exposed to as it fell to earth. >> that's a very valuable rock. >> that you're not wearing on your hand. >> there it is. >> okay. it's about 22 after the hour now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. as we've reported, thousands of central american migrants are
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walking in a caravan toward the u.s./mexico border. but parts of the southwest are already inundated with migrants by a search that followed the end of the family separation policy. we'll get an update from one area dealing with the consequences. plus, there may be something very fishy about your next seafood order. why what's named on the menu or on a store display may not be what you're getting. and later you may already have a robot vacuuming your floor, but that could just be the beginning. we'll get a glimpse of the future at a huge showcase of robot technology now under way. that's ahead on "cbs this morning: saturday".
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ahead this morning, the remarkable and little known story of a trail-blazing attorney who brought down one of america's most powerful mob bosses. another woman breaking ground in a different arena. she fell hard for the world of
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ultimate fighting and managed to find a role in the ring never done
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do you believe there's an effort under way to suppress -- >> absolutely, without question. >> you've been out on the road campaigning for democrats. i know you said our democracy is under assault. what's at stake here? >> i think our basic american values are at stake. decency, honor, giving hate no safe harbor, telling the truth, understanding there's something bigger than you. and it really is under assault. and it is one of those things that i think that only a minority of the american people share his view about that is so dismissive of the basic american more rays, you know. look what the world is seeing lately. they see charlottesville and what he says.
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they see him embracing the dictators around the world attacking our allies. he talks about he has a policy of literally ripping children from their parents at the border for god sake. i mean, it's not who we are. >> as we walk past the lorain motel where martin luther king junior was assassinated in 1968, biden says a lot has changed since then and he remains optimistic about the future of america. >> i was asked by a reporter, well, if he changed would you be supportive? absolutely. absolutely. but stop this phony populism which is about i have a problem it's because of that immigrant or that black guy. or stop this naked nationalism which instead of making us number one is making us last. >> we have the dumbest immigration laws in the world. the world laughs at us. >> what about civility in politics in we remember when michelle obama at the convention said when they go low we go high. >> i think she's still right.
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mayor of distance, a student pilot managed to show his instructor his landing skills mighty fast on friday sensing engine trouble, the young man was able to turn a freeway into a runway. >> the single engine piper landed without incident and without brushing against a single vehicle. only thede pilot and the teacher were aboard. now they have a story they can share for some time. >> that's quite a flying lesson. >> i think you pass when you do that. >> i think you pass when you do that. very impressive. >> he learned well.
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a recent surge in migrants crossing into the u.s. from mexico caused agitation at the white house this week. in a tweet thursday, president trump threatened to call up the military and close the southern border. the issue reportedly led to a heated shouting match between two of the president's top advisers. arrests of migrant families have been surging since the end of the family separation policy. there were nearly 17,000 in september. the department of homeland security says that's the most on record for me month. and an 80% increase from july. mireya villareal is near the border there. >> reporter: we have overwhelming government facilities and forcing i.c.e. to apprehend them shortly after they're arrested. it increased by 121% this year as compared to last. in an interview with 60 minutes
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lesley stahl, president trump was reluctant to say whether he'd reinstate the poll. >> i when you allow the parents to stay together, okay, when you allow that, then what happens is people are going to pour into our country. >> are you going to go back to that? >> well, we're look at a lot of things. we want to change the immigration laws. >> reporter: parents we spoke to said the administration's decision to pause the practice of separating families is one of the reasons they decided to cross the border now. >> the guy told you that you weren't going to be separated from your child? >> uh-huh. >> that's the reason you came? >> si. >> reporter: this is the border fence that separates arizona from mexico. once these groups cross into the u.s. they're searching for agents to turn themselves in. border patrol says smugglers are taking advantage of the uncertainty. >> they think they're going to get a free ticket into the u.s.? >> that's the perceived notion and that's what the smugglers are telling them and what they're selling that journey as.
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>> reporter: the united church of christ is one of seven tucson churches that have become temporary homes for migrant families just released by i.c.e. >> the gates just opened very suddenly. i think we got 800 people. >> reporter: the fight for asylum now moves to closed courts. in the meantime these churning doors wi -- church doors will remain open. tucson, arizona. it's morning here but it's evening in australia, and that's where prince harry and meghan markle are opening harry's invictus games. the aspiring competition for wounded warriors. we'll head there later, but first a look at the weather for your weekend.
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meddling with the midterms. up next the latest on a threat to the november elections. . a russian woman is accused in the first case related to this year's vote. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." fact is, every insurance company hopes you drive safely. but allstate actually helps you drive safely... with drivewise. it lets you know when you go too fast... ...and brake too hard. with feedback to help you drive safer. giving you the power to actually lower your cost. unfortunately, it can't do anything about that.
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of congress and 36 governors mansions at stake, there are new concerns about the security of america's election systems. on friday, u.s. intelligence agencies stated that russia, china, iran and other countries are engaged in active efforts to influence voters. >> hours later, the justice department announced the indictment of a russian woman making her the first person charged with interfering in the 2018 election. for more, we're joined by ian vandewalker, senior counsel at the brennan center for justice in new york. good morning. >> morning. >> let's start with this indictment. how did they find this woman and what is she accused of? >> she is accused of being the accountant to the organization that was involved in the february indictment and has long been known to be a major organization interfering in elections by essentially paying russian trolls to post on social media pretending to be americans and talking about american
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politics to influence american politics. >> federal prosecutors are saying that they're using the same tactics that they used back in 2016. >> yes. yes. a lot of -- in fact, the exact same takt tacticctics, some of accounts were involved, which shows we haven't closed the doors from the 2016 or learned those lessons. >> how far from social media have they gone? there have been attempts to target databases, polling stations. are our polling stations secure? how secure are we? >> hackers are always trying to attack voter registration systems and anything -- anything that they can touch. but, there's no evidence that any votes been changed, any voter registration databases have been changed. and we have election officials working around the clock to keep that safe in concert with dhs, the fbi, and other federal agencies. >> there was so much uproar right after the 2016 election about this and then it went away. and you mentioned this idea that things haven't changed.
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we've heard some talk about it with social media companies, but what about congress? why have they not done anything about this? >> that's a tricky problem. i think that congress -- there has been bills, there's bills to increase transparency online which would leave trolls with fewer places to hide and give law enforcement more of the kind of information that they've used to create that's indictments and the february indictments. and unfortunately those bills haven't moved. but, you know, we hope to see movement after the election. >> and there's been some finger pointing of both iran and china. what more do we know about that as influencers? >> very bill. -- very little. >> ivan was doing the same types of things, talking about american politics and sow discord and have americans fighting with each other. china, we know tynd mon on this, but there's no kind of
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interference that the russians have been accused of being involved in. >> the social media is largely aimed at confusion and disruption, correct? what have they done? >> yeah, the interesting thing is they have multiple accounts and they're just saying the exact opposite things. so there will be one side saying, you know, pumping up president trump and saying he's what we need and another side attacking him from the liberal perspective. so they're not articulating a single viewpoint. what they want is to sow division and they want americans distrusting our system of democracy, distrusting the voting booth and each other and each other's political parties. that's what we need to be aware of. >> and what's clear in this it's an ongoing process. it goes back to 2016 but it continues now. >> absolutely. and they will be continuing going into 2020 for all we know. >> so if congress isn't doing anything, what can we do? >> i think, you know, everybody should be aware that this stuff is going on. when you see a political post on
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social media think about it, do i know where this is coming from? can i confirm it from an independent source? do i want continue to ject thin this into the discourse? those are the kinds of things that individuals can do. >> thank you for being with us this morning. if you're ordering seafood from a restaurant or buying it in a store, there may be a catch. there's a good chance you may not be getting what you asked for. up next, fraudulent fish. we'll look at white problem persists and the risk it poses ahead on "cbs this morning: saturday." is your floor's best friend. only roomba uses 2 multi-surface rubber brushes to grab and remove pet hair. and the roomba filter captures 99% of dog and cat allergens. if it's not from irobot, it's not a roomba. this is not a screensaver.game. this is the destruction of a cancer cell by the body's own immune system,
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so dirt is off your hands. if it's not from irobot, it's not a roomba. whether we live near a coastline or not, seafood is an increasingly popular option for americans. the u.s. is now the second largest consumer of seafood worldwide right after china. the centers for disease control says about 20% of adults are eating fish at least twice a week. but choosing your fish doesn't
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always mean getting what you're after. meg oliver has that story. good morning, meg. tell us more. >> reporter: good morning, michelle. recent investigation dollas and studies show mislabeling due to error but show that fraud is outright rampant in the industry showing up in the marketplace and on restaurant menus. i spoke to local merchants who told us exactly what to look for. >> there's no antibiotics and no growth enhancers. >> reporter: every week lisa rosenberg peppered her local seafood market with plenty of questions. >> this is the one from new zealand. >> reporter: from salmon and scallops to shrimp, she wants to know when and where everything came from. >> just knowing that the seafood we're bettigetting is fresh and coming from a country that has shipped it in a timely manner and markets it and is honest with their marketing practices.
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>> reporter: those practices have come under fire around the globe with rampant fraud in all stages of the seafood industry. one study of retailers found seafood like grouper, cod and snapper may be mislabeled 87% of the time swapped out for less desirable and cheaper varieties. for example, only seven of the 120 samples of red snapper were actually red snapper. >> it's a very big problem. and the issue is that once it's prepared, there's really no way to check it other than dna testing, which a lot of companies are now doing. >> reporter: vinny millbourn hails from a long line of fishermen. the company in new york specializes in local, domestic, and traceable species. his store front acts as a fish market, raw bar and restaurant. >> where do you buy your fish? >> i have a network of small
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boat fishermen in wharves all over the country that are shipping to me daily or by error by truck and we are processing every single day to bring in high-quality, fresh seafood. this is a beautiful steel head trout. >> he not only knows where his fish came from, can he tell a tale about each one. >> >> this striped bass came from massachusetts from a fishing vessel named stanley by a guy i know named seth. >> reporter: that personal connection is hard to find. it's estimated more than 90% of the seafood consumed in the u.s. is imported and less than 1% is tested by the government. >> is it better to buy organic seafood? >> not really. in this country there's no legal standard for organic for seafood. >> no legal standard? >> no. had they did the stabbed ards for meat and poultry and chicken they excluded seafood. when you see organic on seafood it's not a standard so they can put that on just about anything.
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>> reporter: larry has spent years researching the unregulated industry calling fish the most frequently fake food americans buy. >> the inexpensive fish a lot of them are farmed in southeast asia from places that have been shown over and over again to use bad practices, ban drugs, ban pesticides. a lot of the fish that we eat we don't know where it came from or produced at all. >> reporter: how dangerous is this? >> think it's dangerous. there's tens of millions of people that get sick from foodborne illness every year that they can't explain. >> if we don't clean it up and see more regulations, what can happen in the future? >> the zructiondestructions of ocean. we have a virgining global population since the history of mankind, having enough food to heat has been the number one priority of people. it's really important that we take care of the oceans. >> he says the best course of action for consumers is to buy whole fish. he says don't be intimidated.
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you can have them cut it and clean it for you so you know what you're bringing home to your families. >> it's stunning there's no legal standard for organic seafood. >> and if you want to buy organic seafood, make sure it comes from canada or new zealand. >> it sounds like to say place where we need more regulations here. >> meg thank you so much. from restaurant cooks to home health aides, robots are set to play ann creasing role in our lives. up next we'll see how far the technology has come at a major worldwide showcase. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." whooo! want to take your next vacation to new heights? tripadvisor now lets you book over a hundred thousand tours, attractions, and experiences in destinations around the world! like new york! from bus tours, to breathtaking adventures,
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attendees at b conventions. but at one underway in japan this week only some of the participants are human. they're hosting the world robot summit and it's packed with the usual assortment of the practical, the weird, and the entertaining. lucy craft got a look inside. >> reporter: when it comes to factory robots, japan is king. more than half of all industrial robots sold last year were made in japan. the hazardous bah heemmouths of old are getting kind letter and ge gentler. factory bots are working side by side and collaborating with humans. lifting 40-pound components is a real strain on human bodies, so robots do the heavy lifting and people do the light, complex work. modern robots have a light
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enough touch grto grab and box potato chips. this devicen ables users to remotely sense what's being touched each from 3,000 miles away, technology that promises to transform fields from agriculture to medicine to disaster response. japan has long had a love affair wi with robots and with its human population on the decline, it's no surprise that robots are coming off the factory floor to play a part in everyday life. they're in the short-handed nursing agency and helping monks perform funerals. they're being mobilized as tour guides. and as the ideal ping pong partner, plays at any level, never slams down its racket. robo sniffer dogs keel over to warn their users about foot
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odor. and this big tail bot tells users if they pass the smell test. this robot takes the heartache out of hala tose sis, explains its developer. even the daytime tv has been creepily replicated by this android eerily close to an actual celebrity. whatever shape they're in, robots are grabbing attention like never before. for "cbs this morning: saturday," lucy craft, tokyo. the big news there is the robot with the rake. >> yes, exactly. >> now if we could get one to shovel snow. >> i like that. >> but i can't stand the thought of them taking all those jobs away. >> well, it's -- >> from people who need them. >> that's going to be a big issue. up next, a royal couple hosts an event to help injured veterans. for some of you, your local news is next, the rest stick around.
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you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." when my parent came out it was a different world about five years ago. i remember thinking if i can write something quickly enough where my parent can feel safe in the world, even as getting in the elevator with other people, getting in a taxi cab and feeling like people might meet my parents and say oh, i've seen transparent, i understand. >> it's a ground-breaking program and so many people have unanswered questions about it. do you have people asking you questions all the time? >> yeah, i mean i think a very simple thing is like the binary is not that dependable in all ways, you know. good girl, bad girl. victim/villain. man/woman. there's stuff between the binary that will help us get through
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this next phase of humanity. >> it's interesting that you're with amazon. you went from amazon the shopping place where i buy my banana slicer and order my chargers. but amazon took this on because they saw something that other people did not see. >> yes. and i'm grateful that they did, yes. it's an amazing place for innovation. i remember actually being here with jeff bezos with you guys a few years ago and thought wow, to put television and content together with the kind of services they provide and the stuff they sell is kind of a new thing. >> big changes at the show because of the star jeffrey tambor has now left the show, asked to leave the show because of allegations associated with the me too movement. how do you pivot when that was -- the whole show was basically based on the coming out? >> yeah, well that's why we're hoping that people will tune in for our fifth and final season which is actually going to be a movie musical. so we're pivoting in a way that i think is helping the show transition in people's minds to something that can be joyful.
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welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm anthony mason with michelle miller and deign' jacobson. coming up this hour we'll take you down under to australia where prince harry and his wife are opening the invictus games, the competition for wounded warriors that harry himself created. plus she took up a new role for an african-american woman and then took down one of the country's most notorious mobsters. we'll hear the little known story of one of america's legal pioneers. and applying bandages and attending to cuts is something every mom is used to, but not in this setting. we'll meet a woman living out
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her dream and breaking new ground in the world of ultimate fighting. that's ahead. but first latest on our top story this morning. saudi arabia admits that "washington post" contributing columnist jamal khashoggi is dead. an announcement on saudi media said khashoggi was killed in a fight inside the saudi embassy in istanbul, turkey. >> president trump says that he thinks the saudi explanation is credible and calls it a good first step. mr. trump says he will work with congress on a u.s. response, but argued against canceling u.s. military contracts with the kingdom. holly williams is in istanbul with the very latest. holly, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. it's been 18 days since jamal khashoggi walntaudi arconsulat here itanbulbee andhn sappeared. since then, saudi arabia has denied that it abducted, harmed, or killed khashoggi calling those allegations baseless. but in the middle of the night
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local time, saudi arabia finally admitted that jamal khashoggi died inside the consulate after getting into a, quote, fight and quarrel that led to his death. 18 saudi nationals have been arrested by their government over this incident which has seen enormous international pressure on saudi arabia to explain exactly what happened to khashoggi before this humiliating about-face. several senior officials have been fired, including the former deputy head of intelligence ahmed alasiri thought to have been close to bin salman. but saudi's explanation have left people skeptical. khashoggi was outspoken against the government and entered the consulate to get paperwork he needed to marry his fiancee. he had been living in the u.s. the last year over fears for his safety. journalists have been told that
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they believe khashoggi was tortured, killed, and dismembered inside the consulate by members of a 15-man saudi team that left turkey soon afterwards. we still have no details from the saudis about what they did with jamal khashoggi's body. dana. >> still a lot of questions and skepticism, as you said. holly williams in istanbul. thank you. thousands of migrants traveling in a caravan from central america are trying to get to the united states. some were able to get in mexico when they reached that country's border with guatemala if they wanted to apply for refugee status. women holding small children pleaded there are children here and we are hungry. president trump warned the it reaches the u.s. border. >> a very different scene down under. the duke and duchess of sussex better known at prince harry and meghan markle are wrapping up their first week of a fourth
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invictus games. jonathan vigliotti takes us on the royal tour down under. >> reporter: prince harry officially kicked off his invictus games outside sydney's iconic opera house. >> mellohello, sydney, hello invictus. >> reporter: in the hours leading up to this, they seen this video, the prince performing for an audience of one. he created the games in 2014 to help injured veterans. earlier the come attended a ceremony to celebrate a world war i memorial. the couple has been welcomed with open arms. from sydney where the crowds lined up to congrat laim laulatn the news they're expecting a
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baby to dubbo where their parenting skills were put to the test. the tour has become a platform for the come to use their celebrity to shine a light on causes they care about. nowhere was that more on display than when we sat barefoot in the and is with a surf group that gathers weekly to discuss their personal struggles. >> this is meant to be one of the more intimate moments of the trip so far, the royal couple choosing this beach as the backdrop to discuss mental health, a topic important to both of them. >> reporter: they're royal rock stars and meghan is doing exceptionally well, says royal correspondent roya nikkhah. >> i think they're bringing a new image which we've seen this morning, barefoot, chic on the beach, surfing, mental health, very relaxed. this is the future of the monarch i can and that's the freshness that they're bringing. >> reporter: this royal family is growing in more ways than one. for "cbs this morning:
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saturday," jonathan vigliotti, sydney, australia. >> great event. another great event, the national league pennant will be decided by a single game played tonight. the game six of the nl championship series, the milwaukee brewersee avoided elimination last night. they scored five runs in the first two innings and beat the los angeles dodgers 7-2 to force a game seven. nothing better. tonight's winner will face the boston red sox in the world series. >> okay, that was nice and all, but the dodgers are taking it. i'm sorry. >> i'm not -- >> i'm just going on the record saying it. >> there are people in boston who will argue with you if they get to the world series. >> my wife is from massachusetts, i say nothing. it is about six after the hour, here's a look at the weather for your weekend.
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an author in search of an owily history.y found it in his up next, we'll meet a law professor whose grand mother was a law enforcer. he even helped take down one of america's most notorious mobsters. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". ♪ carla is living with metastatic breast cancer, which is breast cancer that has spread to other parts of her body. she's also taking prescription ibrance with an aromatase inhibitor, which is for postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive her2- metastatic breast cancer as the first hormonal based therapy.
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about tresiba®. luci >>om eliot ness to robert kennedy, america has a long history of crusadeders against organized crime. but one name is far less known. back in the 1930s, eunice
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carter, a granddaughter of slaves became new york's first african-american assistant district attorney and she's credited with taking down luciano, one of the notorious mob bosses. it's one of the fascinating stories told in a new buygraphy of carter. invisible was written by her grandson, yale law professor stephen carter. >> i want to tell americans a story about hope and a story about overcoming adversity, whatever the odds. that's certainly the story of my grandmother's life. >> stephen l. carter's grandmother was eunice carter a prominent black activist, community leader and attorney who made her mark decades before desegregation. as he told us at the historic morris-jumel mansion in harlem just across the street from his nana's home. >> and this was her house? >> that this was their house,
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number ten. >> reporter: a woman so famous in her day she counted mary mcleod bethune and eleanor rosevelt as friends. the real life prosecutor even inspired a character on hbo's boardwalk empire. >> i'm sorry, i don't make the assignments. >> online comment threats threads quickly filled with mockery. ridiculous. that there weren't black lawyers back then, not black women lawyers anyway, but they were wrong. my nana eunice was real and really did prosecute mobsters. >> as a detective in new york, mr. mayor, who i think is one of the best detectives in the united states. >> reporter: in the 1930s, thomas dew we was appointed special prosecutor to take on the most ya afia in the 1930s. he hired 19 men and eunice
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carter. >> they're all working on loan sharking and kidnapping and murder, but eunice say woman, so they give her prostitution. so eunice alone in this office listens to the citizen complaints, begins to do research. >> by 1936, she found evidence linking organized crime to charles lucky luciano, the most powerful mafia boss in america. >> she's able to go to dewey and say i found the evidence that the mob is running this, and he allows eunice to run this big raid where they're going to raid 80 brothels at the same time. and she was able to prove that luciano and the mob did take a cut from the money from prostitution. she was the only assistant who ever connected luciano with any crime. >> reporter: eunice's story began in atlanta where race riots left a lasting impact. >> when she was 7 years old, eunice's homelife was completely destroyed by the great atlanta
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riot of 1906 swarmed into the black niebds bu -- neighborhoods to burn and kill. she was shaped by that experience. and a year after the riot eunice said to a little kid she met, when she grew up she was going to be a lawyer and put the bad people in jail. >> reporter: her parents were intellect wa intellectuals and activists. they raised her and her brother to believe that with determination anything could be achieved. she lived an incredible life for african-american people in their time. >> i try to imagine it myself sometimes. here's my grandmother, the grandchild of slaves who has these two big black activists. one of them is traveling the world on behalf of the ymca, the other is her mother who gets sent into places where the people have been completely intimidated by the ku klux klan and she's supposed to rouse the
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black community back into action. >> reporter: eunice would rise to importance in the republican party playing a role in thomas dewey's presidential bids in 1944 and 1948. >> his party adopted the strongest civil rights platform ever adopted by a major party at that time, largely through eunice's efforts. and when he was on the stump he talked about eunice. >> reporter: despite her hard work, some things remained out of reach. >> she wanted to be a judge, that was really an ambition of hers. and she fought as a good republican who campaigned for the right candidates that would happen one day. it never did. interestingly, eunice didn't blame race. she didn't blame gender. she blamed her brother. >> reporter: alphaeus hunton, four years her junior, spoke several languages, held degrees from harvard, nyu, and taught english at his alma mater howard university. but he was an outspoken communist. in 1951, hunton went to prison
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for refusing to name names to the house and american activities committee. when he was released six months later, paul robeson and web were there to greet him, but not his sister. >> toward the end of their lives they reconciled a little bit but they never saw each other again before they died. >> so sad. >> it's a reminder what can happen when we allow us to get divided from each other that i can't get along with you because of our sharp political differences. we should work on that you and i. >> reporter: invisible was truly a family affair. leah carter, stephen l. carter's daughter, was key in researching the book. >> and unfortunately the world has always been unjust, but there is also always something that can be done. >> one of the things that's exciting to me about telling eunice's story is that it fits in with something i think we need in these times. we're reminded that against much bigger odds there are people who did manage to break through. i'm not suggesting there aren't
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barriers today that are real, but i think that the more we study about people who broke through the barriers of those days, the more hope we have for the future now. >> the interesting thing about eunice was that she was a writer at first and, in fact, was one of the first women to be inducted in harlem's writer's guild, which was really amazing. and then she said, no, i really want to make a change in the way the laws are impacted. so that's why she entered the law. >> what a fascinating woman and the break with her brother wads -- was a real twist in that story. >> it's a great read. i encourage everyone to go out and buy because it tells you about new york history, all about southern atlanta, georgia history and it's a romp through a who's who of the harlem renaissance. >> i love that with determination anything can be achieved from her parents. you'll see that in the story that i got to go doh for thdo f.
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just ahead, we'll meet a woman who found her place in the world of mixed martial arts in a world that was previously done only by men. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." -computer, order pizza. -of course, daniel. -fridge, weather. -clear skies and 75. -trash can, turn on the tv. -my pleasure. -ice dispenser, find me a dog sitter. -okay. -and make ice. -pizza delivered. -what's happened to my son? -i think that's just what people are like now. i mean, with progressive, you can quote your insurance on just about any device. even on social media. he'll be fine. -[ laughs ] -will he? -i don't know. -will he? take a moment to unwrap and unwind with lindor a milk chocolate shell with a smooth, melting center
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rowdy, rond aa rousey. >> make no mistake, it's still a man's world, but for one woman that wasn't a reason to stay away. swayze valentine the world's first cutwoman as posed to cutman now works at the highest level of mixed martial arts. we met up with her at a ufc gym in white plains, new york. swayze valentine is used to being the lone female in a provision dominated by men. >> i've been through a lot. i've dealt with assault, physical assault inside the cage by one of the coaches in front of hundreds of people. >> did you ever find out why?
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>> because i was a woman. they'll go behind my back and be like we don't want her. we don't want her. >> how do you handle it? >> i think to myself i'm not going to let anyone make me feel like i don't belong here. >>? >> here is the ufc, the ultimate fighting championship. the elite in mixed martial arts. 4 1/2 years ago swayze became the promotions first female cutman. >> when did you get the call from ufc? >> i know the day. it was february 22nd, 2014. that was incredible. you can't get any higher than that. and the fact that i made it there after everything that i've been through, i was so thankful that they decided to take a chance on me. >> her job as a cutwoman is to protect the fighter's hands before a bout, then to stop any bleeding once it's underway. >> i have 45 second or less to get that fighter to the next round. because if for any reason the doctor comes in and calls it and says he's not good enough to fight or she's not good enough to fight, it's on me. is she going to mess up? is she not going to mess up. >> did she not fix that cut
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because it's a she and not a had he? >> very possible. >> when swayze decided she had to ab i part of mma, she knew she'd have to break down some gender stereotypes. >> you decided you needed this as parts of your life. ha did you do? >> after that show i went down and found someone, i want to do something with your show. what i can do? >> he took a look at me and goes, why don't you be a ring girl. >> you did a doum couple days as a ring girl and thought what when you were out there in front of the crowd? >> it was not for me. i was in too little clothes to be in front of that many people. i couldn't do it. >> but if was there in the cage when she found what she could do. >> that's when i saw the fighters and coaches and they're getting their hands wrapped. i'm like there's no greater honor in this sport than to be the person to wrap that fighter's hands. >> knowing the what but not the how, swayze googled mma hand wraps and found videos from legendary cutman jacob stitch
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duran. >> how's it feel, brother? >> so i started watching him and i'm like, okay, i'll practice on myself and when i got a little confident, i found a local gym and i just drove out there every day and just asked, hey, i can wrap your fighters' hands for their sparring sessions? >> how do you get them to trust you do this? >> that was hard. i knew what my goal was and i kept practicing. and every day i'm reteeing in my head, four over the knuckles, four over the wrist, two over the thumb. >> from determined to confident, swayze slowly started building her career in the amateur ranks adding gyms and fighters all while balancing two kids as a single mom. >> it took a lot of years, a lot of free time. this definitely isn't a job you do for the money. i worked a lot of years for free. i was thinking where can i go to really expand? and i thought las vegas, it's the fight capital of the world. >> but getting there from washington state wasn't cheap. >> i didn't have a lot of money so i donated my blood or my plasma and i got money and i went -- drove eight hours. >> you were donating blood and
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plasma so you could afford do this thing that wasn't going to make you a lot of money anyway. why? >> i don't have an answer for what drove know do it, i just had this deep-burning gut desire of it's going to work out, keep going, keep going. >> swayze's gut was right. all that sacrifice paid off when she got that first call from the ufc. >> can you explain what it's like during a fight? >> it's really actually indescribable. i'm excited, i'm nervous. i get most comfortable when i finally sit down and get my sheet and it shows who i'm going to wrap and then i go in there and when i meet the fighter i shake everyone's hand and that totally brings me down. >> the bigger stage for swayze is still not enough to pay the bills, so she works at her local post office six days a week. comp and vacation time allows her to take off for ufc matches. >> do all your fellow employees know what you do in your spare time? >> they do. >> what do they think? >> they love it. on the outside they're like oh my gosh, it's so dangerous. are you okay? are you safe?
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i'm like absolutely.erro and they love hearing what is my next show? how did it go? so they're super supportive. >> and that support is something at lite girl who says well that there's only one, i don't know if i can do that? >> well, now i know after being the first that there are many more women following my path already. and i just hope that any little girl that sees that, shows you can achieve your dreams whether you're the first or the 15th or the 30th, you do what you want to do and love every second of it. >> swayze's next ufc event is on november 17th in argentina. there were some men along the way, cutmen, that took her under the wing and taught her tricks of the trade that you had to know to do it. but that was determination that got her there. >> six days a week and still the smile on her face from ear to ear. >> it's a job that doesn't pay man or woman. >> you want the definition of
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passion, see swayze. >> there it is. he's the force behind a dozen dining and etant up next, ed kane. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." after more than 50 years in the spotlight, tina turner has given up her u.s. passport to called switzerland at home. >> they love me here because i'm not a diva. >> you're not a diva? >> no, i'm not. i never wanted to be. i know the divas, i have met some of them and i just move the other way. >> do you miss living in the united states? >> no, because when i lived in the states they didn't give me the freedom that the other countries gave me. my angela came to me at one of oprah's gatherings. i said, you know, no america just never really liked me. is he says, no, while you were with ike. >> that ike is ike turner. tina says she endured years of
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emotional and physical abuse until their very rocky marriage ended in 1978. in 2007, ike died of a drug overdose. >> and when he died you felt what? >> nothing. i just felt, happy he's off the planet because i didn't know when he would show up at my door or when he would show up period. and after he died, it was like, okay, now he's gone. >> tina was 46 when she fell in love with german record producer irw irwin bach back in france. they got married five years ago. >> the first time you see him you knew this was something and somebody special. what was it? >> it was a body reaction. i think it was my heartbeat and i was shaking and everyone was very young then. he was only 30 years old. i think wai was probably starti the big hair. i stepped back and i thought oh my gosh, what a good-looking man.
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this morning on "the dish," restaurant and nightclub entrepreneur ed kane, born in boston, he started his career close to homeworking in his family's neighborhood bar. after college, he and his brother joe bought and renovated and old diner and that was just the beginning. >> kane had a feel for hospitality and an inspired eye for design. his big night entertainment group now runs 13 venues from top-rated restaurants to spectacular nightclubs and even a high-end bowling alley. one his latest projects is boston explorator and he's
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brought us dishes from his menu. tell us what's on this great table? >> a lot of wonderful things. mussel broth, local cod and salad over there with the tuna seared with fennel. the fried cauley flowiflower wi sauce that goes on top. you have your mini french onion soup here. and this fantastic dish here is an apple and quint crisp. these are fall dishes. >> yeah. >> and the drink you have there is my bar manager's twin peaks. >> oh my gosh. >> please thank ian for me. >> it's black fig vodka, black tea bourbon. we serve it in a clear tea pot and spills over and has this vy
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mysterious look to it, very cool. >> your family business was this industry. you start with your dad in his bar. from that time there? >> that i didn't want to do it. >> true. true. >> and, no, but i think, you know, you don't know it when you're a kid in high school and all your friends are doing other things and you're at the bar cleaning in the mornings. and when i went to college i swore, oh, i'd never be in that business. >> come on. you're the classic good will hunting. you went from mopping floors to harvard university. >> yeah, economics major. and when i graduated a started a little computer company, i probably should have stayed in the computer company world. but in any case, i got back in the business. i have a wonderful brother who say great mentor to me and he also allowed me do the creative things that i'm very good at. and we started our first place and it was a huge success despite the fact i had no idea what i was doing. >> yeah. >> we're about to celebrate 30 years there. >> wow. >> it will be open 30 years, so that's a pretty good run in the
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restaurant business. and then i had a client and he had a big outside venue and it was a nightclub, 3,000-person nightclub. i said, oh, i can do that. >>ado expece. hyid you say that? >> i just felt like it was such a great opportunity, right? >> yeah. >> and it was next level. and i had a lot of great support systems. >> what is the secret to making a great nightclub? >> i think everyone centers around like a design that tran sen -- transcends time that makes a person walk through the door feel wonderful and glamourous. and then it's hospitality, the feeling of safety especially for women. women want to come to a nightclub and feel this is a safe place kand enjoy myself and have fun and not feel like i'm going to get assaulted or, you know -- >> right. >> it's got to be exciting too. >> it's got to be exciting and glamourous. so i think we do a good job of
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putting those together. >> so much success, i'm going to have you serve your dish. we're filling your table right now, but if you could fill your table and have this meal with anyone, who would it be? >> it would be my mom for sure. my mom died when i was a kid. when i was in my 20s. i had first restaurant starts and she died a week of a opened. i always thought i would love her to see what we've accomplished. >> she would be really proud of you. >> ed kane, thank you. >> thanks so much. >> for more on ed kane and "the dish" you can head to our website at cbsthismorning.com. >> now here's a look at the weather for your weekend.
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sessions, the folk duo known as the milk carton kids, they've been together since 2011 and will be performing songs from their new album in just a moment. but first, i sat down with the duo and found out their harmonious folk sound is paired with a folksy sense of humor ♪ called you up to say hello >> the milk carton kids are joey ryan and kenneth pattengale, a duo who pursued separate solo careers before they connected in los angeles. >> i'd done a bunch of things before meeting joey whereas he had been all over the world playing sad, small shows for the folk den zens. >> why don't you leave the self-deputy pra occasion to me so it's actually self-deputy pra occasion. >> i'm just a fan of normal deputy pra occasion sometimes. >> but something happened when they sang together.
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>> how would you describe what you heard? >> for me, the first time that we sang together, even though it was two acoustic guitars and singing together, it felt complete. >> the way our voices blended in the air happened in a way where i had never had that experience with another person. ♪ when she calls, don't send her my way ♪ >> so they abandoned their solo careers. >> was there any negotiating involved in this union? >> are you referring toy do 90% of the work and get 50% of the spoils? i've not had a good deal historically i haven't represented myself well. but in folk music there's not much to split, you know. >> the milk carton kids got a big break right here in what was then avatar studios when producer t. bone burnett asked them to be part of another day, another time, a concert that
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celebritied t celebrated the music. >> we showed up and walked in for rehearsals and there's joel and ethan and markus mum ford and all of the brothers and joan beaz sitting in studio eight. and we walked in and t. bone said get out your guitars and see what song you might play. ♪ ♪ a kiss from the cold ♪ a blanket of snow overhead >> and they've just got this beautiful footage of us performing this song. and they pan over. ♪ down the heavens above >> and there's markus mumford and a tear comes down his cheek. and then when that ran on show time for a long time, it made a dig difference in our career. the second thing that happened
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hbo show vinyl. ♪ why do you cry >> had all their albums i bet? >> they did not get enough credit. >> hey dan, here's the mike again. >> really? that was a good take, too. it had a recklessness to it. >> wild, loved it. >> i many a lot of fun with it. we got to wear mustaches, my hair was straight. >> part of that experience was the day after our episode aired they canceled the series. >> here to perform selections from their latest album all the things that i did and all the things that i didn't do, the milk carton kids with younger years.
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♪ ♪ in the plains of omaha, i think of all the suffering i saw ♪ ♪ soaking up day and distraught upon land without a law ♪ ♪ everything i loved, everything i found her i hoped for ♪ ♪ frightened and surrounded who else is there to turn to anymore ♪ ♪ oh i held out my heart ♪ oh i held out my heart ♪ held out my heart
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♪ there was a time i spoke the truth but my times were wasted on my youth snoft somewhere i wade into a crowd to a pounding on the ♪ ♪ sure i heard the sound, it's better yet ♪ ♪ i'll make it today i was born beneath the fullness of the moon ♪ ♪ i held out my arms ♪ i held out my arms ♪ ♪ far away ♪ i hear she in the moon ♪ far away, a song ♪
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♪ diamond light morning came, lun running through the window like a friend ♪ ♪ like a wild revelation, like a shining invitation to a ♪ ♪ smoking is a prayer, broken by despair i make amends ♪ ♪ the love inside our hearts is the only kind of saviour we've been seeing ♪ ♪ oh i held out my heart ♪ oh i held out my heart, held
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out my heart ♪ >> don't go away, we'll be right back with more mize being from the milk carton kids. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." i can do more to lower my a1c. because my body can still make its own insulin.
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ask your doctor about once-weekly trulicity. ...perfectly seasoning our ohillshire farm smoked sausage. so by simply adding the right ingredients... ...you can end each day crafting a perfectly delicious dinner. so i got an offer and now i'm thinking... i'd like to retire early. oh, that's great sarah. let's talk about this when we meet next week. how did edward jones come to manage a trillion dollars in assets under care? jay. sarah.
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so i have a few thoughts on that early retirement... by focusing our mind on whatever's on yours. ♪ this will be the last time ♪ it's going to be a last cry ♪ this will be the last time ♪ this will be the last time ♪
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maybe you should just go ahead and do it. we're legalzoom, and we've helped over a million people just like you start their own businesses. legalzoom. where life meets legal. when it comes to managing your type 2 diabetes, what matters to you? feeling good about that? let's see- most of you say lower a1c.
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gendiceitha sulfonear inlin su increased bad cholesterol, tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you have any medical conditions. so-what do you think? well i'm definitely thinking differently than i was yesterday. ask your doctor about jardiance- and get to the heart of what matters. have a great weekend, everyone. >> we leave you now with more music from the milk carton kids. >> this is big time.
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♪ i lower my glass to the table ♪ ♪ i fashionly smile from a dream ♪ ♪ the stars overhead, are with the weight of the sky ♪ ♪ or so it seems ♪ speak to the voices imagine and sunbeams you've seen from afar ♪ ♪ the tiniest voices resound from the mama, the trace, and the stars ♪ ♪ sometimes the threat comes bear snoes sometimes i look for
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me to find you there ♪ ♪ this will be the last time ♪ i'm going to walk a straight line ♪ ♪ this will be the last time we're going to be my last crime ♪ ♪ this will be the last time ♪ this will be the last time ♪ we're going to have a big time ♪ ♪ yeah, we're going to have a big time ♪ ♪ cast out this bad land with witness ♪ ♪ like smoke from a railroad ♪ stone crumbled
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♪ in colors the earth left to sith a trace of otempists ♪ ♪ of glacial and kind ♪ my mind shows the power of truth ♪ ♪ that judgments expected a prayer ♪ ♪ sometimes the threat comes through ♪ ♪ sometimes i look for me to find you there ♪ ♪ this will be the last time ♪ going to walk a straight line smoet this will be the last time it's going to be my last crime ♪ ♪ this will be the last time ♪ this will be the last time
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♪ that i'm going to have a big time ♪ ♪ i'm ever going to have a big time ♪ ♪ the weight of your mind was captured ♪ ♪ closing your eyes holds the key ♪ ♪ imagine a world as living ♪ imagine an air you can breathe ♪ ♪ so i raise up my glass to the sky now ♪ ♪ i'll lower the lights to a
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♪ i'm weak at the sight of your virtue ♪ ♪ to wart out the demons for sure ♪ ♪ and sometimes the threat comes bare ♪ ♪ sometimes i look for me to find you there ♪ ♪ this will be the last time ♪ going to walk a straight line ♪ ♪ this will be the last time ♪ going to be our last crime ♪ this will be the last time ♪ this will be the last time ♪ it's going to have a big time ♪ ♪ big time ♪ now we're going to have a big time ♪
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♪ oh, yeah, we're going to have a big time ♪ >> all right. well for those of you still with us, we have more music from the milk carton kids. >> this is morning in america. ♪ fell asleep with the tv on ♪ finally feeling like i belong
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snoelt woke up to a funeral song ♪ ♪ called you up to say hello ♪ left a message for you at home ♪ ♪ pack my dishes? styrofoam ♪ ♪ everything i knew was gone ♪ it's range many ohio ♪ the streets are slick ♪ i hear their cries through my window ♪ ♪ they're mourning again in america ♪
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♪ mourning again in america
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the billion dollar jackpot. plus: we sit-down with the head of calfire. his response to the pr luck strikes the area and someone nearly wins the billion jackpot. >> and the claim of destructive wildfires, they say it's a result of i am competent thence -- incompetence in california. and thousands of migrants are trying to get through to the u.s. and good morning. >> we have a check of the forecast, we have a little cool

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