tv CBS This Morning CBS November 17, 2018 4:00am-5:59am PST
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♪ good morning, it's november 17th, 2018. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." rising fears, more than a thousand people are now missing as the death toll also jumps in the california wildfires. we'll have the latest on the search. questions and answers. the president said for the first time he has answered written questions from robert mueller. so why hasn't he submitted them? new insight into malcolm x.
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some research shows some of his most controversial views were watered down. and shots from space. off the put th astronaut scott, kelly shows us what he saw. but we begin with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. agitated about what you might be receiving in the mueller investigation? >> i'm not agitated. the whole thing is a hoax. there was no collusion. >> the president says he's autopsied writt answered written questions from special counsel robert mueller. >> my lawyers aren't working on that, i write that. my lawyers don't right answers, i write answers. a federal judge ruled you pass back. jpss st g im>> we have to create rules an rit now. that.
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and if he misbehaves we'll throw him out. president trump visits california to tour the areas devastated by wildfires. the death toll continues to goes up. new yorkers are slamming city officials to be adequately repaired for the city's weather conditions on thursday. >> the city failed. >> this is complete insanity. >> people stuck inside a chicago elevator for hours, no one was injured. >> clack, clack, clack, clack. >> all that. tiger woods faces phil mickelson. >> can you get in phil's head? >>what's been going on in the supreme court lately? i haven't heard much. anything exciting? >> just read the da over there? >> we all are.
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>> on "cbs this morning: saturday." bringing the hammer. >> virginia state 97 had 40. he was happy to get his bench players involved. check out team managers brant ersy. >> ersy from three-point range. brant ersy the team manager and john paul jones has gone john paul jones has gone berserk. captioning funded by cbs and welcome to the weekend, everyone, i'm anthony mason along with michelle miller and adriana diaz in for michelle miller. and we begin with the devastating california wildfires. the death toll has risen to 71 in northern california's campfire. about 1,000 people are reported missing. >> that blaze, the worse in the
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california's history, is now 50% contained after consuming more than 145,000 acres. just outside ofangeles, the woolsey fire is 78% contained after burning 98,000 acres. now communities are faced with a new and very dangerous threat. >> dense smoke from those fires is smothering parts of the state with what is being described as the dirtiest air in the world. megg meg oliver is there. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. i'm standing in the middle of that aftermath. this used to be a restaurant, you can see that kitchen sink behind me. i landed in sacramento, which is about an hour and a half from here, and as soon as the doors opened you could taste and feel the thick smoke that far away. president trump is expected to visit northern california later today, but as communities begin to assess this damage, the worsening air quality is
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imposi imposing severe health risks. in paradise, a community destroyed by flames is pledging to rise fr bu know the town will be able to come together and put it back the way it was. >> it won't be easy. the campfire has burned more than 12,000 structures to the ground as it blazes across northern california. and the death toll is rising as authorities rush to cysift throh the debris. >> eight more remains were recovered today. >> reporter: now the winds that ful fueled the fire push smoke across the area rendering neighborhoods unbreathable. >> it's horrible and so thick, you can smell the smoke and you can see it. >> i'm born and raised in sacramento and this is the worst air ever. >> reporter: people wore masks yesterday, the air posed health
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risks to chronic heart and lung diseases. doctors say breathing it in is the equivalent of smoking ten cigarettes a day. in san francisco, the bay bridge was almost completely obscured by the haze, and in berkeley, today's stanford cal football game was postponed to protect athletes from the severe conditions. and the problems won't go away for the more than 47,000 evacuees from the campfire. dozens of people are sick after multiple outbreaks at red cross shelters across the area. just one more challenge as these people try to move forward. >> a lot of challenges for them. thank you, meg oliver. stay safe in paradise, california. an oval office revelation from president trump after nearly a year of negotiations, the president said he's finished writing out answers to questions from the special counsel. that suggests a big break
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through in robert mueller's investigation. the president told reporters yesterdathat r' inveign now i its 18th month should not have been allowed to begin. but, he added, it was very easy for him to answer the written questions. errol barnett is at the white house. good morning, errol. >> reporter: good morning. you're right, during months of negotiations, the president's legal team works to narrow the focus of questions from the special counsel's team. and just this past week, worked with the president on those written answers. what we know is that potential collusion with russia is an area addressed, but obstruction of justice is not. >> i was asked a series of questions, i've answered them very easily. very easily. >> reporter: president trump said responding to questions from special counsel robert but iid l them andy answers. dye d
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>> but added he hasn't submitted those written appearances yet because he zblnt you need lawyers for submittal and to go over some of the answers. >> reporter: the 18-month probe into russia meddling already yielded indictments. six have pleaded or been found guilty, including the president's former national security adviser michael flynn and campaign chairman paul manafort. >> they should have never been a so-called investigation, which in theory it's not an investigation of me. but it's, as far as i'm concerned, i like to take everything personally. >> reporter: also facing the president, an ongoing legal bat well cnn reporter jim acosta. >> people have to behave. >> acosta's white house press pass was revoked following this testy exchange with the president which resulted in a lawsuit from cnn. >> that's enough. >> reporter: on friday, a trump-appointed federal judge in washington said the government was unable to say acosta's hard pass and ordered the white house to temporarily
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reinstatecredential. >> go back to work. >> reporter: shortly after the discussion, acosta was back on white house grounds. >> i'm really grateful to all of my colleagues in the press who stood by us. >> reporter: the white house said it is going to develop rules and processes to ensure fair and orderly press conferences in the future. >> if they don't listen to the rules and regulations, we'll end up back in court and we'll win. >> reporter: now, the judge's order was just a temporary restraining order which typically lasts about two weeks. and another hearing is set for monday for part two of this legal battle. right now, president trump is en route to california where he is schedule to make multiple stops in areas devastated by the historic fires there. anthony. >> errol barnett at the white house. thanks, errol. it's been another busy week inol gabbenedett naal correspondent >>'srt mueller probe.
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where does that suggest where we are on in this? >> it's some progress. it's not clear how much it actually is because of course he says he's doing it himself. his lawyers will definitely want to get a long look at these appearance -- answers before they're submitted. listen, the fact that the president is acknowledging that he's answering these questions is a significant step not yet clear, though, how much longer this is going to take. >> matthew whitaker has been a vocal critic of robert mueller's. now just over a week on the job as ag, is there mounting pressure to get him a replacement? >> yeah, absolutely. there's real pressure, the question isthl pressure. folks are talking about it a lot. you have republicans and democrats alike on capitol hill saying let's get a full-time ag in here. a lot of people say that his appointment was unconstitutional because of the way it was done. when i say we're not sure how
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real it is, though, that's because it's not clear whether the white house feels a lot of urgency to replace him. we've heard a lot of names, but of course we're still where we were, which is that whitaker is the ag for now. >> given reports that the cia concluded that the crown prince was behind the murder of jamal khashoggi, if relations sour between the u.s. and saudi arabia, how could that affect average americans potentially even at the pump? the president said he's not going to cancel oil contracts, but what could a new congress do? >> the short-term assistance america -- answer is americans aren't going to feel this in their wallets yet. but if there are questions about what do with saudi arabia and if there are long-term effects with saudi arabia, there could be real effects with buying gas and the american relations across the middle east. short-term answer unclear. people are not going to feel it now, but there are real long-term questions here. >> we've got a new class coming in for the house in the new
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year. a lot of new democrats and some of them even campaigned on replacing nancy pelosi as speaker. how likely is that do you think? >> listen, right now you've got to say that she's the favorite. she definitely has the support of the majority of the caucus. but there is a real group of people, and they're not all just new members, a lot of them are older members saying her time has passed, it's time for someone else. as it currently stands, she should be reelected. but there is a real block of people who are standing in her way. the question is who they're going to put up against her. there have been some rumors out there but we don't yet know. no one has formally declared and there's still another four or five weeks. >> she claims she has the votes. >> she claims that and the other people are claiming they have the votes to stop her. but you can't stop someone with no one. >> that's a trick. jim acosta got his press pass back, but is the president likely continue to ten-- to
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intensify his attacks. >> the president is not one to back down from a fight like this. and if we know one thing from the last two or three years, these are going to get more intense. he's going to be out campaigning for re-election, and it's true he was dealt a setback with this acosta trial, but he's going to be out there talking about the and they're going to put in new procedures in the white house. everybody in washington is watching very closely to see what that looks like. >> all right. gabriel debenedetti, we have to leave it there. thank you so much for being here. >> thank you. tomorrow morning on face the nation here on cbs, meet the freshman. margaret brennan hosts a roundtable discussion with four newly elected members of the house of representatives. democrat stacey abrams is acknowledging she will not be the next governor of georgia but in a speech last night in atlanta, ten days after the election she says she is not giving up her fight.
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>> this is not a speech of concession. because concession means to acknowledge an action is right, true, or proper. as a woman of conscious and faith, i cannot concede that. >> abrams said republican brian kemp who until a week ago served as georgia's secretary of state will be certified as the next governor but claims that action -- that action is not aboveboard. she says that's why she's filing a lawsuit against the state to protect future elections from which she described as unconstitutional actions, such as stripping a million residents from the voter rolls. she says the election is over and they're focussing on a bright future. the manual reroubt of machine ballots continues in florida's senate race. nelson was trailing rick scott by some 12,000 votes going into the recount and hopes appear to be dwindling for the three-term
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incumbent senator. the results of two democrat-leaning counties failed to provide a large swing in numbers. final official returns are due from each county by noon tomorrow. there's still a lot of cleaning up to do following a storm that left snow, sleet, and ice from the upper midwest to the east in northern kentucky. fallen tree branches cut overhead power lines to more than 600 homes leaving many people without heat. in minnesota, snow kept a lot of cars off the road. several inches fell elsewhere south of the twin cities. a winter weather advisory is in effect for parts of the state. let's check the forecast for the rest of the nation and for that we turn to meteorologist ed curran of our chicago station. ed, good morning. well, good morning, anthony. we're taking a look at a little. around the great lakes we have a couple areas with winter weather advisories and out here toward kansas city winter weather advisories up through tonight.
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a winter storm warning up for this portion of wyoming here. they could see 5 to 10 inches of snow and windy conditions as well. now, along with the snow, we're of course worried about fire conditions. in northern california, a fire weather warning from tonight till 4:00 on sunday. this is with east to northeast winds 25 miles per hour gusting to 40 plus miles per hour. on top of that, low humidity, 18% to 30%. and along with the fire danger of course, we have bad air quality throughout this entire region because of the smoke of the fires. and except for some cold weather up to the north, most everybody enjoying pretty typical temperatures for this time of year. michelle. >> all right, ed, thank you very much. a baseball legend, rock enroll. they are among several people at the white house yesterday.
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there were there for the nation's highest honor. ♪ you ain't nothing but a hound dog ♪ >> more than 40 years after his death, elvis presley was honor for his decades-long career as a singer and actor. and bestowing the award, president trump cited the king's military service. >> deeply patriotic elvis served in the united states military at the height of his fame. he had a choice, and to him it wasn't a choice. >> elvis was one of three posthumous recipients joined by baseball legend babe ruth who died 70 years ago. >> this award should have been given to him a long time ago. i said you mean babe ruth hasn't gotten it? we took care of that real fast. >> and late supreme court justice scalia. his wife and nine children were in attendance. >> anne, jean, john, paul,
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matthew -- you were very busy, wow. wow. i also knew i liked him. >> the president bestowed the honor on two of his political allies as well. utah senator or rrin hatch retiring the senate. >> he liked me from the beginning and therefore i like him. >> and dr. myriam add hleson. she was cited for her work with drug addiction and recovery. >> through decades of philanthropy and treatment, miriam has helped thousands break free from their addiction to drugs and to alcohol. >> and, there were two pro football hall of famers. after retiring from the nfl, allen page worked his way up to a seat on minnesota's supreme
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court. an ex-dallas cowboys quarterback rog roger stahl back went to the navy. >> i was stunned that elvis presley never got -- >> or babe ruth. >> how did they get overlooked? time to show you some of the other stories. as we mentioned, the "washington post" reports the cia has cop clued that saudi crown prince mohammed bin salman ordered the hit on "washington post" columnist jamal khashoggi in istanbul l istanbul last month. this contradicts previous statements from the saudi government that maintained the prince had nothing to do with the murder. they also center on the prince's brother who assured khashoggi it would be safe to go to the turkeyish consulate. mike pence said those responsible for his death will be held accountable. the richmond times dispatch says a federal judge will allow
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john hinkly junior to move out his mother's house near williamsburg, virginia, and live on his own. he tried to assassinate ronald reagan and three oth nerss 1981. two years ago he was allowed to live with his mother. he will be required to live within a 75 mile range of williamsburg as well as he maintains regular appointments with his social worker, psychiatrist, and therapist. "the boston globe" reports the first two recreational marijuana retail shops on the east coast will open on tuesday in nd identification to prove they're at least 21 years old. they'll al up to one ounce per visit. they'll need to be discrete as well. smoking marijuana in public areas carries a $100 fine. >> they'll still be busy, though. variety reports oscar
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winning screenwriter william goldman has died. goldman won the academy award for best original screen play for bush cassidy and the sundance kid. he also scored oscar gold for his adaptation of all the president's men. his novel, the princess bride, was also made into a film. he died on friday at his home here in new york. he was 87 years old. the chicago tribune reports it took firefighters about three hours to rescue six people who were trapped in an elevator in the city's former hancock tower. the group entered on the 95th floor before making an 84-story drop on friday. >> we were going down and then we -- i felt that we were falling down and then we really kind of heard a noise, clack, clack, clack, clack. >> we were going fast. >> firefighters kept in radio
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contact, but wound up drilling a hole through a wall in order to get to them from the 11th floor. the cause of the malfunction is under investigation. all six people were shaken. i'm sure they were. >> yes, but not hurt. >> not hurt. >> 84 stories. >> apparently they had a prayer circle in the elevator. >> i'd be holding on tight. all right. it's about 22 after the hour, now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. . some see the caravan of central american migrants as a threat, but what are the individual stories of those who have undertaken the difficult and dangerous journey in still ahead we'll talk to some of them both on the border and on their
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way. plus, the auto biography of malcolm x say book that's had widespread influence. but it turns out some of the civil rights leader's original thoughts never made it to the draft. and later, searching for threats to our schools by scanning social media. we hear about a security company with a brand-new approach. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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they're people in our lives who we have to thank and who we might forget if someone didn't remind us. but in this particular case, dave's wife saw the series and dave saw it as well. but dave's wife was the one that pushed him to reach out to us. so we followed up on the story. so he's looking for the guy, he was looking for the guy. >> and doesn't know if he's even alive. >> correct. >> who didn't have to save him. dave's under fire way bunch of guys. they were in a helicopter that crashe they know they're not going to live, it's really bad. and he send out a mayday right before they hit the ground, and he doesn't know if anybody hear military base they actually felt that they could not send another ship to good get him, but one guy who's delivering heavy
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equipment in a chinook. you saw the size of that, you don't go rescuing people in a chinook turns around to his crew and says, guys, should we go get them? we just heard the call. and everybody on the crew said let's go get him. and they came in under heavy fire and opened up the back of the chinook and spun around so these guys could run inside and took off and everyone was saved. it's such a rescue story. and now dave wathnts to meet th pilot who made that choice. >> and so did his wife to say thank you because without that we wouldn't have the children -- they had little children. they wouldn't have the grandchildren that they have. it was such an emotional episode between the two of them when they finally connect. >> and she's just a wonderful interview. >> that's the wife. >> just an incredible woman. and her husband served three tours of duty in vietnam. this is a woman who served.
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kers . after using it as an election campaign issue, president trump is once again focusing on the caravan of central american migrants heading to the u.s. border. in a series of tweets friday, he questioned the motive of migrants who were seeking asylum in the u.s. he calls it a big con. those who make it to the border face another hurdle, getting through the american asylum process which requires them to prove theersecution in their homeland. we had a chance to speak to some of them and tell us why they chose to endure such a long journey. >> reporter: with each day, more migrants make it to the mexico side of the border. some have camped out in the shadows of the border fence. this migrant says she won't cross illegally.
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instead, she'll seek asylum at an official port of entry. she's part of a brup of lgbt migrants among the early arrivals. many say they were persecuted in their home countries because of their sexual orientation or gender identity. earlier on the journey, in southern mexico we met this transgender woman who asked us to conceal her identity. she claims she was targeted in honduras by gang members. and last year more than a dozen armed men broke into her house and attacked her. >> she says she's been beat up and has a scar but doesn't like to show it because it trauma ties her more -- trauma ties her more to show it. >> even if she makes it to the u.s. border and presents her asylum case, the odds are against her. more than 75% of asylum cases filed by central americans were denied from 2012 to 2017. that's not deterring this
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nicaraguan family we met in mexico. they're hoping to receive political asylum in the u.s. when we asked why, rocha pointed to a newspaper. >> what is this? >> it's. [ speaking foreign language ] >> she says they're leaving nicaragua because of this, and this is a newspaper. she says this is her family on the cover. she says her family supports those that are anti-president ortega in nicaragua and the president sees those against him as terrorists. so they have been persecuted. she says this is a photo of their house. she says the para military shot at their house. >> she claims that pro-government forces opened fire on her 14-year-old son in july and detonated a homemade bomb that launched shrapnel in his leg. he now has to make the journey to the u.s. on crutches.
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[ speaking foreign language ] >> reporter: he says he was with his friend and they started getting shot and his friend pushed him down and his friend died, his friend got killed. [ speaking foreign language ] >> reporter: when they retreated to the mountains, he says that people helped take the shrapnel out with nail clippers. he thinks he still has some pieces still in his leg. >> they said wanted signs for the family were posted in town, so they left nicaragua, traversed guatemala, and eventually made it to southern mexico. they stayed there a month when word spread about a caravan approaching. >> reporter: where are you trying to go? [ speaking foreign language ] >> reporter: the united states. >> she then looked into the camera and made a direct appeal.
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[ speaking foreign language ] >> president trump please help us, she said. i would get on my knees and beg. don't send us back, she continued. we're walking and scared. you say you'll mill tar riitarye border, but don't send us back. i fear for my family's life. [ speaking foreign language ] >> please, mr. trump, open the doors for us, i beg you. >> we've been in contact with the family. i spoke to the mother last night and she says that they are struggling on this journey. they are cold, they've been enduring difficult conditions, that they're out of money because they've spent everything they had on trying to get bus tickets to help with the journey. >> you said they've been on the road since july? >> for months, yes. and part of their journey was on horseback to traverse mountainious areas. >> the father's face there was incredibly telling and haunted almost. >> and appeal directly to the
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president. >> she knew exactly who she had to talk to. >> she certainly did. now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. more than 5 decades since his untimely death, malcolm x is saying so saying something new. some new insights into the civil rights fire brand. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." hey portal, call rory. happy birthday! (woman) what'd you get me?
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whether spoken or written, the words of civil rights pioneer malcolm x have influenced generations. more than five decades after his assassination, we're learning much more about his views of the world thanks to some newly revealed documents. vladimir duthiers has the story. >> year nonviolate with people who are nonviolate with us. >> his speeches were controversial. >> and it is time for you and me to fight for our self. >> his legacy shaped after his assassination in 1965 by his book the auto biography of malcolm x. >> that's one of the greatest works of the 20th century.
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>> kevin young is the director at new york city schomburg center for research in black culture. >> i think it's one of those transformative works. >> it was written in collaboration with roots author alex haley. these, a documents now on public display for the first time, show that not everything that malcolm told haley made it into the book. >> i think knowing that there was more, malcolm for us was a special moment. and to see it up close is really telling. >> they include loose papers with malcolm's thoughts. a paper manuscript with mand handwritten exchanges. and at times malcolm's fiery tone. in one paragraph, haley softened malcolm's immoral white devil to read fat cat whites. it was watered down in the book to two-faced whites. in another, malcolm said the american black man is waste being his time strange to integrate. it can't be done. that phrase also didn't make it into the book.
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>> i think the question that scholars are going to ask, is he helping shape the message some and, you know, was there something that haley had as an agenda? and i think it's complicated. i think malcolm x really shines through from the first page. i have no doubt that that is malcolm x's story and it's an i have american one. >> malcolm was often critical of martin luther king's approach to racial progress. this 24-page chapter titled the negro, one of three that went unpublished, he uncanningly predicted america who elect an african american president in the year 2000. >> were you surprised to learn that he was not off by a lot that a black man could be president by the year 2000? >> i'm not surprised anything. malcolm x is such a prophet in the auto biography that we now vnd at lost chapter helps us
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realize that. >> a rare glimpse of a life transformed. for cbs saturday, vladimir duthiers, new york. >> those words coming to light by any means necessary, i guess. >> it's so cool that with that manuscript you can see the whole thing. >> yeah. school shootings are shocking events, but that doesn't mean they always come without warning. sometimes the first clues of have impending tragedy show up on social media. that's next. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." multi-surface rubber brushes to clean all your floors. and with patented dirt detect technology, roomba finds dirt throughout your home. if it's not from irobot, it's not a roomba.
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the epidemic of school shootings in america has prompted vigorous debate over how to prevent them. propose solutions range from limiting the availability of guns to actually providing guns to teachers. but another approach tries to detect threats before they become actions. one innovative company thinks that means actively scanning social media for warning signs it may call for intervention.
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don dahler visited one city where the strategy is being put into practice. >> i think it changed the entire landscape for us and almost every school district in the state of connecticut. >> in the wake of the sandy hook school shootings, greg boulanger says he started to think about security differently. he is the director for public safety in bristol, connecticut, a district with 8,000 students. >> about six years ago when all the districts around put things together and got district crisis teams, we didn't -- you know, we didn't have much. but we added -- we added different tools in our toolbox for school security. >> upgraded security cameras and more robust screening for visitors were two of those tools. another one is social sentinel, a social media threat alert service that costs less than $2 per student. it scans public social media posts for threat indicators like this one which bu langoulanger
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received. stress can kill you. >> this could be a student, you know, who's in crisis himself. i have about 33,000 posts a month. the actionable posts are .97 per thousand. i get 5 or 6,000 a day. >> it just gives you an exlook at red flags? >> yes. we're not invading, people are posting stuff publicly. >> so you're not invading these kids' privacy vir the, these ar that they're posting socially? >> yes. i've been here 23 years and i pretty much know most of the administrators or knew them all. i don't -- we don't have time for that. >> one post that said i'll kill you was flagged. another alert said in part, i gotta kill you all.
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but the person who posted it was not a student and the line was a rap lyric. >> my hangnail is litter rally going to kill me or my boyfriend is litter rally going to kill me are very similar. >> polly mangan is a data scientists. >> sometimes false positives do get sent through because it's very complicated. but we hope to remove some of the noise. >> if you weren't doing this after you retired, what do you think you'd be doing? >> i'd be working with schools in some way, shape or form around safety. >> gary margolis, a 30-year veteran of law enforcement and security is the founder and ceo he says the company has hundreds of contracts in more than 30 states. >> you're critics of course say that you and companies like yours are just profiting on fear after all the school shootings and ha ythat you haven't stoppe anything. >> it's about being a part of a layered security approach.
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much like cameras met a need to be able to put eyeballs in place where's they couldn't have human beings all the time. the fact doors are locked and access control systems reasonably let you keep people out when they shouldn't get in. all of these technologies addressed a reasonable concern. they mitigated a reasonable risk. and we're another part of that layered strategy. >> the service scans public posts on twitter, strahm, -- instagram, and tumblr among others. they would not give us the thousands of phrases that could trigger an alert? >> you do think that's a crucial part of safety to see what's being said on social media? >> the challenge we have now long after the game is over and band practice is over, you're continuing the conversation digitally and you're doing it almost constantly. they're sharing things there that i think we have an obligation to be aware of. >> the business of social media watchdogs is controversial. two years ago twitter, facebook,
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and instagram stopped providing user data access to a company called geofeedia which analyzes posts within a gee graeographic location. >> do you to that kind of monitoring of hash tags. >> we're looking for potential harm. our system is designed that you can't input that information. you can't -- we're not a search tool. we're not a general search tool where you can log into our system and throw a word in there. in fact, with are purposely not that for a number of reasons, including we don't think it's appropriate for you to be able to throwing so something that me politically charged or troublin >> you know, you have a couple of saves. it changes how you look at this. >> have you had a couple saves? >> yeah. >> greg boulanger says he's been able to get intervention for at
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least two young adults threatening self-harm. despite its flaws, social sentinel gives some peace of mind. >> canning so something happen? yes, it can. i don't want to say how, but i though that when i go home at night that we're doing all that we can with what we have to try to protect the kids. >> try to see all the signals? >> yeah. >> or as many as you can? >> right. >> for "cbs this morning: saturday," don dahler, bristol, connecticut. >> i think a lot of people are saying whatever it takes. >> yeah. there are privacy concerns but, as he says, if you get a couple of saves, maybe it's worth it. >> right. well, it's true americana. going up for sale in london. just ahead, a look at, a disney posters of walt disney's rare creations going to the auction block. and later we'll talk to astronaut scott kelly about the
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-act your age. in my johnsonville commercial, we open up in the forest. i'm out in the wild eating my breakfast. and all of a sudden, raccoon come up and asked me, "are those bigger patties?" i said, "yep." wolf comes in and says, "wow, that's a lot of sausage." and we had a good laugh about that. (laughing) johnsonville breakfast sausage has 15% larger patties. fits on a biscuit.
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. stock market marks 90 years since the world first met mickty mouse. it didn't take long for the creation to become a star appearing in dozens of films and television shows and serving as the icon of the disney corporation. and to mark his 90th birthday, sotheby's is auctioning off this collection of, a posters from mickey's heyday of the 1930s and '40s. >> we're talking some of the rarest animation posters in the world. an animation is one of the best and most collected genres with mickey mouse being the most celebrated character. >> the collection on display now in london includes a poster celebrating mickey's 8th birthday believed to be the only
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one in existence. that's also the case for this french silly symphony poster. they could each sell for about $30,000. bidding on this post are for fantasia starts at $1,700. but the prize of the collection is this poster dating back to the early 1930s. it was likely displayed in a movie theater and is just one of two known in existence. >> the rarities because they are made of paper and no one thought, you know, 90 years later we'd treat these as works of art. >> mickey's looking pretty good for 90. >> yeah, he is. >> hasn't aged too much. that's pretty remarkable. >> if we could all age as well. >> yeah. it's always nice when the place you're staying has a great view and astronaut scott kelly took advantage of it. we'll talk to him about the year he spent in space and the incredible images he brought
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back to earth. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." throughout the book there's a lot of am i good enough. you're told by a school counselor you're not princeton material. why did that not destroy you at the time? >> well, fortunately it was the direct open -- opposite of everything i had been told. here i walked into this room with a what who didn't know me because it was a big high school and she had to make a quick assessment. and her assessment could have been, and i don't know, grade point average, yeah, you're a good student. your scores are good, you're black, you're here in this public school, maybe you're stretching sche stretching. she didn't know my brother went to principle top. she didn't try to figure me out, she just decided that the dream i presented was wrong.
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we could probably go into any room of black women or people of color or people who grew up in poor communities or rural communities and you'd ask them has anybody ever told you you couldn't? and everyone would raise their hand. >> you get to principleteton an of the first things you notice is they're not smarter than me. >> so now i'm expecting brilliance, genius. and what i discover is, wow, there's a lot of arbitrariness to this stuff. because while a lot of students are sort of criticizers, debate about affirmative action when it comes to race, ha i point out is i got to princeton i realize there's all kinds of affirmative action that goes on. there are kids who get in because they're athlar w ineherc it just that race stands out. but it was important for me to see that.
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welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm anthony mason with initial miller and adrianady he's. coming up, a smoke in darkness came a cry from help. how a stranger saved a young man and his daughter during this wildfire. >> unbelievable story. plus, bidding for your business this hol siday shoppin season. some of the inventive ways retailers are looking to lure you in this year. then from mary poppins to mary queen of scots. there's something for e coming o theaters and that what is the worth of the price of admission. but first, the campfire north of sacramento is now being
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blamed for 71 deaths. and more than 1,000 people are missing. the fire's now the worst in california's history. the largest deployment of search and rescue personnel in state history is under way. the fire is only 50% contained and is now causing a dangerous threat to air quality. thick smoke from the fire is shrouding communities across northern california and beyond. this morning president trump departed from joint base andrews. he's scheduled to survey the fire damage. but in an interview with fox news, the president again criticized california's efforts to prevent fires. >> i was watching the firemen the other day and they were raking areas where the fire was right over their -- and they're raking little trees like this, not trees, little bushes that you can see are totally dry. weeds. and they're raking them, they're on fire. that should have been all raked out and cleaned up. >> what about the argument -- >> you wouldn't have the
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fires -- >> what about the argument it's climate change, it's drier and hotter and that's contributing to it? >> maybe it contributes a little bit. the big problem we have is management. >> last week the president threat to threatened to withhold money but he later declared it a declaration. there's a break through in the 18-month long russia investigation. president trump said he personally wrote the appearances to questions from special counsel robert mueller. myrrh trump says he answered them easily. he met with his legal team to go over the questions. >> but it didn't take very long do them and they were my answers. i don't need lawyers to do that. >> this morning the president told reporters the questions will be submitted to mueller next week. argentina's navy announced this morning that one of its subma roons had be submarines that had been missing for more than a year has been found deep in the ocean. they found the sub in more than 2,600 feet of water.
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it had a crew of 44. argentina said it will launch an investigation to determine what happened. >> it's good they finally located it. at least one protester was killed and 47 others were injured in france today when a motorist accidentally plowed into a demonstration over the country's soaring fuel taxes. driver's in france are blocking roads and hoping to send a message to president macron. the taxes are part of macron's strategy of weaning them off of fossil fuels. a salmonella outbreak is prompting a turkey recall just days before thanksgiving. the brand jenio is recalling 1 pound pages of raw ground turkey. that includes 91,000 pounds of turkey with use by dates of su in stores anymore but could still be in freezers. regulators say it should be thrown away. jenio's parent company says the
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outbreak has resulted in one death and 164 reported illnesses in 35 states. and in less than a week, black friday will kick off the holiday shopping season and this year it may set records. analysts say holiday spending may top a trillion dollars here in the u.s. for the first time ever and many people are trying some innovative ways to attract your business. here to talk about it is the founder and chief of the website nonpolitical news. vera, good morning. i was reading 88% of shopping is going to be done in stores, but we've been talking all of these years about the death of brick and mortar, the rise of mobile shopping. >> they're going to be spending big times. a trillion dollars. >> that's a lot of money. >> that sa i lot of monis a lot. it's because the economy is in good shape, unemployment's at a 50-year low, gas prices are low,
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so people are feeling good, spending not only on others but themselves. a lot of self-giving going on this holiday season. >> i'm really good at that. >> i'm going to buy myself a new eye iphone and se-- iphone. >> but stores are doing a lot. they're really breaking out all the stops. >> they are rolling out all the punches to capture some of these dollars. we're seek more pop-ups this year. you usually see them anyway, but now you're seeing even more of them. it's a relatively inexpensive way to draw traffic, to try new things, to offer that experience to connect with consumers face-to-face. facebook has some pop-ups, way fair has a couple of pop-ups in the malls. and then other stores are offering an extension of what they sell via services. >> do these stores care whether you go online or into the brick and mortar? >> they could careless. because about 20% of total sales come from holiday shopping so
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they are doing whatever they can to drive traffic to get you in. they just want to bat it will o -- battle it out and get a portion of that share. it will be an aggressive season with a big emphasis open convenience, simplicity, keep temperature easy for the consumers and keep them spending. >> speaking of consumers, what are your tips? how can they get out ahead? speaking for myself. >> a lot of people plan ahead and use certain apps and web sites to get the best discounts. the good thing this year is shipping is pretty much going to be free. amazon said a couple weeks ago, free shipping, no minimum purchase, you don't have to be a member of prime. so all the other ones are following suit and offering free shipping as well, which is a nice bonus because the one thing people hate is paying for shipping. >> what do the sales start? >> they've already started. black friday creep started last week. so they're going on now and right on through the holiday period. the good news for retailers is that they have a couple extra
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days becauseo big money is expe. >> anthony did not get the memo about, you know, christmas shopping starting right after halloween. >> you haven't started yet, anthony? >> i always start for myself early but it's the other people i wait a little longer for. >> men tend to procrastinate. >> just a little, yes. >> vera, thanks for being with us. >> thanks. it's about seven after the hour. here's a look at the weather for your weekend. it's one astronaut's record of a record-breaking mission. scott kelly spent almost a year aboardhe spatati now 's fofted photographs of life orbiting earth and
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astronaut scott kelly holds the u.s. record for time spent in space. in march, 2015, he blasted off for the international space station where he logged a record 340 continuous days in orbit. while executing his regular duties, he also took time to capture some incredible images of planet earth. as well as life aboard his orbiting home. they're collected in the new photo book infinite wonder, an astronaut's photographs from a year in space. i had the chance to talk to scott kelly here in new york. just before his launch into space in 2015, astronaut scott kelly got a shoutout during
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president obama's state of the union address. >> scott kelly will begin a year-long stay in space. so good luck, captain. make sure to instagram it. >> and liftoff. a year in space starts now. kelly and others on their way towards the international space station. >> kelly would take the president's instagram challenge to heart. open his fourth mission into space from 250 miles up, he would point his camera at the planet. >> you know with that long tlens kind of helps you feel connected to the earth when you can see -- almost see what's going on down there in clected those space photographs in his new >> the reason i put that picture in there, i think it really gives a sense of perspective when you're in the -- on the space station for how when you're looking straight down how close the earth might appear. >> and then you see continents
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and countries without any political borders. it gives you the impression that we're all in this thing called humanity together. >> it offered a unique vantage point on the vastness of it all. from manhattan to the milky way. >> makes you feel kind of insignificant, doesn't it? >> absolutely. actually the whole experience makes you feel insignificant. >> on this mission, kelly would spend 340 days in space. >> i believe in the importance of flying in space and, you know, the research we do. >> some of his photography was for scientific purposes, but most was for his own pleasure. >> but sometimes it was as simple as hey, that. so looksed iran as an example, let me take a picture of it and see what it looks like. >> through his lens he found a lake in bolivia, wetlands in brazil, mountain meeting desert in algeria.
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these valleys full of iron ore. he became a master of micro gravity photography. >> how difficult it was to take those pictures? >> the earth is going by at five miles a second, it takes a very steady tracking motion to be able to take a picture that's not blurry. a lot of people when you first get to space you're clumsy. it's interesting when you see new after the nauts shstronauts stuff bouncing off the walls. >> the book also offers a look at life in space. >> you look very comfortable here. >> i'm floating. that's me outside the space station on a space walk. look at that guy. >> yeah. >> this is my brother. this is my brother losing on
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celebrity jep pa celebrity jeopardy to aaron rodgers. >> and you're watching up in space? >> i'm watching. >> kelly who has over a million instagram followers shared many of his photos online. >> you could see the reaction you would get from people. you could see the comments. i would read the comments sometis. >> one follower commented on the plants he was growing on the space station. >> some guy said, you are no mark watney. >> referring to? >> the guy in the martian, the botanist that saved himself by growing potatoes. and after that, you know, fight's on. i was going to do whatever it took to make those flowers look better. >> he succeeded and posted this picture to prove it. >>s this you coming back? >> yeah, this is coming back. looks pretty peaceful float be down to earth until you crash into it. >> he returned with a new perspective on his home planet. >> scott kelly back on mother
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earth after 340 days in space. >> as a fellow astronaut told him, the earth never disappoints. >> it's a beautiful place, whether, you know, you're looking at it, you know, all in one view or with a really upclose lens. >> speaking of lenses, he landed with his glasses on. >> isn't that interesting? >> did you notice that? >> isn't that interesting? he didn't take himself seriously as a photographer until he had to train do it because you do it to record things in space, and then he just spotook off and hea terrific photographer. >> the pictures are inspiring and it encourages young people to see what it's like for him in space, as an astronaut. >> beautiful stuff. >> he's got one heck of a job. >> yeah. >> just like us. from a superhero who lives underwater to a nanny who takes to the air, we're take a look at some of the colorful characters
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coming to the big screen this holiday season and what's worth seeing. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." now playing free on curiosity stream science and technology are transforming our lives with dizzying speed. dream the future and more great shows are now available free on curiosity stream thanks to toyota. is the hydrogen-fueled toyota mirai really the most powerful car on the planet? well, if you're defining power thereby changing the entire course of human history, then yes. yes, it is. the hydrogen-fueled toyota mirai. mauntil i held her.diabetes wasn't my top priority. i found my tresiba® reason. now i'm doing more to lower my a1c. once daily tresiba® controls blood sugar for 24 hours for powerful a1c reduction. tresiba® is a long-acting insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults with diabetes. don't use tresiba® to treat diabetic ketoacidosis,
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hi. >> whoa, whoa, ladies, i'm a princess too. >> what kind of a princess are you? >> do you have magic hair? >> no. >> magic hands? >> no. >> do animals talk to you? >> no. >> were poisoned. >> no. >> cursed. >> no, kidnapped or enslaved? >> no. are you guys okay? should i call the police? >> yes, you should. that was was a seen from ralph breaks the internet, a sequel to 2012's wreck it ralph. it opens this coming wednesday and it kicks off the holiday season. it's one of dozens of new films hitting theaters over the next five weeks. yes, five weeks. >> here to tell us what's worth seeing is editor and chief of the website screencrush.com.
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matt, welcome as always. >> thank you. >> is it worth it? just get right to it? >> yeah, i thought so. i thought it was actually better than the original wreck it ralph. i had a good time with it. you hear the title ralph breaks the internet and you go, how would anyone be able to tell the difference from the internet as it is now. but actually that's kind of what the movie is about. it's about how the sbinternet i this broken, horrible place. i like that about it. it has a little social satire along with jokes about how amazon is crazy and pop-ups are annoying. it's a fun movie. i enjoyed it. >> sounds like it has stuff for kids and parents. >> i think the parents will enjoy a lot of the humor aboutu latest superhero. aquaman finally gets his own film. >> he does. i thought the justice league movie was a complete catastrophe. but, the best part to me was
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aquaman. i thought he was really great. so i think if this movie is going to stand apart from all the other superhero movies, it's going to be because of him and his interpretation of this character as this loveable, meat head jock. superheroes are so smart. batman the world's greatest detective. aquaman is like what if the nice guy at your jim decided to move under water and fight crime? let me tell you something, that sounds like a good movie. i'm in on aquaman. >> he doesn't look too bad playing aquaman either. moving ton maon to mary pop do you think they can overcome the 54 years since the original? >> that's a great question. 54 years. that has to be the longest time between an original movie and a sequel, at least until they make citizen cane two, rose bud's revenge. it's been a long time.
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the new cast is great, emily blunt and manuel miranda. my big question is how's the music going to be? because the original movie, my daughter loves the original but she loves the songs. let's go fly a kite. >> it's got to be good. >> i don't think he wrote the songs, he's just a performer. so that's the big question. if the songs are good, i think we're in great shape. >> i can review. i have seen this film and i wept in thinking i was ready to dislike it a lot. i loved it. >> loved it. >> i loved it. >> mason loved it, there it is. >> emily blunt is amazing. >> there you go. >> speaking of other mary's, once again we're delving down the path of the british empire in mary queen of scots. >> yes, about no one's going to be singing chim chimerry in ts one, i don't think. >> yes, mary of scots, it's written by the creator of the
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american version of house of cards. if you enjoy that kind of political scheming and you enjoy this period, you're interested in this period, i think this one will be right up your alley. already has some oscar buzz. >> that's quite a team. >> yes. >> but so is rachel and emma stone in the favorite. >> yes. within a span of a couple weeks there's two different movies about british queens and these people fighting for power. it's like a classy version of that year when we got arma get den and -- >> only you would make that comparison. >> the favorite, i have seen, it really is one of my favorite movies of the year. it's tremendous. you hear these kind of period movies they sound stuffy and dry. this movie is livery, sexy, funny, it's shot in an interesting way. it's great. i definitely recommend people see that one. >> it brings to life the fact that there was another queen, a queen and ran a country. >> yes. on to the green book, this
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is a really amazing friendship story. >> yes, and it comes from an unusual source. director peter, he made there's something about mary. it's not a comedy. it's a true story. a lot of true stories this time of year, this is the third wurn in a row. and it's about this classical pianist who goes on a tour of the deep south in the '60s and his bodyguard/driver is viggo mortgage bega mortensen. >> i felt like i had seen that guy on screen many times before. >> he's amazing. >> he's fantastic. and they're both good in the movie. i'm sure you'll hear a lot of oscar talk for both movin onn bale plays the vice president. what do you make of that? >> people have seen the pictures of christian bale, he got huge for a role if the was for this
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role to play former president dick cheney. you can see him there, it's an incredible physical transformation. this one comes from adam mckay who is also known for big comedies like anchorman but his last movie was the big short and that was an oscar winner and another shorp movie about modern american politics in society. i'm hoping he kind of pulls it off. and, again, mr. bale looks incredible in it. >> finally, we get a new sherlock homes and a new dr. watson, but it's will farrell. >> his best one i think is step brothers and this is like a step brothers reunioy're sherlock ho watson. i love them together. >> tcong up it's a story worthyf the movies. up next, amid the devastation of california's deadliest wildfire, a heroic rescue to save the lives of a man and his young daughter. that's coming up next on "cbs this morning: saturday."
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you passed ton first but went back to it after the inspector general report? >> at first there wasn't enough information about what really happened. that was what was interesting to me, how doesing some like this happen, 2015, this day and age, they're able to saw their way out of their kwelcells. when the report came out, it was like a hundred page novel that. became our source material for the show. >> you really learn about the ib t -- intricacies in the prison, not only with the ar wellrionship between e s >> we shot in several different prisons. it's such a pressure cooker. it's dangerous for the inmates and dangerous for the guards. there's a different whole survival mechanism at play. >> a different ecosystem. >> this also takes place in a community, the name of which everybody was repeating for several days. but you went and you were there
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what was the community's relationship with this story and the prison and the prisoners? >> i think it's complicated because the town is a very small town. the prison is almost bigger than the town. the media deconcerned when the escape happened for about a month and then left. and we came back a couple years later and were there. and people were concerned about being portrayed as this place where people of this prison screwed up and the reality is there were a lot of things that contributed to what happened in terms of what happened. just the dynamic that's there for this prison being there for over a hundred years ant complacency that happened was based in just the fact that this place has been there that long and generations of people have done things the same way for years and years. that's a biggern about the prison system in the u.s. i think they wanted to us make sure that we will to the story that showed the whole spectrum. it's time for sleep number's veterans day sale on the new sleep number 360 smart bed. it senses your movement and automatically adjusts to keep you both comfortable. and now, the queen sleep number 360 c4 smart bed
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the damage from this month's historic wildfires in california is a long way from being summed up. but amid the ash and rubble, demarco morgan found one story of survival and a rescue nothing short of miraculous. >> reporter: john heinke escaped from his burning home with his wife and two kids. >> once i started to see some red emerbers, it's time to go. >> reporter: he knew he had only seconds when he ran back in search of his son's cat. a few blocks away, matt masterson and his 3-year-old daughter kylie were home without a car. as ninto his yard, he begged 911 for help. >> she sed says don't wait for us. do what you can to survive. >> he picked up his daughter and ran for the road. >> it was just a wall of flames. >> reporter: did you think it
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was over? >> i held my daughter and i just told god, i've done everything i can, you know. if you want me to go on, it's on you now. >> reporter: it was here in this area that the officer was rushing to escape the flames when he heard a man screening for help. in that split second, matt saw headlights through the smoke. >> i didn't see where the sound came from, but i could tell that i had driven past somebody that was yelling. >> reporter: john picked up matt and kylie and drove them to safety. >> the whole car ride i just held my daughter and was like, this was 100% miracle. >> reporter: the next day matt realized he needed to say thank you, so he reached out on facebook in an effort to locate the officer. >> without you me and kylie wouldn't be here. >> reporter: and remember the cat john was searching for? >> it was later found alive proving no matter how dark the circumstance, there's till hope in paradise. >> let's take a picture with it. >> reporter: for "cbs this
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morning: saturday," demarco morgan, paradise, california. >> how segregate to hagreat to positive moment in so much destruction. here's a look at the weather for your weekend. she's worked at some of the boston's top restaurants and opened six her own. up next on the dish, chef lydia shire offers up some cuisine perfect for this time of year. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." forget about vacuuming for weeks. thwith clean basei7+ automatic dirt disposal empties the roomba bin for you. so dirt is off your hands.
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she opened six restaurants over the years and that includes scampo now marking its tenth anniversary where shire's son alex say sous-chef. good morning, welcome to the dish. >> thank you. >> what a great looking table. tell us all about it. >> well, my husband is from columbia, south america, and does not like turkey. so every year i have to -- of course i cook the turkey, but then i also make a big hunk of pork for him. usually a pork belly or a roast should or something like that. so we have a little shoulder happening here. >> this is a taste of your typical thanksgiving dinner? >> yes, without the turkey. we have acorn squash with more bacon, more pork. lots of butter and brown sugar, it's delicious to make. we have a little pair salear sa.
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discuts with rum butter. >> you started out as the salad girl in the '70s and a high end -- how did you go from there and climb the culinary ladder? >> well, i hated being a salad girl. i really wanted to cook. and at that time i was really about the only woman in a major restaurant in boston. and so i just decided i would go to cooking school and come back and they would take me a little more seriously. and i did. i went to london, hocked my diamond ring. >> did you really? >> yeah. >> because you were married at 17. >> yes, exactly, and i had my first baby at 17. but that marriage did not work out, so i hocked my ring and i went to cooking school. and, you know, came back and i went right back to where i was and they said, okay, you can come on. we'll make you a cook. >> well you obvi i first of all, you've broken so
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many glass ceilings and you obviously left your mark. but it's lovely when your patrons and customers are the ones who rave over you. and you had a very special person who would come and sit and just adored your food. >> julia. >> julia roberts -- >> julia child. >> julia child. >> always think about julia roberts. >> well, she called me. i was working and she called me one day and i picked up the phone and she said, why don't you come to lunch tomorrow? >> at her house? >> yes, at her house. >> and she cooked? >> yes, she did. she was working on a tart for her new book, and paul was sitting at the table. and i walked in. she was so just fresh, normal, just so sweet. and she asked me to make the salad dressing for the salad to go with this puff pastry tart. and, of course, you know, my knees started shaking and, you
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know, i went to the sink and i started whisking oil in the salad and i was, you know, was one of those moments. >> but you two became friends. >> very good friends. in fact, the last dinner she had in boston before she went to assisted living in santa barbara she came to lock hober and had dinner with nine of her best friends. and it was very special for me. but she invited me on the qe 2 with her. she called me and said i want to go and eat you. so she invited me on that trip. >> wow. well, if there's anyone past and prems present that you would love to enzwloi meal wijoy this who would that be? >> i would probably say richard or james beard. james beard was a great gossiper. >> good dinner company, i like
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that. among other things. >> well, we appreciate you joining us, bringing us this fabulous meal. and for more on chef lydia shire and "the dish," head to our website at cbsthismorning.com. up next, they've been together for 20 years and are known as one of the hardest working bands around. next in our saturday sessions, lucero plays music from their ninth studio album. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." [ phone rings ] hi, tom. hey, how's the college visit? you remembered. it's good. does it make the short list? you remembered that too. yeah, i'm afraid so. knowing what's important to you... it's okay. this is what we've been planning for. thanks, bye. that's what's important to us. it's why 7 million investors work with edward jones.
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together for 20 years and are ♪ starring in our saturday sessions this morning, lucero, the quintet started as a punk band in memphis two decades ago and has sinced morph morphed in soul band. they released their ninth album among the ghosts which earned widespread critical acclaim. now making their national television debut, here is lieu scare row with bottom of the
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♪ at the bottom of the sea ♪ maybe there's a distant shore ♪ ♪ could wash up on a beach ♪ but for now my heart stays here ♪ ♪ at the bottom of the sea ♪ our heart, dragged down ♪ and it's lost not a sound ♪ and the waves could and black ♪ ♪ bring the bad things back ♪ from the depths of heart ♪ that sank so far ♪ i can feel the waves come down ♪ ♪ crashin' over me ♪ i can feel the cold and dark ♪ at the bottom of the sea
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oh milk. am i willing to pay the price for loving you? you'll make my morning, but ruin my day. complicated relationship with milk? pour on the lactaid, 100% real milk, just without that annoying lactose. mmm, that's good. we are the tv doctors of america, and we may not know much about medicine, but we know a lot about drama. we also know that you can avoid drama by getting an annual check-up. so go, know, and take control of your health. it could save your life. cigna. together, all the way. it could save your life. in my johnsonville commercial, we open up in the forest. i'm out in the wild eating my breakfast. and all of a sudden, raccoon come up and asked me, "are those bigger patties?" i said, "yep." wolf comes in and says, "wow, that's a lot of sausage."
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and we had a good laugh about that. (laughing) johnsonville breakfast sausage has 15% larger patties. fits on a biscuit. to severe rheumatoid arthritis was intense. my mom's pain from moderate i wondered if she could do the stuff she does for us, which is kind of, a lot. and if that pain could mean something worse? joint pain could mean joint damage. enbrel helps relieve joint pain, and helps stop irreversible joint damage. enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been some place where fungal infections are common,
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or if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores, have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure, or if you have persistent fever, bruising, bleeding, or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. since enbrel, my mom's back to being my mom. visit enbrel.com and use the joint damage simulator to see how joint damage could progress. ask about enbrel. enbrel. fda approved for over 19 years. stern kn . have a great weekend, everybody. >> we leave you now with more
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music from lucero. >> this is e has ch ♪ ♪ i can see the way i'm bound ♪ i'm looking north, headed south ♪ ♪ the devil, he don't care which road i take ♪ ♪ i've been runnin' long enough ♪ ♪ i can see your hand ♪ i call your bluff ♪ look like i'll be goddamned either way ♪ ♪ looking like darker days ♪ ain't nobody else to blame
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♪ well, somewhere down in hell they call my name ♪ ♪ it's looking like another fight ♪ ♪ the devil's drinking angel's wrath ♪ ♪ well my friend, now everything has changed ♪ ♪ she was all i once desired ♪ i burpd her letters in the fire ♪ ♪ one morning by the river in the rain ♪ ♪ he tells her the sterno can ♪ the letters gone just like the
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man ♪ ♪ ain't no fire can burn up my mistakes ♪ ♪ it's looking like darker days ♪ ♪ ain't nobody else to blame ♪ well, somewhere down in hake they call my name ♪ ♪ it's looking like another fight ♪ ♪ the devil's drinking angel's wrath ♪ ♪ well my friend, now everything has changed ♪ ♪ there's nothing like the one before ♪ ♪ little sister dance out on the porch ♪ 's waiting for the jack of haters ♪ ♪ the devil's dancing all the
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part ♪ ♪ well my friend, let's have another round ♪ ♪ from the hill i see the flames ♪ ♪ they're closer now, wind has changed ♪ ♪ it's time to reap the harvest i have sown ♪ ♪ there might be another way ♪ but i don't care too much to wait ♪ ♪ let's do this now, just leave me alone ♪ ♪ it's looking like darker days ♪ ♪ a to blame
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[ applause ] >> for those of you still with us, we have more music from lucero. >> this is to my dearest wife. ♪ i'm waitin' on a is unriesz ♪ i've given up on sleep ♪ my only thoughts are with you all back home in tennessee ♪ ♪ they're dug in on the hilltop, we got cover in the trees ♪ ♪ between the two, an open field ♪ kis our baby girls tonight ♪ tomorrow's battle will not wait ♪ ♪ but i don't see no other way
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♪ well, i can see the old house not too long ago ♪ ♪ every night i slept by your side, it was heaven just being home ♪ ♪ i hear 'em calling, i can see the sun ♪ ♪ it breaks my heart, we're kept apart, still fightin' to be done ♪ ♪ to my dearest wife i write ♪ kiss our baby girls tonight ♪ tomorrow's battle will not
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this is kpix news. >> the bay area suffers through some of the worst air quality in the world. reality check on what it is doing to our health. major sporting events are closed. the search to find some relief this weekend. >> more than 1000 people are missing in the butte county fire zone. >> good morning. i am julie
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