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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  November 24, 2018 4:00am-6:01am PST

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good morning, it's november 24, 2018. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." a shocking new report shows climate change could soon knock out 10% of america's economy. we'll detail the findings by more than a dozen federal agencies that are at odds with the president's opinion. dangerous travel. major winter storms are about to hit the u.s. making it difficult for millions to get home.
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black friday weekend is already seeing good numbers. will the holiday spending break a trillion dollars for the first and who are you? roger daulttry, lead continuinger singer of the rock band who wrote his biography filled with his years as the front man. but we begin with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. a huge report on the impact of climate change and the findings are dire, not just for our health and our environment, but also for the economy. the government releases a major climate change report. more than a dozen federal agencies contributed to the 1600-page document. >> they say there's clear and compelling evidence that the temperature is rising fast and that humans are responsible. >> the trump administration has faced accusations of trying to bury the report by releasing it over the holiday weekend. the campfire in northern
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california is 95% contained. firefighters say the rain is helping to douse the flames. millions hit the stores for black friday deals. >> today local shops are gearing up for small business saturday. >> it's a time for us to shine and show what we're made of. a crowd washes a ferry crash into a san francisco pier, two people were injured. a security camera captured the moment a house was blown to fwhi bits in st. paul, minnesota. >> all that. >> many of disney fans capture their first glimpse of the new lion king. people can't wait to see the king. >> i know, he's so cute. >> and all that will matters. touchdown washington! >> for the 111th apple cup the huskies never trailed and had fun playing the game.
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>> i was kind of warm, actually. >> on "cbs this morning: saturday." >> look at this. get this. >> no, he didn't. >> yeah, he did. >> and what they called the match. tiger woods against phil mickelson for $9 million, who came out on top. they had to play three extra holes before mickelson actually prevailed. >> and there at long last, it >> and there at long last, it is -- captioning funded by cbs and welcome stot -- to the holiday weekend, everybody. did we all survive thanksgiving? >> we survived and enjoyed it. the saints won. >> and it was pretty nice. >> that's good. her saints won, my lions lost. >> sorry. i'm sorry. >> that's not fair. >> well we begin this morning with a new and disturbing report on the effects of global climate
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change, a long-awaited report called the national climate assessment was released friday. it paints a dire picture warning that the earth's climate is changing rapidly, primarily due to human activity. >> the report was compiled by more than a dozen federal agencies and mandated by congress. it finds climate change is already causing more frequent and severe storms, floods, wildfires, and tornadoes. all of it totaling nearly 4-billion dolla4 4-billion dollars warth of damage in three years. >> but the policies are at odds with the trump administration. weija jiang is traveling with the president in florida. weija, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, everybody. the white house is dismissing the report saying it is based on the most extreme climate change scenario and does not give enough weight to how technology and innovation are decreasing emissions. the pushback falls right in line with what we have long heard
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from president trump about global warming suggesting it's fake news. the report by 13 federal agencies ominously lays out how climate change will have a catastrophic impact on the u.s. economy, americans' health and the environment. the report predicts the impacts of climate change are intensifying across the country and climate-related threats to americans physical, social, and economic well-being are rising. researchers say global warming is already to blame for more frequent and destructive hurricanes and uncontrollable wildfires. the report states if greenhouse gases continue to rides, the country will see labor-related losses of $150 billion a year by 2090. damage to coastal property due to the rise in sea levels and storm surges could reach nearly $120 billion a year. but president trump's policies and rhetoric often reject
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climate change. his administration has rolled back obama-era regulations and promoted the production of fossil fuels. >> we're getting out. >> reporter: in june, 2017, the president pulled the u.s. out of the paris agreement, a pact of nearly 200 countries to curb climate change. mr. trump has offered referred to it as a hoax invented by china and last month dismissed it on 60 minutes. >> what about the scientists who say it's worse than ever? >> you'd have to show me the scientists because they have a very big political agenda. >> reporter: and following this week's unseasonal northeast cold snap, the president tweeted brutal and extended cold blasts could shatter all records. whatever happened to global warming? former vice president and environmentalist al gore said the president may try to hide the truth but his own scientists and experts have made it as stark and clear as possible.
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gore and many others have also pointed out the timing of the reports' release. he has blamed the trump administration for trying to bury it the day right after thanksgiving and the busiest shopping day of the year. president trump himself has yet to weigh in on the dire findings. michelle. >> a lot of criticism over that fact indeed. weija jiang with the president in florida. thank you. also new this morning, the trump administration wants the supreme court to fast track a ruling on the divisive pentagon policy by restricting military service by transgender people. a request was made on friday that a number of legal challenges to the policy be consolidated and heard before the supreme court. that move would bypass lower courts that have blocked some of the administration's proposals. decision by the supreme court would overturn an obama-era decision that allowed transgender people to serve. jerome corsi, an associate
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of a friend of trump, iszati discussing a plea deal with robert mueller. corsi, a conservative commentator was talking to mueller's legal team about working with long time trump ally roger stone during the 2016 campaign. corsi might be able to provide information about stone's connections with wikileaks which released hacked material that damaged hillary clinton's presidential campaign. the mayor of tijuana, mexico, says the nearly 5,000 central american migrants who are now in his city have created a humanitarian crisis. most of the people are camped inside a sports complex. mayor says his city does not have the resources to deal with the migrants. he's asking the united nations for help. the migrants are expected to seek asylum in the united states. let's talk about washington and elsewhere. we turn to priscilla alvarez. good morning. >> good morning. >> let's talk first about this
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devastating climate assessment. we are about to have a democratic house with a new agenda. how do you think this is going to factor into that? >> it will fire up progressives, and we've seen that in the wake of the report. so we have a representative elect alexandria ocasio cortez has made this a big cart of her agenda. she game into congress earlier this month asking for an expansive plan to address climate change. in a tweet she's pressing more asking for a select committee on climate change. so remember democrats are going to helm a lot of commit teeds, like house energy and commerce committee and the health science committee and they are likely going to make this a big priority moving into the new congress. >> but the president seem like he's going to budge on this. >> no, he wants to move toward deregulating and he's done that with obama-era rules, scaling them back which had been to address other issues with climate change like greenhouse emissions. but progressives are going to push forward and this is
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something they came into congrass wanti congrass -- congress wanting to tackle. >> how hard will it be for the president to get his agenda moving forward. >> he's rereitedly asked for money for his border wall and he's in a tricky situation because the democrats are going to take the house and they'll be less willing to negotiate on the border wall. there are issues that have come up. we have the legislation for protecting bob mueller. we also have the question -- citizenship question that they want to strip from the 2020 census. so these are things that areally to come up in negotiations, but they're in a tough stop because democrats want to move forward, some say they're willing to give 6 billion, but that's still shy. >> meanwhile, as the democrats get set to take control of the house, nancy pelosi is facing some leadership challenges. she doesn't seem to have a clear
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opponent at that point, but how secure is she? >> well, this wednesday we're going to have the closed door caucus vote and so she just needs a simple majority to be nominated as the nominee for the speaker position. and there's not much difficulty that we see rising there, but rather in january she's going to need the majority, 218 votes to take the gavel. and the clear advantage is there's no alternatives. those who had considered it mike representative marsha fudge now supports pelosi. and, again, it's a long time until january. >> yeah. >> so that's a lifetime in politics and she's going to be brokering deals with democrats who oppose her. >> and what's the overall agenda for democrats? what does that look like? >> primarily investigation dollars. that's going to be a big part of this. they're going to have the helm of the house against committee, house foreign affairs committee, they have subpoena power now, they can pressure the administration to turn over documents. and so that's going to be a big
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part of the agenda. and other issues like progressives and possibly immigration reform down the line. >> will it have an impact, yes or no? >> it's going to pressure the administration. it's not going to be a fun time for president trump. >> all right. news every day. >> has it has been. >> pra saiscilla, thank you. rain over the thanksgiving holiday, largely extinguished the deadly campfire in northern california, but the wet weather is bringing with it the threat of mudslides and is hampering recovery efforts. the campfire was started two weeks ago is blamed for at least 84 deaths. 475 people are still unaccounted for. the fire also destroyed nearly 19,000 buildings leaving tens of thousands of people homeless. carter evans joins us now from sacramento this morning with a story of one man's fight to survive. good morning, carter.
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>> reporter: good morning. when the campfire basically insinner rated t incinerated the town of paradise, they were brought here to the medical center. one was bill blevins, and while he's thankful he's alive, what he saw will haunt him forever. >> the dreams that i've had since i've been here, my god. i've burnt so many times in the fire. >> reporter: as his third degree burns heal, his dreams are born out of a my mayor. he was spending the night at a friend's home in paradise when a campfire tore through town. the only way out was straight through the flames. >> reporter: the car was on fire. >> yes, it was actually on. >> what were you thinking? >> what do you do? run back to the house and try to save the house and keep it from catching fire. if we can keep the house from
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catching fire, we might have a chance of surviving. >> reporter: he says running through the fire was the scariest moment of his life. what was the heat like? >> intense? the flames burnt my face, hands. the flames coming across the road were like a blowtorch. >> reporter: she usthey used ga hoses. >> nin it set in i'm burnt bad. skin is melting off my hands. i called my wife and told her, look, we're stranded and stuck in the middle of this fire and we have no way out. i don't know if i'm ever going to see you again, i love you. and i just -- i don't know if this is going to be my last day or not. >> reporter: blevins and his friend, able to keep the fire at bay long enough for firefighters to finally rescue them. >> burns happen fast but get better slow. >> reporter: the doctor at the medical center says blevins was burned over 12% of his body. she estimates his rehab and
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recovery will last at least a year. >> he was a lucky guy. >> he was very lucky. not everybody is as lucky to be able to escape the flames and have the wherewithal do what he did to get out. >> i think we're lucky to be alive today because there's a lot of people that didn't make it out. they perished in their homes or cars trying to get out of there. >> reporter: after blevins gets some painful skin grafts all over his hands, he's hoping to leave the hospital today. he's looking forward to going home and hugging his wife. what he is not looking forward to is hearing the fate of some of his friends who lived in paradise. anthony. >> carter evans with another harrowing story. >> too mem people still unaccounted for. dangerous winter weather is expected across the central u.s. this holiday season. ice and snow from the rocky mountains to the plains and across the great lakes. widespread rain will soak much of ohio this morning.
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winds could be as high as 20 miles per hour. let's check the forecast for the rest of the nation and for that we turn to meteorologist ed curran of our chicago station wbbm tv. good morning. >> good morning anthony. we sergeant with a lotart with east coast. our snowstorm is currently out in the rockies and by the time we get to tonight around 9:00 it moves into the area around nebraska and then on sunday moves through areas like iowa and missouri over into the chicago area. as we watch this progress we have winter storm warnings up in the rockies and tomorrow closer to the chicago area. and between that winter weather advisories that up are for less snow in these areas. but winds are going to play an important factor in wyoming, a high wind morning for today in this area that sees snow, 4 to 8 inches on sunday, will see near blizzard conditions with winds that had gust as high as
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40 miles per hour as this system continues to track to the east. dana. >> ed, thank you very much. bargain hunters will again be out in force today fueling what could be record-breaking holiday shopping sprees on the heels of a busy black friday. stores and malls saw high volumes yesterday in what has traditionally been the start of the prechristmas rush. they predict holiday spending will balloon to more than $1 trillion for the first time. that would be a 5% increase from last year. kenneth craig is tracking the shopping trends this morning. kenneth, weep your cred kenneth, keep your credit card in your pocket. >> reporter: they're hoping shoppers keep up that holiday spirit today. small business saturday is under way and they say 67 million people will participate, that's after more than 100 million turned out for black friday >> it's become a hallowed ritual
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of american consumerism. >> we come every year, it's a tradition. >> it's good old fashion family fun. >> reporter: and by midmorning yesterday adobe analytics revealed consumers had spent $643 million on black friday sales. mastercard projected a $23 billion total windfall. although shoppers may have packed brick and marter retailers, it seems the viral stamm peeds stampedes of years past were not -- that's as they offer online ordering with the option of in-store pickups not to mention an overall trend toward internet purchases. one firm found 57% of holiday spending will good through online, not in-store channels. even so, black friday shopping was not devoid of drama or violence. police were on the scene in syracuse, new york, when two men were stabbed inside one of america's largest malls.
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and in new jersey last night, thousands evacuated a mall in elizabeth when a scuffle was capped off by gunfire. one man was hospitalized after he was shot in the wrist. >> we saw people running and screaming and we heard shots in the background. >> reporter: today local business owners like lisa miller are hoping to capitalize on the black friday momentum with bargains of their own. >> i think people want to shop local again. it's a time for us to shine and show what we're made of. >> reporter: and let's not forget that cyber monday is two days away. nearly 76 million shopperser expected -- shoppers are expected to take part in those deals. last year it hit $6.6 million in sales. >> come on. we cover this over and over and over again. does it really feel any different this year? >> well, when you look at these deals online, the deals online are also amazing so you don't
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have to go to the stores, you can do it right from your phone. >> my cyber monday was cyberfriday, it will be cyber saturday and cyber sunday. >> i came home from traveling from thanksgiving and the lobby of my building, the packages were just everywhere. >> it's insane. >> it's like is it christmas already. >> doesn't end. >> thank you so much. time to show you some of the other stories making headlines. alabama.com reports police in hoover, alabama, say they shot and killed the wrong man in connection with the mall shooting on thanksgiving night. emantic bradford was dongunned n after he was thought to have injured two people. there were two people involved in the shooting and so fay bradd did not pull the trigger. they did say he was carrying a handgun. an 80-year-old man is fighting for his life after his home in st. paul was leveled in an explosion friday morning.
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police suspect a gas leak may have triggered the blast that sent flames and debris into the air causing serious damage to nearby homes. neighbors feared it was a bomb or possibly an earthquake. the red cross is helping the 11 people who were displaced by the blast. the seattle times reports washington state's university's marching band learned the university's fight song to pay tribute to members of the husky marching band that had been injured in a bus crash. they performed bow down to washington before friday's football game, the apple cup, between the two schools. the section of the stadium where washington's band would have been sitting was left empty. one of the huskies band charter buses crashed on an icy stretch of the eye way thursday night. 47 people were hospitalized, two are still being treated. >> wonderful in terms of -- >> exactly. and the times of london reports the painting which many considered to be the male
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persian of the mona lisa is missing. leonardo da vinci salvator mundi shows christ holding an orb became the most expensive painting last year. it was acquired for the louvre abu dhabi. that was the last time it's been seen in public. scholars and art ofish that. toes are concerned about how the painting is being cared for. >> did the mundi come and pay us a visit here? >> it did. it was in this studio. now they don't know where it is. >> check your offices. >> maybe commentary, perhaps, on the person who bought it? it's very interesting. >> i don't know. but if i was the insurance -- i hold the insurance company on that, i'd be concerned. >> yeah, i would too. it's about 22 after the hour, now here's a look at the weather for your weekend.
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the long haul trucker is an american icon but in some parts of the country, they may not fit the pop culture image you have in mind. still ahead this morning, how changes in the industry are changing the face of trucking. plus, divine developments. we'll show you how houses of worship are now in the business of building affordable housing serving low-income residents desperately in need of places to live. a towering achievement, how engineers are tainting the tilt in one of the world's most iconic structures. >> what? >> what? >> look at that. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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behind blue eyes, as lead singer for the who as rommer daltrey is one of the greatest frontman. >> now he's telling us about his
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word wide fortune, this is "cbs this morning: saturday."
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he lived every day to its fullest the at the enjoyed it. he enjoyed the fight. he taught me that. he taught me how to not how to live a life, but respect a life and enjoy taend joy whand enjoy doing. and if you don't enjoy it what's the purpose? >> he often talked about falling in love with his country when you've been deprived of its company and now you've been deprived of his company. do you hear him in your head giving you guidance for how to deal with this period? >> well, i catch myself asking in everything i do i think, gosh, what would john do? what he would think or tell me do. >> was there a particular instance where you thought this is exactly what he would say?
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>> oh, yeah. my gosh, yeah. i find especially many this political climate now i find myself saying things i know that he would have not only said or thought about, which is kind of fun. >> what do you think he would say about kind of where things are now? >> i think he'd say a lot of things. i think he's -- i think he would be terribly frustrated. he was the one that was kind of the conscious of the senate. and we've lost his voice. and consequently i saw an elective process this year unlike anything i've ever seen. and i think many people would say that. it was abomb nable. he would have, i know, quite frankly would have said eenough. th this is not only wrong but bad for the country. >> he had extraordinary fights. he had some tough fights with george bush. >> yeah. >> with barack obama. >> john always said a fight not
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joined sis i fight not ebb joye.
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oh my gosh. >> wow, can you imagine that if you were on the pier. there was panic along san francisco's waterfront friday, a ferryboat crashing into the side of a building. 53 people were on board the boat. many more were watching on land when it hit the dock and came tie struck only when it struck a concrete walkway. two people on board suffered minor injuries. the crash sunday investigation. >> fortunate that wasn't worse. >> wow. welcome back to "cbs this morning: saturday." when you think of america's long haul truckers, some very clear
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images may come to mind from what they wear to the meals they order at truck stops. but a growing globalized segment of the industry is defying those expectations. jim axelrod has the story. >> reporter: here's what you might expect to see driving i-80 in laramie wyoming. long stretches of highway, rolling hills. what you might not expect is that the trucker in the next lane is wearing a turbine. >> i cannot stay in the office now. >> i know the feeling. >> reporter: even with unemployment at nearly a 49-year low, there's a record shortage of truck drivers. this year the turnover rate for truck drivers is 96%, more than 50,000 drivers ever needed to meet the demand and the short sage forcing companies like amazon, general mills, tyson foods and others to hike their prices to consumers. one group of drivers, indian americans who practice the --
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truckers like mintu pander may well be a big part of the solution. more than 30,000 sikhs have entered the trucking industry in the last two years. >> most of them want to keep their article of faith, like turbine, hair, beard, mustache. it's a safety hazard for a lot of jobs. in trucking they can keep everything and still make decent living. >> pander bought a used tractor trailer 13 years ago. today, he owns nine rigs, plus this truck stop in laramie. >> look at that. >> reporter: with so many sikh truck drivers, he even added a seat temple to his truck. >> how many truck stops come with a seat temple? >> not to many. >> it offers indian specials when attracts new fans as well. but it's more than a friendly truck stop drawing sikhs to a career behind the wheel. ♪ >> reporter: recruiting videos that look liking some straight
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from bollywood promise a glamourous future, fancy struck, night car in the driveway, his wife making him food for the road. now is this video based on reality? >> pretty much, yeah. the presentation could be little eye catching, but that's reality. >> reporter: a prosperous reality for mintu pander. >> people who say the american dream is dead. >> it's not dead at all. >> reporter: in fact, if you ask him, the american dream is humming along quite nicely on highways across the country. for "cbs this morning: saturday," this is jim axelrod. >> leave it to jim to be trucking down the highway. i love it. >> i love seeing jim out there in the passenger seat there. >> i'm surprised he wasn't driving it. all right. now let's take a look at the weather for your weekend.
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california's wildfires have left devastation on the ground, but they've also created danger in the air. up next on morning rounds, dr. david agus on the health hazard that's affecting millions. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." unpredictable crohn's symptoms following you? for adults with moderately to severely active crohn's disease, stelara® works differently. studies showed relief and remission, with dosing every 8 weeks. stelara® may lower your ability to fight infections and may increase your risk of infections and cancer. some serious infections require hospitalization. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you have an infection or flu-like symptoms or sores, have had cancer, or develop new skin growths,
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time now for morning rounds. a look at the medical news of the week. as firefighters in california get closer to fully containing the fires, people in the region have had to deal with massive amounts of smoke in the air due to weather patterns earlier in the week, some of the wildfire smoke from california drifted as far as new york. >> thick smog could be seen throughout parts of california forcing many residents to wear masks when they were outside. according to the air quality index, some areas are still experiencing moderate amounts of pollutants although air quality has improved over the past few days. here to discuss this is cbs contributor dr. david agus. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> there was a pull mo nool knoll gift quoted saying if this kind of air quality from wildfires doesn't get people concerned i don't know what will. what are the health concerns surrounding the wildfires? >> when you burning some there's
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particulate matter that goes in the air and gets stuck in the lung and your body tries to get rid of it and you get lots inflammation in the lung. i was evacuated from my home. our kids, they canceled school in california. they canceled the standed for/berkley football game. it was filed. you see people wearing these masks. do those help and what are the strategies to avoid a getting sick? >> there is n-95 or n-100. it can block the particulate matter but it makes it harder to breathe. you have to breathe threw filter and people with cardiac problems it makes your heartbeat faster. but the kids stay indoors. turn off your air-conditioning that brings in air from the outside. the kids, don't do strenuous exercise. you have to breathe deeper when there's particulate matter in the air. >> how significant uptick in
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hospital visits have there been and are we still learning about the long term health effects of this thing? >> no question. you look at beijing and parts of india where they have this on a daily basis and we're seeing dramatic upticks in cancer and heart disease. we're have visits here both during the episode and week to months after because of the response. this is real and it's going to being some that's more and more common. we have to figure out better ways of filtering the air in the house and we're going to have to live with this. >> long term enaekts we'll sffe see from it as well. up next, peanut allergies. for those with a severe allergy, peanuts can be deadly. >> there are no approved treatment options. one study shows what could be on the horizon. published in the new england journal of medicine, the study looked at a phase three trial of a drug called ar-101. 496 out of the 551 participants were ages 4 to seven teen.
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the trial tested how much peanut protein they could ingest after taking the drug. and what can we say about this? is this a big deal? >> i love the fact that it's au called ar-101. it's ground up peanuts when they take out the fact. it's a lot cooler when you call it ar-101. it's a remarkable study because they took kids, these are kids, 1 in 50 kids in the united states has a peanut allergy and they're scared to death a boy is afraid to kiss a girl because if she had peanuts they can get anaphylactic reaction and die. sitting in a chair with someone that has peanuts can be deadly to them. they gave them small amounts of peanuts that went up day by day and they turned off the response for the peanuts. so for the rest of their life they'll have two m&m peanuts every day and that turns off the immune response, not so they can go and have peanut brittle, but
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so they're not afraid and lie in fear every time they go out with friends and they don't have to wipe off every surface when they sit down. two-thirds of the study of these kids got better. the adults didn't benefit from it, it was just the kids. >> start earlier we are with it. >> we're done. >>. >> sorry. >> what about side effects from the drug and i guess what was the inherent risk even with eating peanut products after that sfl there's that. >> there's no question there were side effects and some people did react to it and didn't do well. but many of the kids did do better. and then for the rest of their life they're not cured, but they figure out a way to live in less fear. i think that's critical. and hopefully this will be on the market and fda approved sometime next year. it can really change the lives of a lot of children in this country. >> sooner rather than later, from your lips to god's ears, thank you, dr. agus, appreciate you. >> my pleasure.
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can houses of worship change a housing crisis? you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." got directions to the nightclub here. and if you get lost, just hit me on the old horn. man: tom's my best friend, but ever since he bought a new house... captioning funded by cbs
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. affordable housing is hard to find that america. the problem may be most challenging for low-income americans. according to one study, the u.s. has only 35 affordable and available rental properties for every 100 extremely low-income households. now an unexpected source of low-cost living space is efeathering. some of america's houses of worship are making use of a major asset and using it to help people settle down and start new lives. what is it like to have a place for you to hang your pictures once again? >> i can't even describe what
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it's like to have a place. the pictures are just a small part. >> gina montminy's place over the last two years say one bedroom apartment in arlington, virginia. >> it's a smaller one bedroom than most, but it's perfect for me. >> reporter: before coming to the v-point apartments she lived in a shelter. she lost her house, car, and two jobs when epilepsy made it impossible to continue working. >> well, for six weeks i had to sleep on the floor until you could get a bed, and then it's pretty tough. i mean, you have to eat when they say to eat. you have to watch what they say to watch on tv. you have to be in by 11:00. you have to have lights out and i never lived a life like that before. >> reporter: now she has freedom and affordability, something hard to come by in the washington, d.c. area. here, 70 of the 116 units are rented below market rate in a county where the median household income is $110,000 and
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the average rent, about $2,000 a month. >> i pay around $202 a month. >> that's remarkable. >> it's incredible because i make 900 on social security. so it makes it so you can live. >> reporter: it may be surprising, but the apartments were funded through a partnership between arlington county, the state housing finance agency, and the church at clarendon. it's been on this plot of land for years. >> you see steeple in the front. and there are apartments up there. >> they say the old churnl was -- church was in northeastward repairs b -- need of repairs. settling property could have brought in tens of millions of dollars, but the church decided to try to serve the community on a larger scale. >> we looked up and thought
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there's all this space up there that's not being used, what can we do? housing is a traditional ministry of the church. we had to do it right. >> owned by a nonprofit, the x complex participants in federal, state and local housing programs. >> arlington has lost about 15,000 of its market affordable units. >> jill norcross is the executive director of that nonprofit. >> can you scale this? >> i think you can. there's a lot of churches. there are a lot of faith communities in this area. a lot of faith communities that are looking to really transform and that are in a state of change and that it can be a benefit to the faith community itself as well as the residents they're trying to serve. it's a win/win. >> reporter: across the country, other land-rich cash-poor faith communities take suit.
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take this church, it's created 700 affordable housing units in a zip code where home values have increased by 207% since the year 2000. >> this is spirit week. >> reporter: it's given debra johnson and some 50 other grandparents raising their grandchildren an affordable place to live in a city where it's needed most. this hasn't been an easy road. the views project faced four lawsuits, including one alleging it violated the first amendment separation of church and state. >> there is federal case law precedent now that allows a mixed-use facility which is properly funded and properly accounted for and audited and so forth to, you know, be able to participate in the federal affordable housing program. and that was not clear before our project. >>. >> reporter: and this congregation led the way have some we did that. >> reporter: developers have built more affordable housing over the last two decades thanks
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to the low-income housing tax credit. the federal program which gives tax incentives to priechvate investors. >> church leaders are looking for a new way to fulfill their mission, to take advantage and be good stewards of the land and property they own and a way to be relevant to their communities. >> reporter: nina janopaul is the president and ceo of the arlington partnership for affordable how'sin affordable housing. >> we're seeing in communities like arlington, fairfax, northern virginia, montgomery county across the river, they're creating a plan, a master plan to say we want to do more of this. they're highlighting churches and reaching out to them and trying to create a path for them to achieve this. >> reporter: the path is clearer for gina montminy. she may not worship inside a church, but her apartment has been a god send.
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what does a partnership like this mean? >> everything. it's a lifeline to most people. i would be at the shelter in it wasn't for the church. >> simple as that, right? >> simple as that in cities like new york, l.a., d.c., and across this nation there are churches, catholic churches, there are synagogues. wow, what an incredible opportunity here. >> what a difference for those families. >> you just need the space. >> this is the idea behind, i think, some of the religious-based communities, the idea of helping and being there for the community. >> it's their number one mission in many cases. >> all right. coming up, a duel to the finish with two golf greats with 9 million bucks on the line. highlights from tiger vs phil. >> and if you're heading out the door, don't forget to set your dvr to record "cbs this morning: saturday." coming up in the next hour, our conversation with rock and roll legend roger daltrey. plus, "the dish" with tgi's
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founding allan stillman and music from john hiatt in our saturday session. you're watching second base this morning saturday. -- "cbs this morning: saturday." say hello to the braava jet mopping robot from irobot. its precision jet spray and vibrating cleaning head loosen and scrub stains. all while navigating kitchens, bathrooms and those hard to reach places. you and braava jet from irobot. better together. essential for pine trees, but maybe not for people with rheumatoid arthritis. because there are options. like an "unjection™". xeljanz xr. a once-daily pill for adults with moderate to severe ra for whom methotrexate did not work well enough. xeljanz xr can reduce pain, swelling and further joint damage, even without methotrexate. xeljanz xr can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections, lymphoma and other cancers have happened. don't start xeljanz xr if you have an infection. tears in the stomach or intestines,
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it took two of golf's greatest players 22 holes to decide who would go home with $9 million. phil mickelson topped tiger woods in the extra holes. during their head to head match in las vegas, the spec fik cal cost fans $19.95 to watch on pay per view, but because of technical difficulties, organizers sent out links to watch the match for free. after winning, mickelson acknowledged that it wasn't like winning the u.s. open, he would never let tiger live it down. from the few times i've interviewed both, there is no doubt about it and it will drive
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tiger crazy until his dying day. >> i love this he double or nothinged it. >> why you shouldn't bring a hammer to a sword fight. that's coming up. it's not so much about the painter, it is in some part, but it focuses on the painting. >> it is about painting and it be was foreiimportant for me tot in the movie and that became a key to unlocking the relationship with van gogh. >> so much so that you took lessons. didn't he say you're not holding the brush right? >> it's important because there's a lot of painting in the movie and we didn't have a stunt painter and we did some long takes. dined so and i did some painting realtime in the movie is. he taught me many things, how to paint marks and light and it changed how i see.
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and that was essential, because that's the heart of the movie. because if you can get into how to look at van gogh's work, you can get in his head. and that's the experience of the movie i think. >> explain what it means seeing like a painter. what i do look like to you as a painter? >> initially i would try to paint a man there. but right now i'm looking at you, i see that white highlight here, i paint the light. i paint the light. i remember trying to paint the sight and julian was like wait, see those dark spots? paint those dark spots. it's not just deconstruction, you start to see the origin of things, the rise and fall of things and it opens everything up and it's a new way of seeing. and really, for me, when you start to see that happen in the movie, and you do as you're watching me paint, i think it opens you up to some of the things that he writes about in
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his letters and some -- >> his letters are amazing. >> yeah.
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welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm dana jacob son with michelle miller and anthony mason. coming up, without it's major flaw it wouldn't be famous but the leaning tower of pizza has long been at risk. find out why the tower is leaning a bit less these days. >> then from london worldwide fame, we'll talk to rock-n-roll hall of famer roger daltrey of the band who. then from sizzling night spots to sizzling steaks, we'll meet a restaurant mogul with a
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midas touch and an incredible -- that's ahead. but first, our top story this morning. the u.s. government says natural disasters are waorsening becaus of climate change. the assessment compiled by 13 federal agencies was released friday in blunt language the report warns temperatures in the u.s. coin crease uld increase b as 12 degrees by the end of the century. it cites humans as the cause of more than 90% of the warming. they say the effects of climate change could have dire economic effects, potentially shrinking the u.s. economy by 10% in just the past three years more frequent and severe storms, floods, and wildfires and droughts have cost more than $400 billion. >> here to discuss the extraordinary findings is cbs news climate and weather contributor jeff berardelli. good morning. >> good morning. >> that 10% shrink is one thing
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that jumped out to me. what stood out to you in this report? >> it's the bold, emphatic, straightforward language that climate has never changed skins we've been on this earth, that temperatures hasn't changed as fast as they are and that it's emphatically caused by humans and the burning of fossil fuels. there's no debate left in this report on that. but also that we are the captains of this ship and there's still time to change course and take action, but we have to do so very quickly. >> and to that point, both in air quality and ozone depletion, we know we can make a difference. >> we can. >> so what can we do? >> that's a big question. there's a lot that we can do. this is the greatest threat that humanity has ever faced, so i have to be clear on that. and the interesting thing is it's going to force us to either work together or it will bring our demise. so we're going to have to come together, respect each other,
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respect the earth. this is our success sta nens. if we don'tee invol evolve as f the client, then that's it. it starts with us just being more respectful of each other and that planet and realizing that our life depends on this. it's making the little changes at home that rub off on other people. it's not like if you drive an electric car you're going save the world. but if you drive an electric car you save 1 or $200 a month on gas, your neighbors will see that, their neighbors will see that. if everyone starts to be more respectful of the earth which we depend upon, i think that makes it's w its way up the food chain and we have to hold our leaders accountable. don't do business with companies that aren't go stewards of this world and don't elect leaders that aren't good stewards of the
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earth. >> it's not just about the environment, it's about the economy. i've been hearing this from economists for years. the economic effects of this could be catastrophic. >> we're seeing that. huge storms over the past couple years, $400 billion worth of damage in the past few years or so, and that's just from extreme storms which are going to get worse. but as health gets worse because of allergies, zika, lyme disease, that creates a burden on our economy. as we start to heat up and dry out parts of the americas and especially places like the midwest, deep southwest, farmland that will cause more damage to crops and we won't see as much productivity. it's all a snowball effect, it's all connected. >> this conversation will continue. jeff, we appreciate you being here. there was a big scare for black friday shoppers at two large shopping malls friday. a mall in elizabeth, new jersey, outside of new york city was evacuated late last night after a man was shot in the wrist in the hallway between two stores. he was hospitalized. no arrests have been made.
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then in syracuse, new jersey new york, two men were tapped during the black friday rush at destiny usa. the mall officials described the violence as, quote, an isolated incident. four men looking to grab some holiday bargains at a jewelry store in toronto were foiled. they show the brazen robbers smashing the store window in broad daylight. what their plan lacked was knowing that the store clerks were armed with swords. after swinging the swords at the suspects, the would-be robbers bled in their getaway car enter handed. >> they needed better intel. swords. >> i'm thinking indiana jones when he pulled out the revolver. okay. it's about five minutes after the hour, now here's a look at the weather for your weekend.
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for most farmers the idea of crops freezing in the field say disaster, but not for the makers of one special beverage which depends on winter's chill to create a delicious delicacy. we'll take you to apple country to see how it's done. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." the day after chemo might mean a trip back to the doctor's office just for a shot. but why go back there... when you can stay home with neulasta onpro? strong chemo can put you at risk of serious infection. in a key study neulasta reduced the risk of infection from 17% to 1%, a 94% decrease. neulasta onpro is designed to deliver neulasta the day after chemo and is used by most patients today. neulasta is for certain cancer patients receiving strong chemotherapy. do not take neulasta if you're allergic to it
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apple picking season is coming to an end, but turning those apples into cider will continue. and lately business has been booming. cider sales in the u.s. have increased nearly 500 percent
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since 2011 and the number of ciderries has grown four times. >> one cider product relies on winter's natural cold to turn it into liquid gold and now the country's largest cider market wants to take a bite out of that market. adriana diaz traveled to see how this seasonal specialty is made. >> reporter: nestled in the quebec countryside it looks like a living post card. horses graze in the pasture as their owner and his best friend roam the grounds. but despite his tranquil surroundings, christian barthomeuf is noard another farmer. he's a disrupter, credited for reviving canada's apple industry. it takes a village they say. >> not a village, big town. >> reporter: he did it three decades ago when he invented ice cider, an alcoholic apple drink. >> i pick apple when there is
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minus 10 celsius in the apple. >> reporter: instead of picking apples in the fall, he waits until they freeze in the winter when the apple sugar peaks. he was inspired by a popular drink called ice wine, which is made from frozen grapes. >> i look up in the tree and i ask why i don't try with apple. and i put in basket for frozen and that's how ice cider was born. >> reporter: what started with one apple tree was grown to hundreds at his vineyard clos saragnat where tourists flock for tastings. outside, he walked us through his process. you pick it like this? >> no, i pick like this. >> reporter: you go to the trunk and you shake it? >> yeah. i put a lot big, big. >> reporter: blankets? >> blankets and helmet and. >> reporter: the apples are then pressed immediately. that allows the frozen water to remain with the leftover pulp so only the concentrated sugary
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nectar is extracted. >> all this in the tank, that's ice cider. >> reporter: during fermentation, about half of the high sugar content turns to alcohol allowing the cider to keep its sweet taste despite a 10% alcohol content. >> that's delicious. but it's not like regular cider or apple juice, it's sweet and tart and fruity. but ice cider was once a hard sell, says barthomeuf's partner. >> big companies started to do cider but the cider was very bad, even for health. so the government decided to take this out of the market and the people, they just kept the idea that cider was a very bad thing to have. we said, okay, it's apple wine. since wine was there, they said apple wooin, oh my gine, that's >> reporter: with his success,
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he convinced others to join in. the ice cider movement spread south to vermont when leger's hop by flourished into a company. >> we visited 26 restaurants, couple stores, and all but one of them bought and they rebought when it was sold out and we wanted more. that's when we looked at each other and said, oh, maybe this is not a hob by. >> reporter: leger found eating specialty siders and a year later became the first ice cider maker approved by -- >> our intention was to make ice cider, not hard cider and if we didn't get an approval to make ice cider then we weren't going to do anything commercially with it. >> reporter: unlike barthomeuf in canada, leger picks the apples in the fall, not the winter. she later freezes its juice to make the ice cider. >> the fastest we can make an ice cider is about a year, year and a half.
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but there's a lot of time where it -- we're just letting time and nature do its thing to develop the flavors in the tank or in a barrel. >> reporter: leger's considered america's top ice cider maker and in 2016 she collaborated with the country's largest hard cider company, angry orchard. >> so this is our flagship apple. and what we're doing around ice cider, you're not using the bitter sweet apples. >> ryan is the head cider making at angry orchard. >> i think ice cider gives a new experience insid cider drinking. i think the cider we made with eleanor makes it more of a different cider. there's so many ways it can be its own thing and very different from each other by style. >> but it's not cheap. each bottle requires up to 100 apples and that's just one of the challenges to making this
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sweet treat. >> we'll see what this winter brings. but for us, last year it didn't get cold enough to freeze, thaw, freeze, thaw, the process that you need to make great ice cider. >> reporter: weather is a key ingredient but it may also be this delicacy's downfall. >> i think ice cider is here in 15 years. >> reporter: because of global warming. >> sure. >> reporter: is it getting warmer here. >> yes. >> you notice? >> reporter: yes. there is ten years it's very easy to make ice cider every winter. now, no. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning: saturday," deeds dee-- adriana diaz, quebec. >> i hope we don't lose this. up next, we'll talk to the who's rorger daltrey about his
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>> he gave voice to his generation. ♪ people try to put us down ♪ talking about my generation >> roger daltrey burst on the scene in the early 1960s. ♪ i know i got get away >> has the frontman for the who. one of the pioneering bands that led rock's british invasion of the u.s. ♪ time to take my hand >> along with guitar rift pete townsend, basist john and drummer keith moon, daltrey and the who became one the rock's biggest and influential acts. ♪ ever since i was a young boy ♪ i played the silver ball
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>> selling 100 million records ♪ ♪ sure plays a mean pin ball ♪ soon you'll see me ♪ can't you feel me ♪ i'm coming >> producing two full-length rock operas. ♪ ♪ mama can you hear me ♪ can you feel me near you >> and performing a historic sunrise set at wood stock. ♪ listening to you, i get the music ♪ >> now daltrey is telling his tale of more than 50 years in rock-n-roll in his new auto biography, thanks a lot mr. kibble white. >> and roger daltrey is with us this morning. welcome, rother. >> good to be here, thanks. >> the mr. kibble white you referred to in the title was your grammar school head master who said to you what? >> he expelled me from the school after giving me six strikes with the cane for being
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a rather naughty boy. and as i was leaving his office, he held the door open for me and as i walked past him he said, you'll never make anything of your life, daltrey. you know, immediately with the arrogance and, you know, the ack anger that was going through me of youth, i thought i'll show you, thanks a lot mr. kibble white. >> have you ever seen him since? >> no. but i've had come kind of second kind of contact with his family because i really mean it today as a thank you. >> right. >> i do wonder if he hadn't have said that to me which way my life would have gone. >> not before a stent as a sheet metal worker and after getting kicked out of school, i mean, how did that trajectory lead you to a band, to -- >> i was already in a band. one of the reasons i got kicked out of school i was already in a band. and that's all i wanted to do. i mean, school seemed like a
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punishment. the band seemed like fun. >> you write in the book, it was interesting to me to sort of see the little pieces of the who come together and the way that you all are think you refer to it as a jigsaw puzzle and figuring it out. how simple or how difficult was it to find all the pieces or did you just know each time? >> well, here's the thing about being the singer in a band. you never actually sing much of the rest of the group. you're kind of facing front playing to the crowd that way and they're kind of bare. >> right. >> so what you do because of that position is you feel. so it always became obvious when someone had the same kind of bio rhythm and by the time keith moon joined, who was the last piece of the jigsaw puzzle, he was like the key in the ignition and all of a sudden what then becomes the algorithm, we're all
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our bio rhythms are the same, the algorithm of the who fired up for the first time and it was off. i mean, immediatelying some big happened. >> you were always -- always a dynamic live band, but you write that actually pete town send's guitar smashing early on became one of the trademarks of the band started by accident. >> yeah. accident and a temper. yeah. we were playing a club and it had a very low ceiling and he used to have this thing about playing his guitar that way, across kind of that way at times and bring it up like that. and he may -- i think he may have jumped a little bit and very low ceiling and he -- the neck of the guitar just hit the ceiling and broke. which made townsend completely furious. and it was rickenbacher, which in those days, the equivalent
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today it was $10,000. >> yeah. >> it could have been repaired. but not after he finished with it. >> what did you think as he was smarni smashing the guitar? >> i thought what i would have done for that guitar four years earlier when i was making my own guitars through lack of money. but equally we saw the effect it had on the audience, they went crazy and we thought, well this might be another key in the door to success. >> build that into the budget of -- >> yeah, it was wasn't the key in the door to making any money, but we -- >> you and pete townsend have been together 50 odd years now. >> 60. >> longer than a marriage. >> and you, as you describe as like a brotherhood. but there was a moment it came to blows back i think in the
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'70s ard a '70s and he swung a guitar at you? >> we were rehearsal and there were camera crews filming the rehearsal and they were sitting on their camera box and i didn't film a foot of this whole rehearsal. so i said when are you going to start filming, guys, this is hard piece of work to sing and i'm not doing it twice. pete, who now drunk about at least one bottle of brandy, maybe a bottle and a half. >> wow. >> to have a go at me you'll do as you're told and he started spitting at me. and with this, the road crew, who know kind -- knew kind of what he was like, they jump on me and hold me. with both arms. and then with that, pete starts quoting me and he said let him go i'll kill him. they let me go. he swung a guitar at me which bounced off my shoulder. then he started throwing punches. and blessed pete, he was drunk. even when he's sober he's not a
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fighter. and he threw a punch which kind of -- it went past my left ear again and i just hit him and he kind of left the floor and went bang. and i thought i killed him. >> are the who done? are you -- >> no, no, no. no, no, no. we'll be done when we can't do it -- we can't do it as it needs to be done anymore. there's something about the who that i'm really proud. there's an energy in the who that we've never cheated. and if that's the thing, if i ever feel isn't there in me anymore, because i can't speak for pete, but if it isn't in me as the singer to deliver those songs and give them that energy that is true rock, not rock-n-roll, rock-n-roll is music to make love to, music of the who is music to fight to. and it's really very different. >> i love it. no one could have said it better. >> roger daltrey, the book is
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thanks a lot mr. kibble white, good luck with it and thanks so much for being with us this morning. >> thanks for having me. >> pleasure. coming up next, white leaning tower of pisa is leaning a bit less these days and how that may help it endure. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." i love you and sylvester stallone together. talk about that relationship with him. >> sly is a special guy. he has so many stories to tell he's like your uncle. he's telling about stories back when he did if or what's changed. >> in the ring you got rules. >> he's always giving little gems of wisdom when he can. i'm like a stroponge, i soak itl up. i just don't want to play. i don't want to play anymore. >> the critically acclaimed hbo series put jordan on the map. he played a 16-year-old drug dealer wallace who was killed in the midst of a heated drug war.
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>> that was heartbreaking to me. >> me too. i was crushed. >> wallace. >> when i find y'all you're going to get it. >> right around the time i was getting killed off and i was going to cry on set, i can't go back and work with you guys, i got to go back to school. i was like i'll never work again. and everybody's like mike, you'll be fine. you're going to be great. all the older actors they took me under their wing and said you want this to be a career you can do that. >> and he did. >> i'm sorry. >> split up, all right. >> that career reached new heights with black panther. how many times do you walk and people go wakanda nation? i did that for at least a month and you go okay, gayle, stop. but were your surprised that it become the cultural phenomenon that it did? >> no. i knew would make an impact because of the cast, the story, everybody from all walks of life is really connected with this project and they felt a sense of pride, identity, of owning where
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you come from. and i think that was really important.
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it's within of the most distinctive buildings in the world, but it's losing part of of what made it famous. after decades of work to keep the leaning tower of pisa in italy from toppling over, scientists discovered this week quite the opposite is happening. seth doane has the story. >> reporter: tourists have been using cameras in power of perspective to push up the tower at least as an illusion. but engineers have been at work for about two decades to stop the famed tuscan bell tower from leaning. now it's stabilizing and straightening just a bit. the 186-foot leaning tower of
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pisa is tilting an inch and a half less than it was about two decades ago. with less earth on the opposite side from how it's learning, he explained the tower has reacted by straightening out. the marbled bell tower started tilting soon after construction began back in 1173. it was closed to the public in 1990. 11 years later, it was reopened after an ambitious restoration project to attach braces and weights to the structure while removing soil from one side to allow it to straighten. this civil engineering professor studying how the tower was able to withstand strong earthquakes described the ground beneath. >> the walls are thick and so the whole structure is very stiff. and the characteristic is the soft ground because of place
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used to be a river, a river that doesn't exist anymore. >> reporter: in fact, the word pisa is ancient greek for marshy land. at this pace it still could take thousands of years for it to completely straighten, so fear not those poses and photo ops should still be possible for many generations to come. for "cbs this morning: saturday," seth doane, rome. >> the very definition of instagram moment. >> all you need. >> that's all you need. now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. he turned a singles bar into a game changerer a and that's j
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part of his story. coming up on a special edition of the dish, a creative force in the food industry with an amazing track record and no plans to slow down. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." forget about vacuuming for weeks. the (new) roomba i7+ with clean base automatic dirt disposal empties the roomba bin for you. so dirt is off your hands. if it's not from irobot, it's not a roomba. fact: some of your favorite foods stain teeth. unlike ordinary whitening toothpaste, colgate optic white has hydrogen peroxide that goes below the tooth's surface for a smile that's 4 shades visibly whiter! colgate optic white. whitening that works. the emotions that bring us shouldn't drive us apart. but when you experience sudden, frequent, uncontrollable episodes of laughing... or crying that are exaggerated or simply don't match how you feel, it can often lead to feeling misunderstood. this is called pseudobulbar affect, or pba.
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stillman, he's been revolutionizing how we eat and meet for more than five decades. his singles bar would degree into a worldwide restaurant chain and the steakhouses are iconic. i caught one stillman a few weeks ago here in new york. at smith and wollensky's iconic midto midtown chop house, it's all about the steak and the civsizz. all of that zroibs founder alan stillman. but it's his unique philosophy on restaurant life that takes the cake, fake it until you make it. what made you think you had the skill set to do this? >> lack of knowledge. i had no understanding that i couldn't do it. >> reporter: he opened his first bar and restaurant in 1965 way $5,000 loan from his mother. is it fair to say you got into the business because you wanted to meet women? >> absolutely fair. not only fair, but accurate and
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true. and it worked. >> reporter: but you insisted on good food, you insisted on an atmosphere -- >> excuse me, i insisted on good french fries and hamburgers. beyond that, i didn't know anything, that's for sure. we just discovered it as we went along. >> reporter: the bar would become a hot spot for unmarried men and women on new york's upper east side. it was a magical clientele that provided the perfect combination. i think that you have been dubbed the man who invented the singles bar. >> they only call me the man that invented the singles bar. i happened to open up a restaurant that turned into a singles bar. at the time there was an awful lot of luck and draw of the first piece of luck was calling it tgi fridays. >> stillman would go on to open around 12 tgi friday's before selling. there are now 870 restaurants around the world. is it a kick to see that your singles bar is now like a family
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friendly restaurant? >> neither way. i do get a kick of getting out of a plane in istanbul and having a tgi fridays in my face 50 years later, that, i get a kick out of. >> but in 1974, stillman decided it was time to sell and took off for europe. six years later, he opened another iconic landmark, although smith and wollensky was the restaurant that stumbled out of the gate. that first review in the "new york times." >> smith and wolensky here? >> yes. >> that almost put us out of business in 1978. >> how did you recover? >> we recovered by taking out two full-page ads in the "new york times." and they said with a matchbook cover at least a match for the palm and chris. and the following week we started doing business in double and more than double every day.
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>> stillman has opened and sold seven smith and wollensky's from chicago to london always maintaining ownership of the flagship here in new york. there really is no smith and no wollensky, is there? >> no smith, no wollensky. >> so where did the name come from? >> sitting around here a little bit smashed, maybe a little bit stoned, two, three weeks before opening and absolutely no name whatsoever and a lot of money invested and we finally said at 2:00 or 3:00 in the morning get a phonebook. we took the new york city phonebook put it on the table and flipped the first page and up came smith. we said no, no, you can't call the place smith's, that's not possible. so we flipped it again and it came up wollensky. somebody said you can't call it wollensky. i got up the next morning and said let's use both names, we'll use smith and wollensky and it
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went from there. >> from feerather to son, micha stillman oversees the 11 quality restaurants in what can feel like a mom and pop shop. they have been around for decades. how long have the two of you collectively worked at smith and w wollensky. >> need a calculator. >> 45. >> wow, 45 and. >> 37. >> that's a lot of years. >> yes, it is. danny kissane started carrying boxes in 1981. today he's director of purchasing overseeing all the meat for the restaurant. manager sam pack started bartending at tgi fridays in 1973 and has been with stillman ever since. >> there's a culture of loyalty and respect. that came from alan and no matter what has changed, he is still the same. >> well, considering it is your
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birthday, i'd like to raise a glass. >> i thank you very much. >> to business well done and well earned. >> and i don't know when your birthday is, but you too. me, 39 only once, i'll be 40 coming up next year. [ laughter ] >> what a character. i'm telling you, you know what? it runs in the family. his son, quality meats, quality eats, the whole shebang. he did not even think about the restaurant business. >> yeah. >> until mid 20s. and when you think about what he's done and the legacy now that he has, it's amazing. >> i tell you when you see employees that have been with a company that long, that tells you everything you want to know about them. >> yeah. he was just 18 when he left indiana for nashville and started a music career that's influenced the whole industry. john hiatt is next. to look at me now, you don't see psoriasis. you see clear skin. you see me. but if you saw me before cosentyx...
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starring in our saturday sessions this morning, one of america's most respect and influential singer/song writers.
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john hiatt released his debut album back in 1970 four. 22 studio albums followed featuring music than i spires fans and fellow artists. his songs have been covered by bob dylan, bonnie raitt, eric clapton and roseanne cash among dozens of others. last month he released the eclipse sessions, his first new album in four years. now with a new song over the hill, here is john hiatt. ♪ ♪ i'm over the hill ♪ under the bridge ♪ i got a few peaks and valleys i ain't seen ♪ ♪ you talk about love ♪ i talk about love ♪ i don't know any better than to dream ♪
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♪ i know your father's house ♪ it has many rooms ♪ i see the young men sweeping up with their brooms ♪ ♪ but if you want me ♪ and if you want me, baby ♪ i'm over the hill ♪ i'm long in the tooth ♪ what i can say ♪ i take a huge bites of life ♪ and i eat the bones ♪ yeah ♪ gristle and marrow feeds my soul ♪ ♪ gives me the strength to forgive all the sticks and stones ♪ ♪ and what you see in me
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♪ you think i see too ♪ i didn't get here telling stories for you ♪ ♪ but if you want me, baby ♪ i'm over the hill, yeah ♪ and if you want me, baby ♪ i'm over the hill ♪ i hear a distant cry ♪ a tear forms in your eye ♪ for the way things might have been ♪ ♪ we can't live that again ♪ no time to fill the cup ♪ no time to screw it up ♪ we'll have to place our bets ♪ on the dog with no regrets ♪
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♪ time will tell ♪ heaven or hell ♪ time just whizes his secrets down the stream ♪ ♪ you talk about love ♪ i talk about love ♪ and sometimes i even think we know what we mean ♪ ♪ no band of angels bringing peace to the streets ♪ ♪ we wear the garments ♪ and we shuffled our feet ♪ but if you want me baby ♪ i'm over the hill
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♪ yeah ♪ and if you want me, baby ♪ i'm over the hill ♪ that's right ♪ oh, i'm over the hill ♪ yeah ♪ i'm over the hill, baby ♪ i'm over the hill, baby ♪ >> we'll be right back with more music from john hiatt. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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tell your doctor if you have new or worsening eye problems, including eye pain or changes in vision. if you have asthma, and are taking asthma medicines do not change or stop your asthma medicine without talking to your doctor. help heal your skin from within. ask your eczema specialist about dupixent. next week on "cbs this morning: saturday," king conon broadway. we're going to take you behind
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the scenes of the new musical and show you how one of the greatest movie monsters is brought to life each night in front of a musical audience. >> we leave you now with more music from john hiatt. >> this is cry to me. ♪ ♪ getting dark ♪ and it feels like trouble ♪ heating up just like before an evening rain ♪ ♪ tongues so sharp ♪ they could burst any bubble ♪ nobody wants to talk about all that pain ♪ ♪ they're all having fun ♪ playing with your feelings ♪ you can't control ' ♪ it just breaks your heart ♪ dirty double crosses done ♪ with underhanded dealings ♪ when all you ever wanted was a place to start ♪ ♪ come on ♪ and cry to me, baby
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♪ you can even lie to me, baby ♪ i'm probably gonna let you down ♪ ♪ but i wear i won't keep you down ♪ ♪ i swear i won't keep you down ♪ ♪ memories of highway 19 still haunt you ♪ ♪ babies on hips and men made out of motorcycle parts ♪ ♪ broken windows and crushing blows that taunt you ♪ ♪ not one damn thing ♪ in the yard that starts ♪ i wonder why love is always ♪ looking for its own ghost ♪ or is that just what hurt people do ♪ ♪ find the ones who injured them the utmost ♪ ♪ practically beg 'em to make
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♪ their dreams come true ♪ come on and cry to me ♪ baby ♪ you can even lie to me, baby ♪ i'm probably gonna let you down ♪ ♪ but i swear i won't keep you down ♪ ♪ i swear i won't keep you
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down ♪ ♪ now sniemsing some good can come from crying ♪ ♪ 'cause sometimes when they got you so down ♪ ♪ even words can come from lying ♪ ♪ 'cause sometimes they just wanna keep you down ♪ ♪ come on and cry to me, baby ♪ you can even lie to me, baby ♪ i'm probably gonna let you down ♪ ♪ but i swear i won't keep you down ♪ ♪ come on and cry to me, baby ♪ you can even lie to me, baby ♪ i'm probably gonna let you down ♪ ♪ but i swear i won't keep you down ♪ ♪ i swear i won't keep you
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down ♪ ♪ i swear i won't keep you down ♪ thanks for that, keeping us down for those of you still with us, we have more muse frick john hiatt. >> this is poor imitation of god. ♪ ♪ ♪ i'm a poor imitation of god ♪ i'm a poor imitation of god ♪ i'm a poor imitation of god ♪ i'm a poor imitation of god ♪ well i can do the devil in my sleep ♪ ♪ all day waiting for my midnight creep ♪ ♪ if you love me ♪ don't expect a lot ♪ i'm a poor imitation of god ♪ i'm a poor imitation of god
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♪ i'm a poor imitation of god ♪ i'm a poor imitation of god ♪ well i can steal your heart from you ♪ ♪ hide it in my walking shoes ♪ leave before the band gets hot ♪ ♪ i'm a poor imitation of god ♪ yes, i'm a poor imitation of god ♪ ♪ i'm a poor imitation of god ♪ yes, i'm a poor imitation of god ♪ ♪ well i do better ♪ i do better on my own ♪ like a sick dog ♪ like a sick dog ain't got no home ♪ ♪ untoe thien immaim made ♪ but on that day the mold was broken ♪ ♪ i'm afraid ♪ 'cause i'm a poor imitation of god ♪ ♪ yes, i'm a poor imitation of
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god ♪ ♪ yes, i'm a poor imitation of god ♪ ♪ yes, i'm a poor imitation --
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live from the cbs studios, this is kpix 5 news. now, news of a very slamming into a dock. the presidents on scientists contradicting him on climate change. the alarming warning that comes at a critical time for california. the storm is winding down the roads are still looking slippery out there. thank you for joining us. i am emily and for julie watts who has the

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