tv CBS This Morning CBS April 6, 2019 4:00am-6:01am PDT
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the preceding was a paid presentation for the power airfryer oven, brought to you by tristar products. captioning funded by cbs good morning. it's april 6th, 2019. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." no vacancy. president trump visits the u.s./mexico border and tells immigrants the country is full. we'll have the latest on why he's changed his threat to shut down the border. caught on camera. a deadly standoff between police and a gunman. see the incredible bravery from officers as the bullets fly. joe biden's joke.
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the former vice president is in more trouble after making light of allegations of his unwanted touching. hear what he said after the incident. we're in minneapolis counting down to tonight's final four, and we'll speak with the broadcasters who are calling tonight's games. plus a legendary hoops coach makes waves after she said she would no longer hire men. we'll take a look at what prompted the comments by muffinmy grau and the growing debate over gender equality. and it's a new tier for booze business. we'll explore the trend of mindful drinking and the new claims to have a healthier effect on you and the planet. but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> so as i say, and this is our new statement, the system is full. we can't take you anymore. >> president trump dlirchs a
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blunt message at the southern border. >> our country is full, our area's full, the sector is full. can't take you anymore. sorry. can't happen. turn around. that's the way it is. joe biden tried to use some humor to diffuse some complaints that he had been inappropriately touchy. >> i want you to know i had permission to hug lonnie. >> don't make jokes about it. this is a serious issue. >> that's not cool, mr. president trump. come on. >> by the way, he gave me permission to touch him. >> a standoff in georgia leaves a pregnant woman and her teenage son dead. >> two officers were shout while responding. >> boeing says it's cutting production of its grounded 737 max jetliners. >> that's the reason why you see boeing shares ticking slower. >> the bear ended up eating gummi bears. >> his own kind, i guess.
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>> a flying instructor in tennessee landed on a highway and taxied to a high school for career day. >> all that -- >> a little huddle that turns into a group hug. >> he delivers the shot of the day. >> two. >> fun for everybody. >> -- and all that matters -- >> president trump says he will once again skip the white house correspondence dinner. >> the white house correspondence dinner is too negative. i like positive things, okay? >> -- on "cbs this morning: saturday." >> baylor knocking the oregon ducks out of the tournament. >> notre dame eliminates uconn for the second year in a row. >> they're heading to championship game. maybe the viral moment of the tournament so far. >> the irish jig of a lifetime. >> it happened for muffin mcgraw.
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doing a jig there. >> got to love that name. >> we're going to have more from muppet mcgraw later in the show. we're here. dana is where all the action is. >> dana, what have you got for us? >> a lot. there will be action here, i promise. it's very quiet here at u.s. bank stadium. but tonight for the final four, it will be rocking in the stands behind me on the court. and calling the game on ybs tonight, jim nantz, grant hill, and bill raftery. get this. they were here 25 years ago. we'll talk jim nantz's eliten point guard skill. we'll take a look at how minnesota is doing things right when it comes to a very serious issue for so many states, homelessness among military veterans. we'll look at how they cracked
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the code and what it could mean for other homeless populations. and later on a special edition of "the dish, wtsz we eek take you to one of the moat innovative restaurants. i've had some of the best pizza in the city. it rivals any in new york, i promise. we'll spend time with kim and share how her past has created the most popular delectable tastes. i wish i could taste them right now. >> bring back some samples, dana. >> maybe, maybe. >> thanks. we begin this morning with president trump's renewed warning to illegal immigrants and asylum seekers who were trying to cross into the u.s. from mexico. on friday mr. trump visited the border town of calexico, california, where he told them to turn around, adding, quote, our country is full. he's promising to add economic penalties if they do not stop
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the illegal crossings. this comes after he backed down from closing the border entirely after facing strong criticism from his own party. errol barnett has the latest. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. president trump has ratcheted up his immigration rhetoric, president trump has increased his attacks on migrants from central america, and the president is threatening mexico with dire economic consequences if it doesn't do more to help. >> well, we're going to shut it down if we have to, but mexico can do it very easily. >> reporter: surrounded by public lawmakers and border patrol agents, president trump retreated from his threat to shut down the entire border. >> we're going to shut it down if we have to, tariff the cars if we have to. >> reporter: the newly renovated wall has already helped them. >> in just these two miles, it's
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dropped by 75%. >> reporter: at a round table on border security, president trump went as far as declares asylum seekers as a hoax. >> the system is full. can't take you anymore. i look at some of the asylum members. they're gang members. they're not afraid of anything. they have lawyers greeting them. they read what the lawyers say. they're gang members. they read, i fear for my life. all of a sudden mexico is doing terrifically -- >> reporter: while he changed his mind about shutting down the border friday, this was hi vow just last week. >> i'm telling you right now, we will close the damn border! we'll keep it closed for a long time. i'm not playing games. >> reporter: the reversal comes after comments from the gop. >> it will have catastrophic economic impact on our country. >> reporter: in california the president also laid out plans to
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complete his wall once and for all. >> and we expect to have close to 400 miles done within about two years from now. that's a lot. 400 miles will cover most of it. >> reporter: now, california is leading a group of more than 20 states asking a federal judge to stop president trump from die vertding federal funltd eral fu this wall. they call it unconstitutional and they say it would cause them irreparable damage. >> all right, errol, thank you. former vice president joe biden is trying to tackle the controversy. on friday he addressed a group of activists in washington, but his effort to tamp down concerns about women claiming he made them feel uncomfortable when he touched them may have only added more fuel to the fire. ed o'keefe reports. >> i'm sorry i didn't understand
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more. i'm not sorry for any of my intentions. >> reporter: seen publicly for the first time since accusations of inappropriate behavior, par apology. esident joe biden >> i've never been disrespectable intentionally to a man or a woman. >> reporter: but in a hotel ballroom packed mostly with middle-aged men, he made light of his troubles not once. >> just so you know, i had permission to hug lonnie. >> but twice. >> he gave me permission. >> his first accuser lucy flores shows biden's equips shows he hasn't reflected at all on how his actions have made some women uncomfortab uncomfortable. he directly targeted president trump. >> this country can't afford
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four more years of a president locked in the past. we've got to get moving. >> reporter: moments after biden finished mr. trump tweeted that he's employed thousands of electrical workers through the years who will support him in 2020. >> he's going through a situation. let's see what happens. >> reporter: biden all but said he's in, but he isn't expected to officially join the presidential race until the end of the month at the earliest. >> what's the hold up? >> what's the holdup? putting everything together, man. >> reporter: when he gets in, he'll top the pool of 20. biden and seven others are still considering a run. in that speech he tried to move on. he focussed on economic themes like restoring the middle class and union rights but afterward
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he acknowledged there could very well be more accusers in the coming days. for "cbs this morning: saturday," ed o'keefe, washington. some of the democratic presidential contenders will be in key primary caucus states. cory booker and kirsten jill brand are in new hampshire. bernie sanders and beto o'rourke are in iowa. hickenlooper is in south carolina. ben, good morning. let's start with joe biden. is he in, do you think? is there any hesitation with the accusations? >> i think there's always been hesitation. it's certainly possible he doesn't, but all signs point to yes. he's built a shadow campaign. many in the senate believes he's going to run. and most importantly he's tapped a lot of potential big fund-raisers so they're at the
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ready when he announces. >> is he the what the democrats are looking for? >> this group is broad and diverse. hi was the vice president for a president who remains enormously popular within the party. huge name recognition that vaults to the current top of the polls, above that of president trump. what will determine in choosing is not just the fate of the democrats but the country, much as the nomination of president trump did four years ago. >> he'd be the oldest u.s. president in history. the parties are trying to shape a new image for the future. is that what they want? >> he may well be potentially qualified and were this another election cycle, he should have been the person. in fact, there was a
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representation made. it's a healing process more than an expectation of where they believe they should be going. >> let's move on to immigration. the president threatened to shut down the border last week. this week he says we can't take any more people here. how does this jive with the notion of given me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses? will this be a potential land mine for republicans? certainly, and it has been. the president beat the drum for the wall throughout not just his own campaign but the 2018 midterms and it certainly helped cost his party the majority in the house of representatives. we do have a very serious problem with the asylum system in this country, but the notion that the united states is somehow full is absolutely false. we remain one of the least densely populated nations in the world and we always have what deming on graers call a real
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replacement problem, which means we're not having enough people born as we have people growing old. >> the house democrats blocked funding for his border wall. does this get bibi partisan support? >> few things get by. what these attorneys general are doing is taking a page out of their playbook with obama where many attorneys general filed similar suts on the grounds of overreach. >> i have to talk about the president and taxes because the democrats are making a move to call on the irs to release them. how far will they get with this? >> potentially very far, which means it doesn't mean it won't be litigated to the hilt and the president will not discontinue his campaign. we've already seen that the response from his personal lawyer is very sim lar to the response from his personal lawyer once the mueller investigation began.
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consider it a witch hunt and an attempt to sway public opinion. >> ben goldberger, thanks for being with usz. tomorrow we'll have jerrie nadler and rudy giuliani, attorney to president trump. a picture of a deadly standoff between police and a gunman in stockbridge, georgia, 20 miles south of atlanta. >> watch out. police body camera footage shows the dramatic footage when officers came under fire. that was just the start of what was about to unfold. kenneth craig is here with that story. kenneth, good morning. >> good morning, michelle. this really was a nightmare situation for everybody involved. police originally went to this home after getting a frightening call about possible trouble inside, and when they arrived, the situation arrived. the warning now, the video you're about to see might be disturbing to some.
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two officers were responding to a domestic disturbance thursday morning who came under fire by the gunman who then barricaded himself inside the house. >> shots fired, shots fired. >> reporter: dramatic body dam shoes a chaotic scene as officers are ambushed almost immediately after they break down the door of the home. officer taylor web is shot in the chest and hip as he enters. officer marek is seen dragging his rifle across the lawn after he was shot in the hand. police identified the gunman as 47-year-old as anthony bailey jr. of atlanta. a standoff ensued for the next 17 hours as officers pleaded with him to release two hostages, a 16-year-old and his
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mother. officer webb's body cam captured bailey threatening police as they surrounded the house. >> i have a hostage. don't come here. i got a lot of shots. >> reporter: webb was able to make his way to a garage where officers helped him escape. police stormed the home early and found the woman, the son, and the gunman. the suspect had a criminal history that would not allow him to legally own a firearm. white was due to deliver a baby boy in less than four weeks. white's sister called 911 after seeing the pregnant woman on the ground in the garage. >> and i ran to the door to ring the doorbell and i didn't hear anything, so then i came around and that's when i saw the blood. i tried to get into the garage and i saw my sister lying on the ground. >> we've got dispatch to trouble
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unknown, a lady bleeding. the officer was putting on rubber gloves thinking he was going to help somebody. he had no idea. >> according to her sister she worked as a nurse in the areand her son played high school football. both officers were taken to the hospital and they're expected to recover from their injuries. >> what a horrible day. >> the officers went to help. >> they were wearing the gloves. >> it's hard to imagine what it was like for them, 17 hours. unimaginable for the people inside. >> kenneth, thank you. heavy rain is expected to soak a large part of the west coast today while another storm system will likely bring rain and possibly tornados to the southern plains. meteorologist jeff ber ardelly has that and the rest of the nation. good morning. >> good morning. the weather season is really starting to crank up. it's going to be a pretty stormy stretch of weather the next
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couple of days. big storms around lubbock. this threat is headed toward dallas, austin, san antonio, and eventually shreveport. where you see the orange, that's where you have the greatest threat for severe weather and the possibility of a few tornados today. that whole threat is going to be shifting eastward and up northeast as well. louisville, rockport, shreveport, and we'll see several rounds of showers and thunderstorms. as we put it in motion over the next 24 to 48 hours, as you notice it's not just one round of storms. it's several. this is headed toward memphis overnight tonight. then we see another round of showers and storms develop here in texas and move northeast over saturated ground. and so we're worried about the possibility of flooding over the next couple of days in the southeast. generally 2 to 4 inches of rain, generally up to around 6 inches. it's going to be a rough couple
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of days. time to show you some of the other stories making news this morning. "the wall street journal" says boeing is scaling back production of its best-selling 7 737 max jets as it tries to fix software that was involved in two crashes that killed over 300 people. it's already suspended deliveries to airlines after the planes were grounded by regulators. boeing shares fell 2% in after hours trading on friday. the star gazette reports a new york man is under arrest for making death threats to a congresswoman. the suspect stook issue with the democrat's religion and threatened to kill her in a phone call last month. omar is one of three muslims serving in congress. if convicted he faces a maximum sentence of ten years in prison and a possible fine of $250,000.
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the new york "daily news" reports a self proclaimed shock value comic says his staged holdup at a store in february was a prank that went horribly wrong. he had a friend film the robbery where he used a fake gun in hopes of ag online officer. he and his friend face charges of murderer, manslaughter, robbery. to quote someone, dude, this isn't funny. the purchase of large capacity gun magazines is no loer legal in california. a federal judge who last week struck down the ban agreed to put a temporary hold on the decision friday while the state prepares go file an appeal.
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it led manufacturers and retailers to ramp up their weapons that hold more than ten rounds of ammunition. mick jagger is reportedly on the mend. he tweeted thanks for all the messages of support he's received. he said he's much better now. the surgery forced the stones to postpone their spring tour. he plans to get back in the swung once he makes a full recovery. >> like a good old-fashioned timex watch. takes a licking but keeps on ticking. it's about 22 after the hour. now here's a look at the weather for your weekend.
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notre dame defeated uconn 81-76 at the women's final four in tampa, but that's not all that coach muppet mcgraw has on her mind. we'll hear about her plea for ee quality and beyond including a promise to no longer hire men for certain jobs. >> plus many of the nation's cities are struggling to deal with crippling traffic conditions, but one city is trying something new to try to fix the problem. we'll get the details and see if the idea could spread. later a drink with health benefit and a healthy buzz. we'll take a look at healthier buzz and what it's all about. is it real? how does it taste? you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." [phone ringing]
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i know it took you a long time to figure out what you wanted to write in this book? what happened when you started and sat down writing? >> well, at first i thought i wanted to write a really breezy book. for me it was a cinderella story. i was an ordinary person, took the subway to work, worried about money, and all of a sudden i was woured about a driver, hair and clothing and people. >> magazine editor. >> ed door in chief. >> i thought i was going to write a cinderella story and all
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the colorful characters at conde nast. as i got deeper into it, i thought i want the book to be useful to people so let me talk about what it feels like to be a leader. here i am. i'm a writer. i sit in my little cubicle, and suddenly i've got 65 people who work for me. >> including one employee who said do you know what you're doing? he said early on, do you know what you're doing with such disdain. >> antd i didn't. the ordinary language of magazines were like martian to me. >> so, ruth, what was the skill because writers are solitaire people, so what was the key for you? >> the key for me was suddenly realizing i don't know everything, and i'm going to hire people smarter than i am and let them have their head.
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for the second year in a row, notre dame maxed uconn out of the women's irish four. they won 81-76. they'll face baylor in sunday's national championship game. but notre dame's coach muppet mcgraw had more than basketball on her mind leading to last night's game. dana jacobson is with the men's final four in minneapolis with more on that. >> reporter: if notre dame wins tomorrow night, muppet will be the first to win back-to-back championships and she's using her platform to speak out about gender equality.
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>> we don't have enoughab visib women leaders. >> reporter: on the stage she made an impassioned plea at the women's final four calling for equality in sports. >> men have the power, men make the decisions. it is always the men that is the stronger one, and when these girls are coming out, who are they looking up to to tell them that's not the way it has to be. >> reporter: mcgraw is in her 32nd season at notre dame. the hall of fame coach caused a stir earlier this week when she said she would no longer hire men as her assistant coaches. >> when you look at men's basketball and 99% of the jobs go to men, why shouldn't 100% or 99% of the jobs in women's basketball go to women? >> reporter: in 1972 when title ix was enacted to end gender discrimination in college sports, they had a female head
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coach. today that number is about 40%. in 1978, 79% of coaches in women's college basketball were female. now it's down to 57%. mcgraw also addressed the lack of progress for women in politics. >> we've had a record number of women running for office and winning. i'm getting tired of the novelty of the first female governor of this state, the first female african-american maier of this city. when is it going to become the norm instead of the exception? >> reporter: a lot of support, but also some pushback for mcgraw, specifically the vow to not hire men. her rival who has never had a male asus substantial and advocates for women in the sport says he hopes she sends a formal thank-you to the male staffers that helped send her the staffers that won her the championship. it's not easy. and it's something to say you're
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notds going to hire men in those sports. >> i'm astounded by those numbers. how can it be? >> reporter: there are more men playing some of these sports and more men who have been in the pro e feg for a while. so her point of bringing more women into those positions obviously is heard. maybe there should be more women working in the men's college game as well. that's something to think about. >> it's an important conversation. it's got to continue. there's got to be some change. dana, thank you so much. and now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. traffic isn't just annoying. it costs us all in time and money. up next, atlantic's derek thompson tells us the solution
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are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. woman: help stop the clock on further irreversible joint damage. talk to your rheumatologist. right here. right now. humira. if you ask people what problems the city faces, traffic would be at the top of the list. >> the largest city is trying
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something new. they're looking at congestion pricing. it will charge drivers a fee to drive into the heart of manhattan and use the money raised to help fund mass transit. here to discuss the plan that other cities are also looking at is derek thompson, a staff writer at "the atlantic." good morning. >> good morning. >> this is such a hot button issue. i can't tell you how many times i've jumped into a limo, an uber, a taxi, where the drivers are telling me why it's such a bad idea. >> it's pretty obvious. new york is expensive enough. with the rising costs of insurance and the cost of living, now i have to pay extra to drive? here's the thing. streets aren't free, but a lot of people use them for free. a lot. as a result, if you're trying to drive across mudtown, it's going to take 19 hours. if we charge people what this
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resource actually costs, what the streets cost, it will reduce congestion, it will reduce emissions, and finally it will encourage more people to use public transit, provide more money to the transit system and the subway system improves. >> this has been done in london. is there evidence it works? >> it's been tried in london, singapore, and stockholm, and it has basically worked everywhere it's tried. what does work mean? it has reduced congestion in the cities, it has reduced driving deaths in the cities, and it has reduced measured emissions in the city. if you're an environmentalist or wants to get around town faster once you're downtown, congestion pricing works pretty much everywhere it's tried. >> let's talk about those numbers. one, you mentioned it costs the average driver 97 hours and $1,300 a year. new york city might be the first, but when you think about what is happening elsewhere as he mentioned, i mean what are
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some of the drawbacks? >> well, i want to focus on what you said. ist costs the driver 97 hours and $1,300 to be stuck in traffic. congestion already enacts attacks. this is simply another way to get people to pay it. it's a way to get people to pay it such that it benefits other traffic. the drawback is relatively obvious. it's going to mack it a lot more expensive for people to drive downtown and a lot of these people have to drive downtown. they're coming from the suburbs. >> you're talking about low income people, too, trying to get to work. how do you deal with that? >> there's a way to deal with that. one, you can rebate the congestion tax back to them at the end of the year. you're paying more, but we can rebate it to you at the end of the year. it ooh going to work a little like e-zpass.
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we won't install it in drivers who make less than a certain amount of income. right now the city is talking about $60,000, $70,000, $80,000. you simply exempt some people from it. >> that's a lot. another problem plaguing our cities, homelessness. one state has found a solution to just about eliminate it among veterans. we'll show you how it's changing and saving lives. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." called beta-glucan, iber which can help lower cholesterol as part of a heart-healthy diet. now it's in new quaker oat beverage, a super-smooth dairy alternative. you won't find relief here. congestion and pressure? go to the pharmacy counter for powerful claritin-d. while the leading allergy spray
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all eyes are on minnesota this weekend thanks to college basketball's final four, but there's more to celebrate in the state, including a series of innovations that have virtually ended homelessness among military veterans. dana joins us again with that story. dana, hi. >> reporter: hi, anthony. yeah, veteran homelessness is a problem nationwide and minnesota is one of just a handful of states that seems to have actually solved it.
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they've used an individualualized approach looking at the factors, be it mental health issues to economics. then they tailor a support system. it's a model that could help the homeless population, veteran or not. >> people don't understand how you get this. they all think life is a breeze, but things happen. >> reporter: teresa marshal spent 13 years in the army as an air defense artillery specialist starting in operation desert storm. >> i had a 6-month-old son and a 5-year-old daughter and i left on her birthday. >> what was that like? >> teary, very emotional, very uncomfortable. but i signed up for it. >> so you served your country. >> i served my country, and i don't regret it. >> reporter: she retired in chicago, but after her husband passed away in july of 2017, marshal fled to the twin cities.
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she found work as a chef, but wasn't able to find a place where she could afford to live. >> so you were living in your car. >> yeah. >> for how long? >> a year. yeah. i didn't want to really stay in a shelter because of so many people or out of fear. >> reporter: a visit with the minnesota v.a. changed marshall's life when she was told about an organization that helps place the state's military veterans in temporary housing. >> what did you think when you heard about it? >> terrified. >> really. why? ? was it almost too good to be true, why do you want to help me and what do i have to give you? >> right. exactly. >> reporter: marshall wunl alone. the state decided it had had enough. >> how do you go about tackling a problem like homeless veterans? >> i think the approach that we've taken is really to break it down into its essential
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elements. >> reporter: larry is the kmegser of the v.a. nine years ago his department compiled a registry of every veteran living on the street. working together they started finds homes for veterans. >> they all had these resources, but no one organization could solve the problem by themselves. it took the combination of all of the organizations to be able to pull together and to be able to come up with an actual solution to the problem. >> reporter: he came up with a resolution with a fellow national guard. >> no one will be left on the battlefield, left behind to ir-ka for he or she who bore the battle, and that's why we need do it. >> it's about service to those veterans. >> reporter: before taking office in january, walls spent 12 years in congress where he was the ranking member of the committee on veterans affairs.
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>> if we're going to fight this fight, it's going to be big and transformational. >> it's like here's the problem, coordinate the action, coom pleat the mission. >> what is it? to eradicate homelessness. >> yes. people say, can we ever do that? yes, we can. you have 17 folks in swift county, what can we do to help with that. we started aligning resources. then it became manageable. one at a time. we have an old post here. there's a rich history here. >> walz says with some creative work at the federal, state, and local level, part of the fort has been converted into transitional housing for veterans. >> we were up there a few weeks ago, just a sense of pride. it sets right next to the rail line. the first stop is the v.a. hospital. listening to them, all these pieces came together. i can get around, get applies to
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live, and now i have a job. >> my staff said it's like a marathon. i said now it's time to do a sprint. move the needle and find the last 223 people a home. >> sometimes they have nobody else but us. >> reporter: sam peterson and rochelle washington helped track down those veterans as case managers for them. >> why is it so important you find them, they don't have to find you? >> sometimes they don't have the transportation to come find us. sometimes they don't have a phone and the place that we know they're probably going to be when they go to sleep at night is one of the shelters. >> meeting them where they're at, where they're comfortable, where they probably feel safe as opposed to uneasy in my office kind of thing builds that trust. >> reporter: on the night we visited the simpson housing services shelter, peterson met with a veteran who opened up for the first time. >> he wasn't always in the mood
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to connect with me. but tonight we had a bit of a step forward, so even though we didn't get him moving forward necessarily with traditional mcafee case management, every little interaction is important. >> as for teresa marshall, she found temporary housing thanks to mcafee and moved in just a few weeks before we met her. her rent is offset by a housing voucher available for veterans and she can stay until she find as permanent home. >> can you imagine where you would be if you didn't take that leap of faith? >> no, i don't want to imagine because it's almost a nightmare. i have someone to care about me now. >> reporter: sam peterson told us the veteran that opened up to him the night we were with him, he's seen him at the resource and referral center and that's another step forward to try to find housing for him. it's all a process.
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again, it's that individualized approach. remember that number is down to 223 homeless veterans. that's all from where they started. >> it's amazing progress, dana, what they're doing. >> kudos to the caseworkers and it seems so obvious, right? figure out what the problems are, what they need, and you give it to them. >> reporter: it's easier said than done. remember that when it's not the veteran population, it gets a little trickier. you can't do this exactly across the board. dwrounl have a federal housing voucher. you don't have the assistance some are getting, but it's certainly things they're looking at. >> dana, you have earned your keep this week, i'll tell you. another amazing story. amazing. arist vincent van gogh was known for his brilliant colors but they were notably missing from one of his works until art restorians were able to retrieve his true intentions. if you're heading out the door, don't forget to set your
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dvr to record "cbs this morning: saturday." up next, dana will have a chat with jim nantz and grant hill about their final four memories. >> plus korean meets italian and mexican in the hands of talented shift ann kim. >> and he's one of britain's most coveted music awards. we'll talk with rising star sam fender, and he'll perform in our ""saturday sessions."" you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." you guys hungry? ♪ ♪ ♪ a great dishwasher needs a great detergent.
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including pancreatitis. tell your doctor if you have diabetic retinopathy or vision changes. taking ozempic® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase the risk for low blood sugar. common side effects are nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, stomach pain, and constipation. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. i discovered the potential with ozempic®. ♪ oh! oh! oh! ozempic®! ♪ ask your healthcare provider today about once-weekly ozempic®. as one of the most celebrated artists in the world who dealt with demons as famous as his work, there's been as much not analyze ed about vince van gogh. they think they've revealed a
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detail about his work. a true color of his last work. they removed the frame of a watercolor that lacks the vibrancy of his other works painted just two months before he died. they discovered fragments of the original paint that had faded over time and based on the clues in the pigment digitally reproduced the colors van gogh would have seen. turns out the muted midday painting we see today was meant to be a celebration of the sky at sunset, but impoverished vincent didn't have the money to buy paint that would last. conservator rosie freemanagemental said the artist always knew his sunset would fade. >> vincent was very aware of the light sensitivity of some pigments as were other artists of that time, but they still couldn't resist using them. they knew they were fugitive, but they used them anyway. >> what a difference. >> yeah. an artist of his caliber to know
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it wouldn't last. imagine what was going on in his head. >> it's nice to see it the way he saw it after all these years. ahead, we'll sample a brand-new brew and hear about the alleged benefits. 's coming up on "cbs this morning: saturday." so many things to talk about. let's talk about little. because the producer said this about you. i don't think there's anyone else who can deliver lines and throw shade in the nonchalant way that she does. >> one of the film's producers. your timing is impeccable. >> sounds like he or she said i was shady, but that's fine. >> your impact is throwing shade. shade, little vortex. >> did you relate to april? what did you enjoy about playing her. >> i enjoyed playing her because i haven't been in that position for so long.
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>> which position. >> to be an assistant in a very long time. >> that's true. >> virginia is so hilarious. to take her abuse and to take marseille's abuse was a lot of fun. i definitely struggled with finding my voice and being able to speak up for myself, and to go through the journey and find that voice. it's a ploesh to play. >> that's what the play is about. how does one find their voice, and what can i do. >> i think you're doing it exactly. i think you're doing quite well. i think it takes confidence, a sense of knowing what you want to say, and i think april throughout the movie just really wants to be promoted. she has this wonderful idea and she's scared of rejection. she's scared of this verbal abuse. but sometimes there are women in the workplace where you have to speak up and not expect to be
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. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm anthony mason with michelle miller and dana jacobson. coming up this hour, genetic testing kits can reveal fascinating facts about our heritage but author dani shapiro got more than she bargained for. we'll hear about her dna discovery and aftermath. >> reporter: plus, all the march madness has come down to this weekend. wheel hear from jim nantz and
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grant hill. >> and we'll hear from one of the twin city's most popular chefs on a special edition of "the dish." we'll see how ann kim made a name for herself adding a korean touch to pizza. yes, you heard us right. that's just ahead. but first the latest o on our top story, president trump is back on the attack this morning taking aim at illegal immigrants and asylum seekers. mr. trump urged migrants heading north to turn around, adding, quote, our country is full. he also questioned the legitimacy of those coming to the border seeking asylum. >> they're gang members. they're not afraid of anything. it's a scam, okay? it's a scam, a hoax. >> the president is playing down his about-face this week when at perhaps the urging of republican
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lawmakers he said he will not shut down the border. >> president trump is putting the treasury didn't on notice, and he has hired a lawyer to prevent his tax returns from being released. mr. trump says releasing the documents would set a dangerous precedent. the renewed defense following a congressional request to the irs to hand over six years of mr. trump's personal tax returns and some from his business. democrats say they're checking for potential conflicts of interest. making the last preparations before the final four, virginia, auburn, texas tech, and michigan state, all getting in their last practices ahead of tonight's ncaa tournament semifinal games. both matchups will be called by cbssports' jim nantz, bill rafte raftery, and grant hill who appeared in the 1990s.
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>> reporter: this is actually the fifth year they will team up. it's a three-man booth calling the final four and championship game right here on cs. three on that call is no easy skill to master. even getting trio together here was tough. bill couldn't join us, but jim and grant did sit down with me yesterday to share in the chemistry and finally three. >> we're in minneapolis and all i can think is in 1992 both of you were in minneapolis, you were playing in the final four, you were calling the final four. please tell me you knew you would end up partnering at some point to call games again. >> it has been pretty special to be back here in this city with something, you know, truly magical happening for me and my teammates and our program at duke and to see this guy here and to work with jim and to know and admire him from afar, although, we did have some
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interaction during that time, but to now work closely with him, it's awesome. >> i had my eye on him a long time. i can't say it was 1992, but i got to know him in '91 when he was a freshman, and i saw him a lot during regular season games and at practices. we even played a little bit of h-o-r-s-e. >> the moments you have, do you treasure any one moment more than the other? >> you know, my first year working with jim and bill and my al ma matter duke was in the final four and they went against wisconsin in 2015. and as a broadcaster, you have a job to do, so you kind of get lost in calling the game. but it dawned on me with a
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minute left, we're going to win, and then i'm trying to keep my composure, and so obviously be respectful of wisconsin and do my job, if you will. but that was a great moment. >> it's 2016. villanova/north carolina. villanova has less than five seconds. they inbound the ball to archie. but as he's racing up the floor, grant sees kris jenkins, the trailer, and he says watch out. >> three seconds. >> jenkins. >> gets it to jenkins for the championship. >> and i reacted to what he said it. was like his sentence went with mine. i mean i was able to react to his warning. >> jenkins with the winner at the buzzer. >> that was a sweet moment for all of us, to be able to have a buzzer beater for the national championship. >> the three-man booth, as you
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talk about, having fun, it's great fun. how do you balance it? give me the inside story? is somebody hitting someone to shut up, are you pointing, or does it just flow in. >> it just flows. i think i'm in the way a little bit. >> no, no, no. >> i going to try to be a little more spare. >> jim nantz. >> he serves it up, and there you go. >> i've grown working with jim and working with bill. see christian and bobby, they carry med at duke, an't these guys are carrying me now. but you're not latent. >> i'd rather be a point guard. >> that's true. that is your role. that's true. >> my analysts have had a good broadcast, whatever the sport might be, then my day's been successful. so by and large, i'm trying to set them up in the right place and sometimes lob it up there so this kid back in 1991 can reach up over the backboard and slam it down for one of the more
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memorable moments in championship history. >> one shining moment it. ooh is probably good that bill couldn't join us because we wouldn't have had enough time. there was a moment jim and grant shared with me about passing the game on, father and son. both learned that love from their dads. jim's son will be sitting across the court. he'll check him out, look every once in a while just to see if he's watching. it's really a family environment and i'll tell you this. i get to travel during the tournament. these are families that travel along the way. they're a family along with tracy wolfson, their sideline reporter. that's what hopefully comes across when they're calling that game is the love of the game and the love of i'm other and the fun they get to have. >> i love the description of the villanova moment. these guys want to do justice to these big games, and that's
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cool. >> yeah, yeah. that passion. you can feel it through the tv screen, i think, when they're talking about it. it's amazing. >> news flash. jim nantz has a 3-year-old? oh, well. okay. all righty. the final four tip-off. auburn starts off followed by virginia and tech. that starts right here ott cbs. it's about eight after the hour. now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. dna testing can help us
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reveal ancestors. someone discovered something closer to home, a shocking secret that changed her world. ♪ daisy it's true ♪ before i get on the move ♪ i grab my special food ♪ today's the daisy i see ♪ the difference in me ♪ today's the daisy for cottage cheese (cottage cheese) ♪ ♪ today's the daisy for cottage cheese (cottage cheese) ♪ ♪ today's the daisy! with a lot of other young couples. then we noticed something...strange. oh, could you, uh, make me a burger? -poof -- you're a burger. [ laughter ] -everyone acts like their parents. -you have a tattoo. -yes. -fun. do you not work? -so, what kind of mower you got, seth? -i don't know. some kid comes over. we pay him to do it. -but it's not all bad. someone even showed us how we can save money by bundling home and auto with progressive. progressive can't protect you from becoming your parents.
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. three years ago on a women, dani shapiro submitted her dna to a site. what she discovered rocked her world. in her latest memoir "inheritance," shapiro studies the essence of identity and what happens when the stories we're told about our very origins turn out to be fiction. >> this is my father's whole immediate family. >> reporter: dani shapiro still has her parents' wedding album from 1957. >> i love this picture. it's an unusual expression on my mother's face. >> reporter: through five memoirs and five novels, the best-selling author has examined
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her family's jewish orthodox history and her own place in it. >> this is my birth announcement, which -- yeah. >> reporter: in 2016 encouraged by her husband michael, she submitted her dna to a genealogical website. >> the results come back, and what do you see? >> the first thing that i see is the breakdown of my ethnicity is surprising. >> reporter: the ancestry.com analysis showed shapiro was only half injuryish. she co -- jewish. she compared it with her half sister. >> that was the nigh my life changed. it showed we were not sisters, we were not half sisters, we were not related. >> what did you think then? >> i thought ancestry.com got it wrong. i made my husband go downstairs and call them. i thought if that's the case,
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then my father is not my father. >> it's tough to write that and still not know the truth about oneself. >> i always wrote about family secrets and to discover at the age of 54 i was the family secret, i was searching for something, and it wasn't until that moment where the lights kind of blinked on that i realized that i had been the secret and that's what i was searching for. >> reporter: if you want to keep a secret, george orwell wrote, you must also hide it from yourself. when shapiro re-examined her past, she realized the evidence had always been all around her. >> i was told every day of my life i didn't look jewish. every day. >> reporter: as a child she was the little blond jewish mod thal kodak featured in a christmas ad. >> yeah. i was almost militant about it. >> reporter: the other clue came from her mother who let slip
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when dani was 25 that she'd been conceived at a fertility clinic in philadelphia. >> i said rwhat was the procedure. she said artificial insemination. >> reporter: she asked if a sperm donor was involved. >> she said absolutely not. it would mean her father wouldn't know you were jewish. >> and you tucked it away. >> i closed door and didn't look at it for decades. >> reporter: until ancestry.com came to a conclusion. >> there was such a sense of betrayal that they kept my identity from me. >> do you understand why they did what they did? >> i had to go inside of what it must have been like to be them in the early 1960s, and there was so much shame surrounding infertility. >> the other thing you wrestled
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with in this circumstance is my father still my father? >> the irony for me is my mother who is my biological parent who i never felt bonded to, my father who it turns out was not my biological parent is someone i have a profound bond with. >> you find your biological father remarkably quickly. >> 36 hours from the time that i made the discovery about my dad until the moment that i was looking at a youtube video of my biological father very shapiro protecting his privacy in "inheritance" but reveals he was a 78-year-old retired doctor who was a sperm donor. >> is it easier to write? >> wroting is my process. it's my church, my faith, my temple. it's how i understand the world. >> reporter: "inheritance" is a
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meditation on identity by a woman whose own sense of self was shaken to the core. >> what did you learn about identity? >> that it comes from so many differential places. a friend of mine early on said to me, when you get to the other side of this, you will be free. >> do you feel free? >> i do. >> you feel free. what are you free of? >> there was always some kind of disconnect within me, something that i felt a little haunted by. >> that feels gone now? >> that really feels gone. >> we create a mythology for ourselves that we carry with us. >> right? so when we're forced to rewrite it, it's very understanding. >> write. but to understand it as mythology is actually pretty liberating. >> one thing that makes it difficult for her is her patients were long deceased. her biological father went on to become a medical equityny tifft.
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this is the big question. should children have the right to know what their yore jans are. >> this so resonates with me, and you know why, you know why. >> yes. >> up next in "the dish," you'll meet ann kim in the twin cities, home of tonight's final four. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." yes. it's way day! it's wayfair's biggest sale of the year, and you're invited! starting april 10, score our lowest prices since black friday on best-selling furniture, decor, and way more. plus, everything ships free on way day. everything? everything. and flash deals launch all day long. hey guys, check out the flash deal i just scored! our biggest sale of the year only lasts 36 hours so shop way day starting april 10 at wayfair.com.
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her creative heritage and applied it in some unexpected ways. >> tell us where we are. >> this is young joni, a combination of my palleatepalat. what i love to eat -- >> it's part dna, part ingenuity. >> this is an example of what i offer at young joni. it's really a reflection of my upbringing. >> tit includes korean barbecue short ribs. >> on the base of it is a scalli scallion. >> and beef topped with salad. through her food, ann kim tells personal stories. >> this is a childhood favorite of mine. my mother used to stick japanese
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sweet potatoes in the fireplace when we were little and we'd take them out and unwrap them and eat them like candy. >> reporter: she immigrated to the united states in the 1970s when she was just 4 years old. >> it was really my grandmother who raised us because my parents worked the graveyard shift. i always wanted to help and stir the pot when it was boiling. it was just a part of my upbringing. >> growing up she said she was a class clown. her parents worked multiple jobs an wanted a better job for her, a doctor or a lawyer. in college she headed to new york city. >> when i got to columbia, my parnls were good with that. but i thought i would start acting and end up in lights. ironically i got my head shots and moved back and got an acting
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job. >> hello, everyone. >> she got tired of the uncertainty of acting when in 2007 her boyfriend now husband lost his job in finance. >> i was looking to make a change. >> he suggested kim open a restaurant. >> i'm the risk taker and my job was basically to push ann over the cliff, and i tend to like jump in and then freak out afterward, you know. >> yeah, yeah. he -- i mean that's what he did for the major of his life is he kind of made bets on the market and things, and me, i played it safe. >> kim's first idea was to open a franchise of the sandwich chain jimmy john's. >> that's what i thought i was going to do until a lawyer that i hired said during this whole meeting you never talked about the excitement of thisgy dwri john's but you some day hoped to
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open up an intimate family-like restaurant and in good faith i can't do this for you. you should consider doing your own thing. >> kim missed new york pizza and wanted to bring it to minneapolis. she began reading books on baking and read up on a world champion. after they walked their dog lola by an empty convenience store in 2009, they knew where they would open their first restaurant. they emptied their savings and maxed out their credit cards to open pizzeria lola. >> this is the only restaurant we actually worked in, were scheduled, you know, on the line. >> conrad was a host, believe it or not. yeah. >> i promoted myself out of that job very quickly. when we opened, it was pretty much all hands on deck, and ann made pretty much every pizza. >> yeah. it was a lot of work, a lot of
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hours, but it was a lot of fun. >> a little more than two years later they opened hello pizza, a new york style slice shop like kim remembered from college. but their most ambitious job is young joni named after each of their mothers. it includes a back bar speak easy modeled after one in north dakota. >> to me i left one stage, the theater stage for another stage. >> kim the aspiring actress turned professional chef was recently named a semifinalist for the james beard awards after being a finalist one year ago. >> they call it the oscars of food, so if i wunl going to get the oscar on the stauj or behind the screen, i was going to hopefully get it somehow. all of those things are really, really nice and it's an honor, but it's about the people that fill the seats and love what we do. >> now i'm craving ann kim's
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pizza. we don't get that, but we do get tea with a twist. actually healthy booze and it's coming up on "cbs this morning." saturday. long before the accolades starting rolling in for ashley mcbryde, there were countless days and nights writing music with friends, making truth rhyme, and hoping it would connect. >> it's kind of our rule, don't write anything down until somebody cries. we like to dive deep. >> it was that emotional connection to the music that took her from small town arkansas all the way to nashville. the sound and look so different, the industry first tried to turn her into someone else. >> it started with a photo
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shoot. this person looks at me and says i need you to start running twice a day. >> running. >> i wouldn't run if a bear chased me. it was i need you to lose 10, 20, 30 if you can. i'm still trying to lose 10, 20, 30 every ore day like every other woman in the world. >> she took the criticism and turned it into a country music hit. "we're all going nowhere," mcbryde's song earned her a grammy nomination. ♪ >> mcbryde's favorite song about an honest maen who always carried his bible and his pistol may also be her most personal. >> people get upset when we do bible and a .44 and they crime. i do two things. number one, i'm so sorry.
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number two, i'm so happy you have somebody to simone, i leave the van gogh. to harrison, the wine collection. to craig, this rock. the redwoods to the redheads. the rainbows to the proud. i leave these things to my heirs, all 39 million of you, on one condition. that you do everything in your power to preserve and protect them. with love, california.
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alcohol consumption in the u.s. is changing. data shows overall consumption dropped 0.8%. beer was hardest hit, down 1.5%. and growth in wine and spirits slowed compared to the year before. >> the changes coincide with an emerging market that some experts have called mindful drinking. alcohol products that claim promotion of health and a healthier lifestyle. don dahler got the lovely assignment of looking at this. i want to hear about this. good morning.
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>> i'll tell you all about it. americans used to drink a lot more alcohol. in colonial times they averaged seven gallons a year and now we're down to two gallons. the types have changed from cocktails to mass produced beer to california wines to single malt scotch to craft beers now, but for the future of alcohol, some are looking to the past. it looks like a brewery. it smells like a brewery. actually it is a brewery. but this isn't beer. it's hard come bu cha. an ancient fermented tea that has exploded in popularity. >> how's business? >> can't make enough. >> really. >> yeah. >> al is the co-founder of booch craft. one of several breweries in southern california that have entered the better for you
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market and are having a hard time keeping up with demand. his company is already expanding with 20 gleaming new stainless steel tanks with a million gallons a year. >> are you thinking they're looking for something traditional? >> they want something more refreshing, not weighing them down, and tasty. >> he's responsible for coming up with these one-of-a-kind flavors. >> is it hit and miss? >> it's always hit and miss. >> they pride themselves on never seen before-flavor combinations used only fresh pressed fruit, herbs, and spices. >> what do we have here? >> apple on jasmine. >> that's good. >> grateful, hibiscus, heather. >> ginger. >> you can smell the ginger. >> wow, i have never tasted
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anything like that. >> tumeric tangerine ginger. >> tumeric tangerine ginger. >> it's got the ginger punchtangerine. >> that's a little bite to it. >> hard kombucha is part of the trend called mindful drinking. it includes the hard seltzers, kreidcr side ciderss and kombucha. >> they've seen bigger companying, either their own products or investing in companies that have hard kombuchas. there's definitely runway for growth. >> despite the potential for growth or because of it many of these kombucha moguls are determine to run their
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businesses dinnerly, ethically, they say, insisting on using only natural grenls and maintaining quality. >> you're onto something here and you're going try to stay with the ethics that started this whole thing. >> yeah. you can stay with ethics as long as you have the right customer base. >> they offer over a dozen flavors on tap. >> how big is this going to be? >> trends aren't built overnight but i think in the next five to ten years poo em are going to see what i call functional alcohol. i think that's going to be a third of the section when you walk to a beer wall. >> if you don't see it, h1n1er says you soon will. >> five years in the future, i hope we're expanded throughout the country. >> you really think that's a possibility. >> definitely. >> you vnl been drinking. >> not yet.
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i don't think it's a possibility. i think it's a certainty. >> there's something i want to say here but thoelk wanted to go straight to the test. >> here's my question. will you have a hangover when you wake up in the morning. >> they say you won't. the fda says you can't make that claim. but they say this has a lot of water in it. if you hydrate, you have a less of a chance of having a hangover. also there are natural ingredients, no sulfites like in wine. >> i'm trying the cucumber mojito. >> it's in between a club soda and something else. >> while we konl to sample, you can take a look at the weather for your weekend. ckonl to samplu can take a look at the weather for your weekend. okonl to sampl you can take a look at the weather for your weekend. nkonl you can take a look at the weather for your weekend. konl t you can take a look at the weather for your weekend. konl t can take a look at the weather for your weekend.
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>> it's growing on me. a rising young musician is in good company. up next on "saturday sessions" stan fender won the same aword as others. he says his chance for stardom are just as bright. we'll meet him and hear him perform next on "cbs this morning: saturday." now, full coverage super stay foundation... from maybelline new york. with full coverage pigments...
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this morning in our "saturday sessions," a singer/songwriter with a growing reputation on both sides of the atlantic. sam fenldser just won an award and this this country he's playing in sold out shows. we'll hear from him in a moment. first i had a chance to sit down with fender here in new york. growing up in a small new england town sam fender was given some advice. ♪ for the 24-year-old singer/songwriter, music has become an escape. >> for the last six months things have really flipped on its head. >> he won a british prize, the same one that launched the
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careers of adele, florence and the machine, and stan smith. >> that's a pretty big deal. >> yeah. yeah. >> fender who grew up in a seaside town near new castle was influenced by an american rocker who also has working-class roots, bruce springsteen. ♪ i was born in the usa i was born in the usa ♪ >> i hear a lot of springsteen in your music. >> yeah. yeah. i love the guy. >> he was a teenager when his older brother introduced him to "born to run." >> it changed my world. the thing about springsteen, he was writing about new jersey and i wrote about my towns, it's
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about the working class. >> he likes bruce springsteen and bob dylan and what's happening in the world. >> they all have something to say. >> it's important to have something to say. >> do you have something to say? >> when i've got something to say. >> with dead boys, he did. >> i lost a friend to suicide like a year ago, and it was -- i wrote as a reaction to that. i read up on it, and it's the biggest killer of men under the age of 45, more than cancer and car accidents. so that was like staggering for me. >> were you scared of putting that in a song? >> i was utterly terrified, and i wasn't even sure about releasing it because it's very close to home. ♪
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>> but the song struck a chord and started a conversation. the video has been viewed more than a million times. >> the thing is i don't write like i'm an expert. i write as an early twenties kid who doesn't know what the hell is going on. >> when you do, let me know. >> you'll hear a performance of dead boys in just a bit, but first with his new single, here is sam fender with hypersonic missiles. ♪ dutch kids huff balloons in the parking lot the golden arches illuminate the business park ♪ ♪ i eat myself to death
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feed the corporate machine ♪ ♪ i watch the movies, recite every line and scene god bless america and all of its allies ♪ ♪ i'm not the first to live with wool over my eyes ♪ ♪ i'm so blissny unaware of everything kids in gaza are bombed, and i'm just out of it ♪ ♪ the tensions of the world are rising higher snl we're probably due another war with all this eyre ♪ ♪ i'm not smart enough to change a thing i've no answers, only questions, don't you ask a thing ♪ ♪ oh, silver tongue suits and and cartoons, they rule my world ♪ ♪ singing, it's a high time for hypersonic missiles ♪ ♪ and when the bombs drop,
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darling, can you say that you've lived your life? ♪ ♪ oh this is a high time for hypersonic missiles ♪ ♪ the cities lie like tumors all across the krorld a cancer eating mankind hitting it on blind-side ♪ ♪ they say i'm a nile list, because i can't see any decent rhyme or reason for the life of you and me ♪ ♪ but i believe in what i'm feeling and i'm falling for you ♪ ♪ this would is gonna end, but till then, i'll give you everything i have i'll give you everything i have ♪ ♪
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♪ oh, o', oh, oh oh, oh, oh, oh oh, oh, oh, oh oh, oh, oh, oh oh, oh, oh, oh ♪ ♪ oh, silver tongue suits and cartoons they rule my world singing, it's a high time for hypersonic missiles ♪ ♪ when the bombs drop, darling can you say that you've lived your life ♪ ♪ oh, this is a high time for hypersonic missiles ♪ ♪ then you'll do the same, only the names change, 00 you can join their club if you're born into money ♪ ♪ it's a high time for
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hypersonic missiles ♪ ♪ oh, this is a high time for hypersonic missiles ♪ ♪ oh, this is a high time for hypersonic missiles ♪ ♪ oh, this is a high time for hypersonic missiles ♪ >> don't go away. we'll be right back with more music from sam fender. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> announcer: "saturday sessions" are sponsored by blue buffalo. you love your pets like family, so feed them like family with blue. i'm working to keep the fire going
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but they come back around at a breakneck speed ♪ ♪ my world spins so fast the centrifugal force keep me stuck in the middle ♪ ♪ we close our eyes learn our pain nobody ever could explain all the dead boys in our hometown ♪ ♪ we close our eyes learn our pain nobody ever could explain all the dead boys in our hometown all the dead boys in our hometown ♪ ♪ ♪ we all tussle with the black dog some out loud and some in si
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silence everybody round here just drinks because that's our culture ♪ ♪ we close our eyes learn our pain nobody ever could explain all the dead boys in our hometown ♪ ♪ we close our eyes learn our pain nobody ever could explain all the dead boys in our hometown all the dead boys in our hometown ♪ come on! ♪
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♪ we close our eyes learn our pain nobody ever could explain all the dead boys in our hometown ♪ ♪ we close your eyes learn our pain nobody ever could explain all the dead boys in our hometown ♪ ♪ all the dead boys in our hometown all the dead boys in our hometown ♪ ♪ all the dead boys in our hometown all the dead boys in our hometown ♪ ♪ all the dead boys in our hometown all the dead boys in our hometown ♪ ♪
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♪ >> for those of you still with us, we have more music from sam fender. >> this is "play god." ♪ you were cracking all your fingers with your eyes fixed to the floor sound it echoed down the street but the mon meant you hear ♪ ♪ man is screaming through a megaphone get your hands off the middle east ♪ ♪ every world would herd the cynical every word would cut your teeth ♪ ♪ and he will play god and he will play god ♪
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♪ it's all the same down in the capital all the suits and cladded feet sewer rats will shower the underground in a race to make ends meet ♪ ♪ and he will play god and he will play god ♪ ♪ ♪ am i mistaken or are we breaking under weight from the long time that he played god ♪ ♪ am i mistaken or are we breaking under weight from the long time that he played god ♪
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live from the cbs bay area studios, this is kpix 5 news. >> now on kpix 5 news this morning, the chp gives the all clear after a bomb scare shuts down the benicia bridge for several hours. and more falling concrete on the richmond san rafael bridge. the push for a solution to distracted driving. let's get starts this morning with our forecast. >> we had already started
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