tv CBS This Morning CBS April 20, 2019 4:00am-6:00am PDT
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captioning funded by cbs good mosh morning. it's april 20th, 2019. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." a deadly holiday storm shuts down travel and leaves a trail of damage across parts of the country. we'll have the latest on the dangerous conditions. fallout from the mueller investigation. a subpoena is out for the full unredacted report as are new calls for impeachment proceedings. the president is now calling for
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revenge. life in prison for your a life of torture. a california couple is abused of abusing and confining their children inside a house of horrors. for the first time hear what the children say about their parents' actions. and swinging for the fences. the oakland a's are in market for a new stadium, and as part of a plan to build a new ballpark, the team is making quite the offer. we'll show you how it may get the team and some of their fan as new home. but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. gosh. >> that tornado is like here. >> oh, my gosh. >> the next thing i knew, there was a loud boom. sounded like the roof blew off literally. >> you can see the line of storms extends from pittsburgh all the way down to miami. >> he was like a "the wizard of oz." he was behind the screen
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somewhere and they were doing all the dirty work. more sharp reaction from the mueller report. for the first time democrats are calling for impeachments. >> this is not something i want do. that's not the point. it's a point of principle. >> protesters are calling for the dismissal of two police officers who shot an unarmed black couple. >> 25 years for the parents who kept their kids starving and in deplorable conditions. >> two of the kids spoke but did not want to be shown. >> my parents took my whole life from me, but now i'm taking my life back. >> notre dame officials say it may have been electrical. >> all that -- >> the easter bunny is coming to town and he's got a new way to get around. >> he's got two wheels and a load of easter eggs. >> walk-off winner!
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>> -- and all that matters -- [ laughter ] [ cheers and applause ] >> -- on "cbs this morning: saturda saturday". >> one more shot, one more shot. >> bam. from half court. good for $20,000. you're thinking, oh, that's great, right? well, another fan steps up. no way! >> that's what i'm talking about! welcome to the easter weekend, everyone. very expensive night for the oklahoma city franchise. $20,000 a shot they won. >> every time. >> both times. >> i thought that was a million-dollar shot.
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i'll take $20,000. >> can i go back to whipped cream? there's something about that when you can turn that can upside down and go for it. >> i want to be with the easter bunny. i like that. coming up this morning we're going to take you to switzerland where in the fresh alpine air they're working on an ambitious plan to help with the emissions problem. how they're changing the climate and reversing it. also, the star architect. he was loathed as well as loved. we'll explore the complicated legacy of this controversial figure whose work still surrounds us. and have you ever wanted to get away, i mean really get away. >> look at that. >> turns out there's an opening. a lot of people were interested in running this historic lighthouse and the bed and breakfast alongside it. we're going to show you the
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departing managers and the benefits of living where they do. >> that's very cool. we begin this morning with deadly and dangerous weather for millions of americans this holiday weekend. powerful storms producing heavy wind and damaging winds. a tornado was confirmed nereston, virginia, last night. thousands are without power as several towns try to recover from devastating weather. in southwestern pennsylvania a building partially collapsed last night in franklyn county after severe winds an a possible tornado struck. there are no reports of injuries. kenneth craig has more this morning. good morning. >> reporter: good morning to you, anthony. i can tell you there are a lot of frustrated passengers out here this morning as you can imagine, including this family was headed to florida until their flight was canceled just this morning. more than 1,700 flights
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nationwide were canceled yesterday, and now many of those passengers are scrambling to find alternatives on a business holiday weekend. residents in virginia are cleaning up this morning after a tornado touched down last night causing a tree to fall through a home. nobody was hurt. steve works for the national weather. sh shakina johnson was running errands when she got a call that a tree fell on her building. it forced people to find about a new home for the night. >> the first question was was everybody safe and all right. luckily the kids weren't there because of the holidays. >> reporter: rescue crews fanned out in black mountain after
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severe weather fanned for the day. severe weather for a second week in a row. tornadoes, high winds, and pounding rains are destroying homes and leaving some communities without power. the storm system is being blamed for at least five deaths since thursday, including an 8-year-old girl who was killed when a tree fell on a florida home friday morning. but a woman in morton, mississippi, managed to survive, even as a twister destroyed her home. this hous >> this house behind us is totally destroyed with the exception of the closet she was in, which is really a miracle. >> reporter: the good news in all of this is that many of the flight delays and cancellations we were seeing just last night have died down significantly, but the day is young, and most of the northeast, dana, is under a flash flood warning. certainly we're not in the clear yet. >> and on a holiday weekend. thank you, kenneth. we appreciate that.
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for more we turn to meteorologist jeff berardelli. good morning to you. >> good morning to you. we've had 34 reports of tornadoes and an immense amount of rain in the smoky mountains. 5 to 10 inches and devastating floods in that area. now i want to show you what's happening right now. things are starting to get a little better in most of the country, but still a lot of big storms up and down the eastern seaboard. delaware, maryland, new york city. it's going to be a stormy morning. check your flights. there will be several flight delays this morning. that rain will be moving further north as the day goes on. here we are right now basically. you can see these heavy bands of storms up through new jersey and connecticut. that's going to move through parts of boston as we head in to boston and the evening hours. then later tonight and tomorrow, things sweep out. there's still a chance of a few leftover showers in the
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northeast. look at how hot it is in minneapolis. 84 with bright sunshine. >> i like that. 84 degrees. well, special counsel robert mueller's 484-page report on his investigation into the 2016 trump campaign continues to make waves. now just two days after a redacted version was released. mueller concluded that while the president did not break any laws, he did try to stop or influence the investigation. members of congress are calling on mueller to testify under oath on capitol hill, and the first calls for impeachment proceedings are coming from some of the democrats running for president in 2020. >> president trump made clear his feelings about the mueller report and some of his former staffers on friday. weijia jiang is traveling with the president. she's in west palm beach this morning. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, everybody. president trump is spenldsing the weekend with friends and
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family in florida. but the chaos of the mueller report has certainly followed him here, and he is on the defensive again with dem cats demanding to see an unredacted copy of the report and some political rivals calling for his impeachment. the president tweeted his summary of the redacted mueller report in all caps. trump has been totally vindicated. he also lashed out over some of the statements about him in it calling them total b.s. and only given to make the other person to look good or me to look bad. president trump's tone was much softer when the report was first released. >> i'm having a good day too. it's called no collusion, no obstruction. >> reporter: mr. trump is right that special counsel robert mueller found no collusion with russian officials in the 2016 presidential election. but on obstruction mueller wrote, while this report does not conclude that the president committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.
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cbs news legal analyst jonathan turley said mueller should have made a definitive ruling after ten events that the president obstructed justice. >> it comes down to why were the acts committed. was this a case of corrupt intent or just the type of visceral reactions we've seen from president trump in various areas. >> reporter: attorney general william barr ultimately determined there was no obstruction. mueller hinted congress should draw a conclusion, though barr offered a contradictory interpretation. >> special counsel mueller did not indicate he was leaving the decision to congress. >> reporter: on friday congressman jerry nadler released a subpoena ordering congress to release the unredacted complete version of the report, but many democrats are hesitant to call for impeachment. >> impeachment shouldn't be a
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fetish for anybody. that would be ridiculous. but it should. n't be a taboo either. it's part of the constitution. it's a part of a defense for the people in congress. >> reporter: the campaign, though, is a very different venue and massachusetts senator elizabeth warren became the first presidential candidate to bring up impeaching the president, tweeting yesterday, the severity of the president econ duct as outlined in the report means the house should initiate impeachment proceedings. anthony? >> weijia, thanks. here to discuss the political fallout is anita kumar. good morning. >> good morning. >> we've got jerry nadler, the head of the house judiciary committee subpoenaing the full report, indicating he might want to hold extensive hearings on all of this. where is exactly are we going. >> well, it's not over.
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obviously the democrats want a full report. they've been saying that from the beginning and they're going to work to try to get to. to get that, they're going to have to go to court to try to get the judge to allow them to have all of the report. the pieces they didn't get were where the grand jury was talking about things. they could go to court and try to do that. >> this obviously is falling on party lines as we're seeing the reactions to it. what about -- i feel like we always go to the trump base. nothing seems to make a difference. just the idea he didn't commit a crime, but he's not exonerated. any impact when you go to 2020? >> not that i've seen at all. what i've seen, the talking points and what they're saying, he didn't do it. so it vindicates him in that he's been saying for two years people are out to get me, the media's out to get me, the deep states are out to get me, and this just proves it.
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he's saying, i was right, for two years they've wasted a all this time and money. they say there was no underlying crime. so he tried to do what. >> this is the man we know to be -- >> right. and remember when democrats pushed back and continued keeping this going for two years, he'll say the democrats are overreaching, and they'll think they look good, the way they want to. >> to dana's point in texturalizing in terms of history how is this different than when richard nixon did in the '70s and bill clinton did in the '90s? >> well, one way, we can see a lot more. you're right. people compare it to what was done in the past. the president keeps going back to if there's no underlying crime, how could i have committed obstruction. you know, because bob mueller didn't go there, it's a question of what we do next. now, you'll see what congress
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says. congress says, now it's in our court. >> it leads to the question. there are division already on whether they should seiche impeachment or not. how big a fight is there going to be within the democratic party, do you see? >> i think we're already seeing that. you saw house majority leader steny hoyer say no impeachment and then he walked that back because he got a lot of criticism from his party. then you see elizabeth warren saying, let's look at that. you see more progressives saying we have to look at impeachment. >> with the republican senate and no real hope ultimately, what's the cost for democrats if they try to go this route. >> exactly. that's why nancy pelosi says we can't do that unless we have support of the republicans. what's the point. they're afraid of the backlash when they're up in 2020. not the presidential race, but their race. if all they've done is go after donald trump and done nothing else, it's going hurt them.
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>> we'll hear from nancy pelosi, obviously out of the country and she said she didn't want to speak on it. tomorrow morning on "face the nation" on cbs, bob schieffer is guest hosting for margaret brennan. his guests will include elijah cummings and mike lee. demonstrators took to the streets in camden last night over the shooting of an unarmed couple. the woman in the passenger's seat was injured when an officer shot her. they have been placed on administrative leave. police are planning to release body cam video of the shooting next week. the california couple who kept their children shackled and hungry for years have started serving their sentence of 25 years to life in prison. it follows an emotional court
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hearing friday where they were not only criticized by the judge but by their own children. john blackstone was in the courtroom. >> i'm sorry for everything. >> reporter: as louise and david turpin faced sentencing, they had to face several of their children, kids who they tortured, chained, and held captive for years. >> i'm a fighter. i'm strong. >> reporter: cameras were not allowed to show their faces, but their voices rang loud and clear and defiant. >> my parents took my whole life from me, but now i'm taking my life back. >> reporter: the children ranging in age from 2 to 29 had been held for years in a filthy california home described as a house of horror where they were sometimes barely fed and often chained to beds. police were tipped off only after one of the teens managed to escape and called 911. >> we live in filth and sometimes i wake up and can't breathe because of how dirty the house is. >> i cannot describe in words
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what we went through growing up. sometimes i still have nightmares of things that have happened such as my siblings being chained up or getting beaten. >> reporter: but some also spoke of forgiveness. >> i believe with all my heart that our parents tried our best to raise all 13 of us. >> reporter: since being rescued from their home, the children have been seizing opportunities they never had before. >> in june of last year, i learned how to ride a bike. i'm getting a bachelor's zree in software engineering. >> reporter: the turpins both pleaded guilt in february. the judge began reading their sentences count after count. in imposing the sentence the judge told the turpins their acts were selfish and cruel.
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he said if they ended up thriving it was not because of you both but in spite of you both. for "cbs this morning: saturday," john blackstone, san francisco. >> so true, the words by the judge. >> such a long road by the kids. i cannot imagine what they went through. so horrific. >> i want to peel back the minds of these two individuals. was it that there were too many children? why couldn't you care for these kids. >> not even care for them. what you did for them, the inhumane treatment. when you heard the one child talking about forgive ps, that's remarkable. >> that's a huge step for them. time to show you some of the other stories making news this morning. "the hill" says a new government report shows millions of americans have lost their health insurance since 2016. the report estimates nearly 29 million americans do not have health insurance. the noncongressional department budget office atriblts it to a rise in premiums and growing health care coverage.
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the report saw significant declines to those purchasing on an individual market outside the federal and obamacare plans. the 5-year-old boy who was thrown off of a balcony at mall of america last week is showing signs of recovery. new test results have been positive, though the boy remains in intensive care with, quote, a long road ahead. the man charged with throwing the boy is facing a charge of attempted premeditated murder. a gofundme account has already has raised more than $900,000 to cover the boy's medical bills. the new york "daily news" reports clair bros.man, an heir has pleaded guilty. bronzeman pleaded guilty on
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friday to concealing an undocumented immigrant for financial gain and identity fraud. she faces up to 20 years in prison and nearly $6 million in fines when she's sentenced in july. the "philadelphia inquirer" reports the philadelphia flyer has covered up the statue of kate smith and will no longer play her song. she became a good luck charm of sorts for the flyers. she sang "god bless america" before the game when they won their stanley cup in 1974. the team unveiled a statue of her outside of their arena in 1987. earlier this week the yankees announced they would no longer use kate smith's song during their home games. and there be a new button you can use. the company says the test is aimed at letting viewers view
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content that interests them and not necessarily to prepare the program or choose it for them. netflix plans to show the top ten list. >> they're going to play your episodes out of order? i'm not sure i want to go 2, 7, 5. it's about 22 after the hour. here's a look at the weather for your weekend. . it was the day the term "school massacre" entered the american lexicon. on the 20th anniversary of the massacre at columbine high school, we'll reflect on the
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attack with a teacher who was on the job then and how he's there now. how he says classroom life has changed forever. plus holy week continues at st. peter's basilica in rome, but not at another of the catholic world's great buildings. we'll get an update on the efforts to rebuild notre dame cathedral including one promising development. later, a baseball team is planning a new home, but not just for players and fans. how a stadium project could also create housing for thousands. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." dog barking)
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when you first came in, i'm looking at your neck saying are you okay, is it okay? >> it is. i have tape on support it for about a month. >> after you shared your story with us that a viewer had pointed this out to you, i looked at my neck to see if i noticed things. >> i'm so grateful to the person. this person saved my life. >> what did you say? >> we talked. the doctor was very straightforward. he said the nerves that power your vocal cords rest on top of your thyroid and we have to
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manipulate it to move it. he was very forthcoming and i was very fearful. >> when you first came out, did you say, hello, do i have a view. >> i wanted to. but i'm such a rule followers. i wanted to wait for them to say something first. and then i thought, thank you, lord. >> it was so sweet after your surgery when you posted that photo of your husband carl after 31 years. was he nervous during your surgery? >> he was because we had been advised that it would be about a three-hour procedure, and then an extra half hour, extra hour, hour and half. it was 4 1/2 hours that you get the text from the hospital it with us over. they told me later, he said later, yeah, i was thinking what do we tell the kids, what do i do about arrangements. >> it's your loved one's natural reaction. it's much harder on the family members. you're out cold. you don't know anything. it's very hard for the family.
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at the disneyland resort a full moon over the vigil in memory of the victims of the columbine high school massacre, what many consider america's first mass school shooting that took place in littleton, colorado, in 1999, 20 years ago today. the attack by two seniors killed 12 sturmts and a teacher and may have set the establish for the school shootings that haunt us to this day. barry petersen is in littleton this morning. barry? >> reporter: good morning, anthony. this is the columbine memorial to the 12 students and teacher killed that day.
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each student has a plaque with something personal. here's daniel mauser. this is a place where people come to remember. but for one man who knew all these people and friends and students and who survived that day, there's no way to forget. kiki was in his first year teaching history and english at columbine. >> i can see the silhouette of a gunman holding a long rifle, but i can also hear gunfire. >> reporter: he's still teaching at columbine, and when you talk to him, you wonder, was it 20 years ago or just yesterday. you were there. 20 years, and yet there's still pain in your voice. >> trauma has memory and we can feel it. >> reporter: students still walk those same halls learning english and math and these days how to survive a shooting.
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>> the drills aren't old. >> reporter: still it does not ease kiki's past. >> what was left after all of those years at columbine. >> to try and heal, whatever that looks like. there's always the push to move forward, which drives me crazy. the largest group is that nonphysically wounded traumatized population. and then also the families that get lost in that as well. >> reporter: after the murders at sandy hook, kiki was asked to come and share his insights and memories. >> the faces and their eyes, was so difficult. >> when you spoke with those people and you were on the other side or the mending part of it, did that help. >> yes, yes.
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i think it's -- it's a really important part of that healing to have that opportunity to meet with somebody or talk to somebody who could relate to your experience. >> reporter: steve see gel agrees. he was a victim's advocate for the denver district attorney. >> what are they suffering? >> they're going through a time were their wounds have been ripped open. >> it's flooding back. >> it's flooding back in. >> kiki he's memories include the newspaper from the day off. >> i saw scenes like this, but i didn't know what it was going to be, you know, how big it was, you know, how life-changing it could be. >> but i really kind of wonder if we should always keep this going on, to remember what happened and what the lessons were. >> we really need to keep the dialogue. >> and the dialogue means the memories. >> well, yeah, the memories. that's part of it. it's a package deal when it comes down to, you know, these
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mass shootings, school shootings, inevitably you're going to be dealing with that. and it's part of what we have to deal with until something changes. >> there will be a remembrance service here later this afternoon that will draw huge crowds. students, survivor, family members. and i'm sure like kiki, many of them will also be wondering how many more of these before something changes. michelle? >> all right, barry. i tell you. it is -- no questions can answer the why. >> yeah. in all the stories that i've seen this week, what's so powerful is how touched everybody still is. >> everybody. >> and what kiki said, trauma has memory is so spot on. >> and even that idea you're not on the other side of it.
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you're still mending. and think about it. 20 years later, you're still mending on the other side. >> i was the first from cbs at newtown, and i'll never forget the first moments of looking at my phone and seeing 20 chirp dead after thinking it may have been just a fight. i mean it just is -- it stays with you. it stays with you. >> all right. we have much more news for you ahead, but first let's get a check now of the forecast for your weekend. p hope rises from the ashes. coming up, a promising development amid the devastating fire that swept through notre dame cathedral. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." (door bell rings) it's open!
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pope francis presided over good friday services at st. peter's in rome. it's the most solemn day on the catholic calendar. in paris, a spokesman for the fire department says notre dame is now stable after the massive fire that all but gutted the cathedral. roxana saberi is in paris and joins us with more. roxana, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the paris prosecutor's office is urging people who are donating money to rebuild notre dame is
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saying to beware of scams. the donations keep pouring in as investigators continue to search for what sparked the fire. in the days after flames devoured the roof of notre dame cathedral, leaving a hole where its spire once stood, firefighters raced to cool down the walls so they wouldn't also crumble. now they say that danger has passed, so investigators can access more of the site. >> and then the fire alarm just rang. >> reporter: this notre dame spokesman says it could take weeks to learn what caused the fire, but he doesn't think it's linked to renovations taking place when the blaze broke out. >> there were too many protections on these renovations. >> reporter: with these scenes resonate beyond france's borders, people around the world have pledged more than $1 billion to rebuild notre dame. >> we don't know if it's enough or not. >> really. >> you can say it's crazy to have a billion euros.
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but we don't know. it could cost 2 or 3 billion. >> reporter: rebuilding could take years which means ceremonies like this good friday procession yesterday that usually take place inside the cathedral will have to take place in its shadows. the archbishop of paris told worshipper commemorating the picture of jesus christ, france is crying and the world is crying with us. the easter mass that was to be held at notre dame mass also been moved. it's set to take place at a church a short walk from here. >> a billion euros. >> a lot. well, it's a state-of-the-art stadium, and it could transform one city's waterfront, but that's just one potential benefit from this ambitious project that could be a big hit for people in need of
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he's not going to get it. >> that's a high light from last night's game of the oakland athletics and the toronto blue jays. they have a 7-0 record at the coliseum. they've played at the coliseum since moving to oakland 50 years ago, but the a's are searching for a new place to play and it could ease one of oakland's biggest problems. at bat since 1901, the oakland athletics have called the east bay home for half a century. they've been sporting a new age attitude with four playoff appearances in the last seven years and a bona fide numbers
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crunching approach in a game where stats mean everything as showcased in the 2011 film "money ball." if we try to play like the yankees in here, we'll lose to the yankees out there. >> it's a great way to connect with the fans. >> reporter: now the president dash kavle is pledging a new deal, a brand-new stadium that wouldn't cost taxpayers a dime. >> we're committed to fully financing the ballpark. it's been a guiding principle and key aspect from the beginning. >> reporter: it's so out of the box, he's betting city hall won't pass up the bargain. the a's want to foot the bill for a splashy new ballpark and also build 6,000 new housing unit in oakland with the promise that many would be affordable. how do you get up to speed when you haven't been a housing developer? >> it's a sports team, but it's bigger than baseball. we want to make sure our project
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brings everything to the community, a new neighborhood, housing, affordable housing that makes sense for our community, and any big project is going to include aspects. >> reporter: mayor libby schaaf is more than eyeing the project. she's nearly sold. >> housing is a number one need in the bay area right now. housing at every income level, but especially affordable housing for our work force. >> just how affordable is affordable? >> these are things that will be worked out along the way. >> give me a ballpark. >> you know, i think somewhere between 25% and 45% would be appropriate for a development like this. >> reporter: it's an attempt to ease what's dubbed the silicon valley effect, a housing crisis in san francisco experienced a decade ago that's crept across the bay. median home prices in the metro area have more than doubled in the last ten years to nearly
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$763,000. rents are up 83% during that same time. last year the average rent in oakland tau lanland topped $2,6. that's more expensive than washington, d.c., seattle, and san diego. >> do you see this as unprecedent territory? >> i think of it as a new way to look at ballpark development. and i think it's great. oakland has been on the edge of it. >> they've been looking for a new home for decades, but coliseum is baseball's fifth oldest stadium and it's been plagued with structural problems. >> we need a new home to invest in our players, win more championships and have success on and off the field. we've had three sites but this is the most iconic, a waterfront locatio. >> reporter: he's looking at
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where to build. an industrial water territory near a retail district in jack london square. the team wants to redevelop the site where they current pli play, building a mixed use neighborhood and transforming the play field into a park. so do you see this as a model for what stadiums and teams should be doing in the future? >> we've spent almost a year doing outreach, doing 24 workshops. we've listened to the community. >> reporter: ester goolsbee is a member of oakland united, one of the local groups who's taken part in dozens of community workshops hosted by the a's. oakland united believes any development by d a's should result in a community benefits agreement that would provide jobs for local residents, affordable housing, and investments in community services. >> if the oak land a's are truly rooted in oakland, then a strong
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community benefits agreement, no matter east or west oakland would happen. >> reporter: >> they're not some fly-by-night developer who's going to build something, see, an get out of town. they know their brand depends on community good will. >> reporter: but their site is far from a home run. if the plan goes forward, it would need an extensive environmental cleanup, and it's located about a mile from the nearest mass transit station. the team is proposing a gondola to ferry fans from downtown oakland and over an interstate hee way to the new ballpark, but so far there's been no word on how this part of the plan will be funded. if you do this and you do it right, what are the benefits. >> well, more world championships hopefully a key benefit. >> let's forget about the a's for a minute here. let's talk about what this could mean for oakland. >> what it means for oakland is jobs, economic development, over
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$3 billion from economic stimulus from from this project alone, 5,000 new jobs, a huge investment for me. >> ballpark it for me. >> ballpark, 2023. we're opening it. it's going to be fantastic. >> he said it right there. 2023 is the time they want to open. he's done this with the soccer team that he owns and still a lot of hurdles here. such a lot of hurdles. >> so ambitious, and it's so nice to see a team want to do this privately and help the community. >> it's the only way to do it in california. those california lawmakers and mayors, they're just not having anything but. >> they've done it before. the man in black gets a monumental honor. straight ahead, find out where a statue of legend johnny cash is going to stand and who it's going to replace. if you're heading out the door, don't forget to set your
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dvr to record "cbs this morning: saturday." coming up, capturing carbon right out of the air and how climate change is showing promise. plus, he's the driving force behind all the restaurants in a very trendy new hotel. meet john frazier on "the dish," and new music from susto in our "saturday sessions." you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." oh! oh! oh! ♪ ozempic®! ♪ (announcer) people with type 2 diabetes are excited about the potential of once-weekly ozempic®. in a study with ozempic®, a majority of adults lowered their blood sugar and reached an a1c of less than seven and maintained it. oh! under seven? and you may lose weight. in the same one-year study, adults lost on average up to 12 pounds. oh! up to 12 pounds? a two-year study showed that ozempic® does not increase the risk of major cardiovascular events like heart attack, stroke, or death. oh! no increased risk? ♪ oh, oh, oh, ozempic®! ♪ ozempic® should not be the first medicine for treating diabetes,
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>> reporter: cash grew up in arkansas and grew up in dice. his statue will be joined ed ey his statue will be joined ed y by daisy bates. cash and bates will replace two figures. eliye. yoez and j.p. clark who reportedly held segregationist views. arkansas still has to raise funds for the statues. after the old fustatues are removed, others will be replaced including robert lee and the confederate from mississippi. >> the state feels it is time now for those to go. >> a lot of statue going. we've got the kate smith statue
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in philadelphia may be coming down. >> there's a running theme. >> people wonder if you should talk about the history or just remove them. >> he was an icon himself. coming up, philip johnson on "cbs this morning: saturday." i want to talk about the numbers because this was stunning to me. i touched on title ix. when it was enacted in 1972, 90% of the coaches of female basketball teams were women. now it's down to 41%. i thought title ix was supposed to guarantee equality in education and sports. whoo i is the number decreasing? >> that was the idea. when it came out, it took 30 years for us to get to any kind of equality. i'm not sure we're still there. what happened is when we got to the point in the '90sing they started paying more. that's when the men came in. that's when the men came in. here's an opportunity on the women's side to make some money. >> we looked at the u.s. women's
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national soccer team. we've covered that for the first time now. all of them are going to sue for equal pay. are we the transformational moment, do you think, with women in sports? >> we really hope so. we hoped with villaging king would have. maybe we'll see somebody from the wnba. >> what needs to be done? >> first it starts with hiring women. if girls aren't looking up to see these role models, what are they going to learn and how are they going to believe it, and if we can't believe it, how do we change it. >> pete buttigieg is your mayor. what do you think about him. >> i think he's awesome. i was down there for his announcement on sunday. he's somebody who's got a kbrt voice and he's got a different perspective than we've had hchl's young, he knows this generation, and i think he's the future. >> can i just say you're the first muff get i've ever met?
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welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm anthony mason along with michelle miller and dana jacobson. coming up this hour, many scientists say cutting carbon emissions woen be enough to fix climate change. they say we'll have to pull burned carbon right out of the air. we'll take you to one place where they've already figured out how to do that. then his lifespaned nearly a century and was caught up in all the social and political turmoil. wheel look at both the influential work and controversial life of architect
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philip johnson. and you get plenty of fresh air with this rental property and amazing views too. but that's only part of the reason why so many people applied to work inside a working lighthouse. that's ahead. first the latest on our top story. a powerful and deadly storm system is moving o it to sea this morning, but not before it left a destructive packet from the southeast in to the mid-atlantic states. the storm moved up the eastern seaboard overnight spawning twisters, dropping hail rngs and dumping rain on millions of americans. a tornado touched down in north virginia late friday ripping a tree out of the ground and slamming it onto a home. no injuries were reported. near greensboro, north carolina, high winds ripped the roof off of a fire station. many of the firefighters were out responding to other storm-related emergencies when that happened. >> there was a couple of weird cracks that we heard. we opened the door to look outside, and i walked into the day room to look out the window, and the next thing i know, there was a loud boom.
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sounded like the roof flew off literally. >> the storm system is being blamed for at least five deaths including that of an 8-year-old girl in florida who was killed when a tree fell through her home. more than 1,700 flights were canceled nationwide on friday. scientists at the national hurricane center now say hurricane michael was a category 5 storm when it made landfall back in october. michael's winds clocked in at 160 miles an hour at landfalling an increase of 5 miles an hour over the estimate last fall. that's just over the threshold for a cat 5 storm. michael is blamed for about 16 deaths and $55 billion in damages. it's the first category 5 to ever make landfall in the u.s. the justice department says a subpoena by the house democrats to obtain the full
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mueller report is unnecessary. a spokesperson said the 448-page report was released with minimal redactions. house judiciary chairman jerry nadler begs to differ. he said mueller's report invites them to take up the issues. police in northern ireland have arrested two teenagers in connect with the shooting death of journalist laura mckee. the shooting happened thursday night during rioting in londary. the police linked it to a smau i.r.a. group. mckee rose to prominence in 2014 with a blog post describing her struggle of growing up gay in belfast. today is april 20th or 4/20, a day that marijuana users have celebred the drug. once taboo marijuana is now
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fully legal in ten states and in washington, d.c. it appears to be gaining mainstream acceptance. a new cbs poll finds more than half of americans, 55%, have tried marijuana. 65% believe pot should be legalized. that's up from just 27% 40 years ago. support for legalization cuts across age and political affiliation. nearly half of all seniors support legal pot use, but legalization does not appear to be an issue that drives voters. majorities of both democrats and republicans say a presidential stance on legalization makes no difference in how they'll vote. >> that's interesting. i want them to take a poll on how many americans like the smell of that stuff. i'm not a fan. >> walk around certain cities, that is all you smell. >> that is all you smell. and i'm not liking it. it is about four minutes after the hour. here's a look of the weather for your weekend.
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michelle you may like this smell a little better. you may associate switzerland with alpine air but the air is too rich in carbon-changing. up next, a carbon solution. and later -- >> reporter: this lighthouse is on a tiny island, but when the job became available, thousands of people from around the world showed interest. the surprising appeal of an unusual occupation coming up on "cbs this morning: saturday."
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monday marks the 49th earth day. despite decades of warnings from climate scientists, the world is still struggling to cut c02 emissions, the main driver of climate change. now a handful of researchers and companies are trying to fill in the gaps with what were considered fringe ideas. we have the story. >> i want to show you something illustrating what will happen with temperatures even if we end c02 by 2025. because of that disturbing
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reality, some climate ideas that were dismissed just a few years ago are slowly gaining traction, but it is slow. to find the best real world examples, we had to travel to another continent. up on the roof of an industrial plant in zurich, switzerland, we found rows of circumstance lar vents, the first commercial scale facility bringing back what we all put up in the sky. >> this box is capturing c02 directly from air. >> just here out in the air. it's grabbing the c02 from the air and collecting it. >> yes. >> louisa charles represents climworks by removing it and reusing it. we built it here because we have a source of energy. >> reporter: the source is waste heat from a garbage incineration
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plant just below. >> we have a building material which is highly selective so it only captures c02. >> they needed buyers and they found their first one just a few hundred yards away, a greenhouse looking for fertilizer. >> it's a big cherry tomato. >> taste it. it's pretty good. >> reporter: down the road professor marcus free throwle has started using climb works to make fuel. >> we have carbon and hydrogen dioxide going in and out comes methane. >> reporter: it comes out of a gas pump and into a small fleet of cars. what would happen if i put methane in my car? >> it wouldn't go well. you don't have a methane car? >> not yet. can i get one? >> yes. there's about 20 you can buy. >> reporter: free throw. says the beauty of methane is that the gas is easily stored.
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an electric battery relying on solar power in a swiss winter would be hard to charge. >> do you feel this is part of the solution too climate change? >> yes, i'm very convinced this is part of the solution for climate change very for that climb work needs nr customers and they got one on the day we visited last week. this truck was delivered captured c02 to coca-cola at a picturesque bottling company. they became the first bubbler with captured carbon. >> these are some of the first bottles. >> it's the first. >> it tastes the same. >> it's normal c02. it's just coming from the air. >> reporter: he convinced the bosses it was worth paying climb works $600 a ton for c02 that
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they could get elsewhere for almost nothing. >> to change it and import, you have to invest a little more. >> reporter: all of that is less than a drop in the climate bucket. the plant here years 600 tons of c02 a year. humanity emits 37 billion tons. each climb work scrubber removes about one ton a week. >> i looked it up and i think my flight over here was about half a ton. so it would take three days of one of these just to offset my flight to get here. that's a depressing number. >> that's why we need more of them. >> reporter: but before you dismiss carbon removal -- and you wouldn't be alone -- consider this. these intergovernmental climate projections are counting on some of this working? >> oh, yeah. >> reporter: "national geographic" journalist andrew
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rev kin has been followed the climate story for decades. >> my journey on climate started in 1985. >> reporter: he's watched as years of trying to cut emotion s -- >> it's like something that actually -- it's a takeback thing. >> it's the only way to make the math work. >> the only way. >> reporter: this family of ideas is known as geoengineering. i could mean carbon removal like climb works is doing, plant millions of trees, even dumping iron into the ocean to jump start its natural c02 absorption. but remember this graph we showed you at the beginning. even if we bring the c02 to zero, levels could stay dangerously high for decades. sew we have another one. >> dim is sun just a tiny little
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bit. >> reporter: we already know volcanic ash does something similar biks blocking out the sun on purpose? >> take one last look at the sun, springfield. >> reporter: it's the kanld of thing the evil mr. burns would do on "the simpsons." and yet spraying air and reflecting back some sunlight is probably also the cheapest surest way to lower the global average temperature. there's a glitch. >> you don't care about the global average temperature. you care about heat waves and whether there will be water. >> you don't know whether it will be equally distributed, whether it will affect rainfall. >> exactly. >> reporter: he's spent decades studying what happened if we dimmed the sun, but has run into massive resistance to even the
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smallest real world test. much of the opposition comes from environmentalists. >> people who spent decades trying to fight for emissions guides are terrified if we let this topic out in the open that people will use geoengineering as an excuse to keep emitting. they'll say, ah, we got the problem solved. this's completely wrong. >> your perspective is we have to do both. >> we have to absolutely walk and chew gum at the same time. >> reporter: that's the view of climb work too. to scale up dramatically and scale down their costs. they're working not only to recycle c02 in soda and fuel, which is carbon-neutral, but at this site in iceland, actually bury it making it carbon-negative. >> if we're not examining all of these avenues, we'll always have that sense ten or twenty years from now, whoa, why didn't we pay more attention to that
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option. >> climb work admits to scale up to a true meaningful size, there are have to be a price, basically a tax on atown. that will make air travel significantly more expensive. >> it sounds like a wild-card. >> you have to approach it from all angles. no one card is the answer. >> i note replacing emissions. it's in addition. >> that graph said it all to me. >> i'm still wrapping my mind around that dimming the sun thing. architects have become celebrities in their own right, but he's considered the first dominate both skylines and headlines. ahead, a look at the controversial life and work of philip johnson with with tthe a of a soaring new biography. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> announcer: this portion sponsored by toyota. let's go places.
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philip johnson. johnson died in 2005, but we still live in the shadows of his skyscrapers an people still visit his infamous home, the glass house, which is now a landmark. the new biography "the man in the glass house" looks at the controversial architect who was both love and loathed in his lifetime. >> reporter: with his owl-shaped eyeglasses, architect philip johnson was easily noticed and he enjoyed the attention. he had a barn a methodil flare for acting. after frank lloyd write, no american architect was more famous than philip johnson. >> there was only one reason for my whole life, and that's art. nothing else counts, nothing else gives me pleasure, nothing else gives me satisfaction. >> for his generation, he was america's most prominent architect. he was the first winner of the
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pulitzer prize, the nobel for architecture. >> reporter: in his new biography "the man in the glass house," mark deconstructs the new york lincoln theater, the ahman carter museum in dallas, and the crystal cathedral in california, and whose buildings helped define the skylines of houston, boston, c9 morcgcy joh some of them are wonderful. and some of them are not super great. but they are ubiquitous. >> johnson was the founding architectural curator at the museum of modern arting but in the 1930s as hitler was rising in germany, he suddenly left. >> and he threw away his career as a curator to try and become this fascist politician. it's a terrible moment in his history. >> reporter: johnson's former secretary told the fbi he wanted
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to be hitler in the united states. >> how long was his involvement in this? >> it was quite long, roughly a decade, where he's deeply embedded in these fascist ideas. >> reporter: by the ended of world war ii, johnson has a change of heart. >> he designs a synagogue and goes on to build. >> reporter: but beyond that is the revelation of lamster's book. >> mark did find out that it was a little more extensive and a little longer lasting than people thought and it's important to know that. >> reporter: paul goldberger, former critic of "the new yorker" and "the new york times" know talkis the glass house tha johnson built for himself in new kaman, connecticut, in 1949.
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>> this house was an attraction almost immediately. >> yes. almost an attraction and scandal, i suppose. i think he liked both sides of it. >> as a critic for "the new york times," did you like everything he did? >> no, did not like everything he did. i found almost everything he did to be worth taken seriously, however. i he was sigh mull tan aboutously the elder statszm st and bad boy of architecture. he would do things to always shock people but be on the edge to dismiss it as nothing but a trick or joke or what have you. >> reporter: the architect abounded in contradictionses. mark writes he was a guy man living in a history and liking nothing better than living in a glass house and throwing stones. >> reporter: at what point does he become an architect. >> in the 1970s.
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he's on the cover of "time" magazine holding his plans for the building in new york. >> why? >> he disdained them. he liked to proclaim i'm a whore and quite cynically said he would build for anyone who would pay. >> in the '09s johnson began building for donald trump, the trump international hotel in columbus circle was one of his projects. >> "new york times" called it a solid gold ingot standing on end. johnson and trump were made for each other. they were both masters of brandibrand ing because their relationship. >> the architect was still going to the office at 92 when cbs
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caught up with him in 1999. >> i've got to get certain arth tech real artistic sculptural ideas across. i have to work them out in my mind and get them built. that's all i've got to do. death occurs any time. i don't know. i don't give a damn. >> reporter: a modest exercise regime helped keep it at bay until he was 98 when philip johnson died here in his glass house. >> i think philip johnson probably lived his life on that precept of oscar wild who once sads, you know, the only this ing in life worse than being talked about is not being talked about, he wanted to be talked about? and still is. >> and still is, exactly, yes. >> we still are. and there's so many contradictions in philip johnson. >> i think that's the best way to put it based on what this book seems to say because you called him a fascist. >> he basically wanted to create
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a nazi parties in america and went off to do it himself. what's so interesting is so many prominent jews ended up forgiving him for that and became friends of his. up next, we'll take a look at a very different life one couple will be living. first we've got to talk about prince harry because this news about you and prince harry teaming up to work with apple -- >> is that out now? >> yeah. we're glad about this. harry says this. i'm incredibly proud to be working alongside oprah on this vital series. how did you and harry known as h.j. become friends. >> i asked him what do you think are the most important issues facing the world right now and he sads there are two. he said climate change and he said mental wellness, mental fitness. >> mental wellness. >> mental wellness, mental fitness, and mental health.
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as you know, he's spoeng about his own issues and what he went through after his mother died and how being able to talk about it has benefitted him so. sand so it's a passion of his. at the end of the conversation -- i said, oh, i'm going to be doing this thing with apping. i said, it's a big concern of mine too. and i want to try to erase the stigma, and i was telling him about this apple platform and he said at the end of the conversation, oh, if there's anything i can do to help. and i go, uh -- as a matter of fact. >> do you know what you're going to do at this point? >> yes. year doing a multi-part docuseries on mental health. >> and what's harry's involvement going to be? >> harry is co-creating this with me and executive producing this with me. >> he has several ideas. >> we've had several meetings. i've had secret meetings by
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welcome back to "cbs this morning: saturday." we begin our last half hour with an offer to step back in time due to an incredible response around the world. east bay is home to a ving torian lighthouse. ships still rely on it and visitors view it in droves but only two people will get to call it their home. john blackstone has their story. >> reporter: on san francisco bay on an isolated island in the 1870 gs, preemtsed an unusual
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job opportunity. living and working in a victorian lighthouse. thousands found it irresistible. >> you name a country, russia, china, cambodia, vietnam. i'll tell you i't think of a country in the world we didn't get applications of. >> reporter: tom butte was in charge of replacing jillian and ian rogers who had been working at the lighthouse for the last two years. they were shocked so many people wanted the job. >> within an article the ar acc put out, we were getting calls. >> i think it appeals to people living in a victorian lighthouse on the bay. it's a desire to step back from the modern pace. >> reporter: but the pace on the island isn't exactly laid back. >> cook and server and
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dishwasher, concierge. >> reporter: it's one of the more unusual bed and breakfast inns. jillian and shea do everything from running the boat to bringing guests to the island to cooking and serving meals. >> this is where we spend most of our day. >> not bad looking at the view of san francisco. >> absolutely. it's completely something sometimes. >> reporter: it offers waves of wildlife on san francisco bay. this lighthouse is now considering a treasure but at one time the coast guard was really to demolish it until lighthouse lovers stepped in to save it. >> reporter: the light itself was operated by the coast guard years ago but now it's an island for guests. >> a lot of proposals happen up here. >> reporter: the visitor this day are tyler watterson and tiffany dance. the couple selected from more than 1,000 applicants to run the
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place. >> people always ask are you going to have a cook or manltd nens person or anything, and it's all us. >> reporter: you're going to be living in the 1870s. >> which i'm okay with. i do enjoy suffrage and women's rights, but other than that, i think i'll be quite fine with it, yeah. >> reporter: among their new duties, learning to get the old fog horn up and running. as a noisy demonstration for overnight guests. they learn as well that of all the impressive views here, no guests wants to miss the sunset. >> are we going to have to ta take a break before dessert to see the sunset? >> we found that out early. we absolutely build a nice sunset break. >> reporter: two years on the island taught jillian and che why so many people want to work in the lighthouse. >> there's something symbolic about being the person whose job
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it is to keep everyone safe and being isolated but also serving such a strong purpose. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning: saturday" john blackstone on east brother island. >> how many guests can stay there? >> i'm not sure. i would like to be a guest. i don't want to be an inn keeper. >> i see a show trip coming up. >> there it is. >> now it's time for a look at the weather for your weekend. the co-founder of the legendary studio 54 has opened a brand-new hotel here in new york and he turned to one man to develop and run all of its restaurants. up next on "the dish" michelin
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star john fraser and his new project and the taste he is known for. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." if you have moderate to severe psoriasis, little things can be a big deal. that's why there's otezla. otezla is not a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. it may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. upper respiratory tract infection and headache may occur. tell your doctor about your medicines, and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ready to treat differently with a pill? otezla. show more of you. ready to treat differently with a pill? ♪ living well do you often wake up with chest congestion? or suffer excess mucus? try mucinex 12 hour.
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chef whose latest project isn't one restaurant but a hotel full of them. john fraser grew up in a los angeles suburb eating fruits and veggies from his family's backyard and fish caught up on camping trips and he's brought a love of fresh produce throughout his career including his current new york venues, the veg tairet nix and another. >> it includes a ninth floor terrace and outdoor gardens, fine dining and night life and dining at paradise club. john fraser, welcome to "the dish." >> thank you for having me. >> what's on the table? >> we'll start with the muck rooms and the salad. we have roasted carrots in a bag which steams and roasts at the same time. that's a mixed dish. this is a vegetarian style dish
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and a vegan tempura. last a cook pot with apple, brown sugar, and oats. and a drink. >> my favorite. >> i like mine straight, dry bourbon and vermouth. >> cheers. >> one of the fascinating things about you, you studied anthropology in college. how do you go from anthropology to cooking? >> i used to sit there in class and think, i can't wait to get to my job. i found a passion in the misfit culture of restaurants and bars, but you make people happy. it's in your mouth. i can hear you say yes, and it makes me feel good. >> i hear you have a vegetarian restaurant, nix. i adore anyone who takes giant
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leaps. what made you do that? >> i had a restaurant called dovetail. my diet shifted twaut vegetables. lo and behold a whole new group of people joined us, people i hadn't seen before. at the same time people were getting pig tattoos in kitchens, we were like, what does it feel like to feel great after dinner, not weighed down. >> we won't ask you to show your pig tattoo, but i do want to talk about a pivotal moment in your career, which is when you went to work at the french laundry with thomas keller who you said basically changed the way you saw the world. >> absolutely. thomas is a mentor and someone that -- you know, he's still -- he's in my orbit, right? a lot of the decisions he makes -- >> you hear his voice? >> what would thomas do? >> true. not just because of the hard times but nurturing times, the rough times in kitchens are the
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times you recognize people care. >> talk about this latest project of yours, the times square hotel, which is just massive. >> it is. >> how do you wrap your mind around something that big? >> first of all, i have a huge team. it's not just mine. it's been a great experience working with ian schrager and team. they're fantastic. it's our job to get it to market. it's four restaurants. we've been in succession opening them one at a time. >> you have one other project, the met project. tell me more about that. >> yeah. it's my favorite museum in the city. you obviously answer the phone when they call. the interesting part of that is how do you interject yourself into something that's been there for so long. so we tried to kind of approach it like an exhibit, right? you change the exhibit every few months. you introduce yourself to a whole segment of people. >> food is art.
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>> and the view across central park. >> is unbelievable. the perfect spot. >> we'll have you sign this dish. the perfect ending. if you could have this meal with anyone past or present? >> that's easy for me. jane goodall. her come bag and way she approaches life is just incredible. >> john, thank you. for more on john fraser and "the dish," you can head to our website cbsnews.com. the band susto made their debut a few years ago, a j now they're back to perform from their new album right here in studio 57. stay with us. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." ♪ ♪ i can do more to lower my a1c. because my body can still make its own insulin. and i take trulicity once a week to activate my body to release it,
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like it's supposed to. trulicity is not insulin. it starts acting in my body from the first dose and continues to work when i need it, 24/7. trulicity is an injection to improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes when used with diet and exercise. don't use it as the first medicine to treat diabetes, or if you have type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. don't take trulicity if you or your family have medullary thyroid cancer, you're allergic to trulicity, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2. stop trulicity and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of a serious allergic reaction, a lump or swelling in your neck, or severe stomach pain. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. taking trulicity with a sulfonylurea or insulin increases your low blood sugar risk. common side effects include nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and decreased appetite. these can lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. i choose once-weekly trulicity to activate my within. if you need help lowering your a1c,
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ask your doctor about once-weekly trulicity. there's brushing...and there's oral-b power brushing. oral-b just cleans better. even my hygienist said going electric could lead to way cleaner teeth. and unlike sonicare, oral-b is the first electric toothbrush brand accepted by the ada. oral-b. brush like a pro. let's talk about thisd when we meet next week. edward jones came to manage a trillion dollars in assets under care by focusing our mind on whatever's on yours. you see clear skin. cosentyx can help people with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis find clear skin that can last. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx.
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before starting, get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms, if your inflammatory bowel disease symptoms develop or worsen, or if you've had a vaccine or plan to. serious allergic reactions may occur. how sexy are these elbows? ask your dermatologist about cosentyx. starring in our saturday sessions this morning south carolina's susto led by singer/songwriter john osborne was first noticed for opening
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for acts like band of horses. then came a breakthrough album in 2014 and a tv debut right here in 2017. they've just released "ever since i lost my mind," their third full length studio collection, and here now is susto with ho"home boy." ♪ ♪ home buoy of mine, it's time he says he's moving to los angeles ♪ ♪ he can't go out in town without these people start to panic ♪ ♪ you know that he is a friend of mine and man i'm gonna miss him ♪
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♪ homegirl of mine, she's fine, yeah she moved to buenos aires ♪ ♪ to live and paint and eat and drink and brush up on her spanish ♪ ♪ she's got a right minded brain and now i'm feeling manic ♪ ♪ ♪ if you want a new life, well, i think i'll have one too ♪ ♪ tropical fountain i wanna dive back into you i do ♪ ♪
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♪ home buoy of mine, i'm fine, yeah but you know it's been a long time ♪ ♪ since i've been down in town on my own dime ♪ ♪ i've got a left-minded brain and i think i'm about to lose mine ♪ ♪ ♪ you want a new life well, i think i'll have one too ♪ ♪ tropical fountain i wanna dispend my time with yo i do, yeah ♪ ♪
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morning: saturday." >> announcer: "saturday sessions" are sponsored by blue buffalo. you love your pets like family. so feed them like family with blue. when you eat a bowl of oatmeal, you're getting beta-glucan. that's a soluble fiber that slows the breakdown of carbohydrates. and that provides energy that lasts. spand so do the savings ats kohl's.... with an extra 20% off! save on spring dresses... kids' easter attire - 40% off! and home decor. plus - take an extra $10 off your $50 or more home sale purchase!... plus - get kohl's cash! thursday through saturday - at kohl's. (door bell rings) it's ohey. this is amazing. with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis,
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are you okay? even when i was there, i never knew when my symptoms would keep us apart. so i talked to my doctor about humira. i learned humira can help get, and keep uc under control when other medications haven't worked well enough. and it helps people achieve control that lasts. so you can experience few or no symptoms. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. be there for you, and them. ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, control is possible. we'll be right back with more
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them close and was so cruel and we did good ♪ set your dvrs because next week on "cbs this morning: saturday," in the world of super cars it's a threshold that has yet to be broken. we're going to take you inside a race at 300 miles an hour and the different carmakers and the hunt to pass that elusive number. that's next week. >> why? >> why not. >> why not. we leave you now with more music from sues toe. this is "weather balloons." ♪
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♪ hold me down like a weather balloon tell memo how i could ever forget you ♪ ♪ faster now we got nothing to do ♪ ♪ what if we could fly right out the window ♪ ♪ go find a new place somewhere clean enough to feel ♪ ♪ one look in your eyes fill me up with hope ♪ ♪ it changes me mind tells me i'm not dead yet no, i'm not dead yet ♪ ♪ ♪ no, i'm not dead yet ♪
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♪ many times i've stop and i've seen beauty pass me by on my life screen ♪ ♪ a thousand eyes do you know what i mean? 'cause i really love you i really love you ♪ ♪ what if we could fly right out the window ♪ ♪ go find a new place somewhere clean enough to breathe ♪ ♪ one look in your eyes it fills me up with hope ♪
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♪ ♪ if i was a saver i'd help all the people get saved dunk their heads on the water just to make sure they're all okay they're all all right ♪ ♪ be out of sight ♪ if i was a teacher i'd spend all my days in school teaching children how to solve problems teaching them how to play cool and follow the rules
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you'd better stay in school ♪ 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.
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with love, california. exclusive video of a man taking some of that with a gun in an emergency room and san jose . a bay area football player swept out to sea, they hope foreclosure. >> leave your drone at home, what san francisco police will be watching for at the big 420 smoke up. let's get started.
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