tv CBS This Morning CBS May 25, 2019 4:00am-5:59am PDT
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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it's may 25th, 2019. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." severe weather hits the holiday weekend. tens of millions of americans are in the paths of dangerous storms with others facing near triple-digit temperatures. we'll have the latest on the damage and the forecast. overseas tangs as the president talks trades and tariffs in japan, he also sends more troops to the mid east in response to iran. details on the deployment. a killer sentence. the man convicted of kidnapping
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jayme closs and killing her parents hears his sentence in the courtroom. hear the message. a hiker missing for more than two weeks is discovered by a rescue crew late last night. we ooh el have the latest on her condition, but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. you hear the roar and rough weather. >> see v weather slams the holiday weekend. >> president donald trump is now in tokyo, japan, for a four-day state visit. >> i think we right now probably have the best rogs with japan that we've ever had. >> before leaving washington, he left us with plenty to chew on. >> they were very unhappy with the mueller report. they want to do a redo of the mueller report. it's over. there is no redo.
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>> life in prison without parole. >> you are the embodiment of evil. >> a hiker who went missing in hawaii two weeks ago has been found alive. >> beyond blown away. >> we found somebody by doing it right. a manhunt is under way in france knolling a bomb attack in the city of leone. at least 13 people including a child were hurt in the blast. a dangerous pursuit in florida. >> all that -- >> tiger, what do you think of the person who bet $85,000 you would win? >> great bet. >> -- and all that matters. >> we're looking to have better relationships with people. what do i know, anderson? wish i was anderson.
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it wouldn't fit. >> i don't even know what that means. >> -- on "cbs this morning: saturday." >> here's your shot of the day. second round. harmon with the approach at number 9. overcooked it a little bit. >> oh, come on. >> if that's not the shot of the day, shot of the day is meaningless. >> the best break i've ever seen. >> yeah. that counts? that counts. >> he called it. it was a bank shot. >> if that had gone in, i was going to go crazy. >> i would say higgs luck for the weekend is looking pretty good. welcome to the weekend, everyone. i'm anthony mason along with michelle miller and dana jacobson. later we're going to take you inside a charity that's doing really incredible work for veterans. america's vet dogs provides service dogs to those who served
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our country and it's work that can truly save the lives of the people they're assigned to. we'll see how they do it and check in with one of the most famous service dogs, former president george h.w. bush's dog sully. >> look at that face. he's known as portraying several faces. actor michael k. williams' new roll is from the central park jogger case where five black teens were convicted of a crime they did not commit. he'll join us at the table. they played the foil to mark zuckerberg. the real winkle ross twins lost out. but the story of how they finally hit it big is told in a new story, bitcoin billionaires. we'll speak with the author. that's ahead as well. but we begin with more dangerous weather across the country this holiday weekend. at least ten related deaths have
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been reported so far. now new powerful storms and extreme heat are on the way in iowa. a suspected tornado barreled through iowa city and surrounding towns last night. there were no reported injuries, but the powerful winds tore down trees and power lines and flipped over trailers at a dealership in rural johnson county. in oklahoma, emergency officials are keeping a close eye on the rain-soaked arkansas river which began to crest. they're releasing the am of water from a nearby dam friday to control expected flooding in tulsa. this all comes as an estimated 43 million americans are traveling for the memorial day holiday weekend. it's the second busiest in 20 years. meteorologist jeff berardelli is here with the latest on the severe weather and that record heat. good morning, jeff. >> hey, good morning, michelle. we have a lot of to talk about.
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we have this east ridge, snow in between this blocking pattern, this atmospheric gridlock. all this rain up and down the plain states and midwest and that is likely to continue for at least the next several days. let's look at what's going to happen over the next 48 hours or so. lots of heat and no rain there, but on the north side of this ring, showers, thunderstorms and into the plain states, ohio valley and great lakes. and that continues as we head through the day tomorrow. watch out late day new york, the late day plain states. rain is likely. look under the high pressure. no rain at all. but under the west ring of fire, 6 to 7 inches of rain. last but certainly not least we're entering a very strong heat wave over the next several days. it's likely to last through the middle of next week with records broken all across the southeast.
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look at these high temperatures, 100 in columbia bia, 99 in tallahassee, and ungo nafortuna not much better tomorrow. it will last through memorial day and a good chunk of next week. 're talking real heat and unfortunately no relief. >> welcome, summertime. breaking overnight, a hiker mussing in hawaii for more than two weeks is alive and recovering this morning after she was found by rescue crews last night. amanda eller was spotted from a helicopter by searchers. she was injured in a creek bed in a state forest. rescuers made their way to her and airlifted her to safety. our honolulu affiliate kgmb spoke to her mother by phone. >> elated, excited, ecstatic. i n't but i incredibly grateful >> eller is being treated this
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morning in a hospital in maui. she had not been seen since may 8. phe side. hundreds of volunteers have spenks trying to find her. i conditional believe that. to survive that long. >> to survive that long. >> and the fact they were still looking for her. that is what is remarkable. >> you've got to thank the rescue crews for not giving up on this one. an extraordinary effort by that. >> i cannot wait to hear from her. we move to other news now. president trump is in japan for high-stakes talks. "air force one" landed in tokyo this morning, the start of a four-day visit for mr. trump and the first lady. for all the smile, there is a deep uneasiness with japan after the president threatened to impose stiff tariffs on cars and parts. ben tracy traveled with the
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president and is with us this morning. good morning. >> good morning. this is a last charm offensive by the japanese to stay on the good sight of the often unpredictable american president. this is president trump's second visit here since taking office, and the japanese are once again rolling out the red carpet. on saturday the president met with high-profile japanese business executives, and on monday mr. trump will be the first world leader to meet the emperorer nar hee toe installed last month after his father abdicated the throne due to old age. >> the relationship with japan and the united states i can say for a fact has never been more powerful, stronger, closer. >> the japanese president has gone out of his way to woo mr. trump. they've now spoken more than 40 times. the prime minister indicators to the president's preferences.
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after a golf outing tomorrow the two leaders are expected to dine on hamburgers, and at a sumo wrestling match, president trump will be handing out a so-called trump trophy to the winner. trade issues are on the agenda, which could include japan agreeing to buy more american military hardware including fighter jets. but it's the military conflict in the middle east that has the president's attention. >> we want to have protection. the middle east, we're going to be sending a relatively small number of troops, mostly protective. >> on friday he said he would send 900 troops to beef up defenses. the u.s. has also deployed b 52 bombers and an aircraft carrier to the region. president trump is declaring an emergency over the region. mr. trump thinks iran gets the
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message. >> right now they don't -- i don't think iran wants to fight and i certainly don't think they want to fight with us. >> of course, it is memorial day weekend, and president trump does expect to visit a u.s. naval base here in japan on tuesday before he heads home. anthony? >> ben tracy. thank you, ben. the director of national intelligence has issued a rare warning to the attorney general. dan coats asking william barr to honor long-established highly sensitive and classified information, which if not respected would pout u.s. national security at risk. the warning comes after president trump gave barr new tools to unravel what he has long called a hoax. here's paula reid. >> we're exposing everything. >> reporter: president trump granted attorney general william barr sweeping new power to investigate law enforce millionaire and intelligence activities related to the russia probe.
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>> they'll be able to see how the hoax or witch hunt started and why it started. it was an attempted coup to take down the president of the united states. >> he ordered the other intelligence agencies to quickly and fully cooperate with barr as he now unilaterally decides what classified information is released. barr has previously expressed doubt about the origins of the probe which began in july 2016 at the height of the presidential campaign. >> yes, i think spying did occur. >> a justice department official confirms barr asked the president to expand his authority. the unusual move raises concerns that intelligence gathering could be compromised as the president pursues his political enemies. in a statement senator mark warner, the top democrat on the intelligence committee, warned declassifying source and methods thelnce cmunity
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ven as the president granted his attorney general new tools to review the mueller probe, he continued to attack democrats for their oversight of the russia investigation, insisting for them it's over. for "cbs this morning: saturday," paula reid, the white house. melanie joins us. good morning. >> good morning. >> what is the motivation behind this? is it a throw or what's the real deal here. >> well, conservatives have been pushing for this for month. trump initially said last fall he wasn't going to do this, but he said they need to be transparent with the american people about the origins of the russia investigation. the concern from democrats is that william barr is essentially going to be doing the bidding g
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picking. so there's not a lot of confidence right now with democrats, but he is going to be sort of not political in the way he goes about this. >> one of the things we know he wants to see is if robber mueller testify. we'll see. >> that is the million-dollar question right now. jerry nadler said last week mueller is ready to testify but in private. he does not want to be a political pawn in this fight. but he's willing to do an open statement publicly, have a transcript. but it's really, really important that the american people hear from him publicly. his words will have more power than just reading i. we're seeing this back-and-forth. the other is if president trump is going to block him from testifying. >> he could theoretically give an interview in another forum and the president couldn't block that, right. >> that's rye. it's a question of whether the democrats are willing to have
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hiehindsedor muler. that would be a more drastic option. >> can we talk about the president's relationship with nancy pelosi which seemed to reach a new level this week? there had been this sort of begrudging respect of the president toward nancy pelosi, but that seemed to go out the door this week. >> with a single word. >> with a single word. >> has something changed there, do you think. >> you're absolutely right. the president has long held a lot of respect for nancy pelosi, as a politician, her ability to demand respect with her caucus, but this week you saw a turning point. i think there are two reasons. one, he lost two key court cases with democrats. that was frustrating to him and was a huge blow to his stonewalling strategy. the other thing is you hear more and more democrats calling for impeachment and the first
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republican of michigan called it. he's starting to lash out. >> nancy pelosi has been trying to hold the line with some of the more left-leaning peon herbicide of the fence, but is she really going to be able to do that? i mean is it enough. >> well, she bought herself a little bit of time this past week. she got her troops together for a closed door emergency meeting. she said, we are making progress, we're going to hold these court battles, but i think there could be a tipping point in the future especially if trump does something like block mueller from testifying or defies court orders. you talk to the members of capitol hill and they'll say, okay, we'll follow the lead of nancy pelosi, but there could come a point where they can no longer stay sigh lenl and get o on the impeachment bandwagon. >> no shortage of things to talk about on this holiday weekend. thank you. this weekend margaret brennan's guests will include
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beto o'rourke. jake paterson was sentenced in a wisconsin courtroom. he w jayme closs was not in court but she said in a statement she wants him locked up forever. >> reporter: 21-year-old jake patterson will spend the rest of his life in prison with no chance of parole for kidnapping jamie kloss and killing her parents. >> you're the embodiment of evil and the public will only be safe if you're incarcerated until you die. >> reporter: family members describe the pain. >> we miss them and love them and think about them every day. >> reporter: for the first time we heard the chaotic 911 call that was made by jayme's mher and she hid in the bathroom.
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we also saw where jayme was forced to hide under patterson's bed sometimes for 12 hours a day until she was able to escape 88 days later. >> judge, this is the statement of jayme closs. >> reporter: in a letter her attorney chris gramstrup described how she was able to get away. >> i was smarter. i took back my freedom. i will always have my freedom and he will not. >> reporter: patterson shook his head about law enforcement details about what prompted this heinous crime. >> you're an extreme danger to the public in general. >> reporter: patterson's defense attorneys say he accepts he'll die in prison but hopes for a chance for parole down the road. >> reporter: the judge read his sentence. >> i dwould anything to take back what i did. i would die. >> reporter: despite patterson's
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plea, the judge did not show mercy saying he considered patterson's planning and premeditation. for "cbs this morning: saturday," jamie yuccas, barron, wisconsin. >> some of those details absolutely chilling. >> a very strong statement from jayme closs. i will always have my freedom and he will not. >> still don't get why he did this. >> i don't know that there are answers for this. an intense manhunt is under way in france after a bombing. it happened at a bakery in central france. there were no deaths but there were jeurys. surveillance video shows the suspect leaving a package in front of the bakery that then exploded. time to show you some of the other stories making news this morning. "the clarion-ledger" of
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mississippi reports there has been a blocking of the heartbeat law. it prevents the law from talking effect on july 1st. it would have banned abortions as early as six weeks into pregnancy. it comes as missouri's governor mike parson signed a bill into law banning abortion after eight weeks of pregnancy. there's cellphone video of sandra bland during a stop. they accused officials of withholding it. bland died in a texas jail four years ago after the arrest. her family's attorney said the video was not turned over to them either. the family is now calling for the criminal case against the state trooper who arrested bland to be re-examined. the "denver post" reports the fbi arrested dozens of people in the largest marijuana bust in colorado history.
quote
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42 people were taken into custody following a two-year investigation into a vast black market marijuana ring. agents seized 80,000 pot plants and 45,000 pounds of finished marijuana. the finished product is valued at around $13 million. licensed recreational marijuana is legal in marijuana, but state officials say unlicensed marijuana is still a big problem. >> why they're not making some of the money they expected to. and the new york "daily news" reports prosecutors are curbed joaquin "el chapo" guzman may be plotting a jail break. the drug kingpin has been complaining about harsh conditions in a manhattan jail and efforts to escape. they've asked the judge to deny a request for earplugs, commissary pro sened nt
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nt just don see it. >> i'm just envisioning "shawshank redemption." >> escape from new york. it's not easy. >> no, it's not. >> all right. it's about 22 after the hour. now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. the president's feud with nancy pelosi takes a bizarre turn. still ahead, a deeper look at how manipulated videos of the house speaker have spread across social media with the help of the president and his associates. plus, helping to turn young people into young professionals. we'll learn about an outreach
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program that gets students prepared for careers they might never have considered. they're the brothers made famous by the social network but the winklevoss twins found a whole other way to join the billionaire class. the author of a new book tells us how they did it. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." r rime they
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did not commit. still ahead this morning, we'll look back at the central park five, a notorious episode of racial injustice with actor michael k. williams, star of a brand-new net felix series about the case. also they served the soldiers who served oush country. we'll meet the canine companions and the people who trained them. we'll be right back. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." seresto, seresto, seresto.
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let's just start with the title. originally you wanted to call it "central park five." >> for me it was getting under this moniker that had been given to them by the police, the prosecutor, and the press and really asking you to humanize the boys, asking you to see them, not just the label given them. >> i remember the story when it happened and i remember it very vividly. recently i got to meet all five. ava, ictually went t them and apologized. i believed everythin about the story, hook, line, and sinker. it never occurred to me they
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could possibly be innocent. watching your piece, i learned things i didn't know. what you did was you put humanity. you made us see them in a different lighting and i didn't know that was possible considering what we had been told about this story. >> it was important to them that people hear their story. >> they say a lot of people have apologized. >> it's asking the public really interrogate the stories given by the news. we have a responsibility to interrogate. enough people didn't do it at this time. hopefully the film allows people to think again. >> do i have this right? you started on this project because of a tweet asking you to tell the story. >> i get a lot of tweets. i was always riveted be i think case. by the time the boys were teenagers in harlem, i was a
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teenager, grew up in compton on the opposite coast, so i i our three contestants are all at the big ikea table. who's going to be tonight's winning chef? contestant #1, impressive knife skills. but contestant #2 fights back by using fresh parsley. and, contestant #3 adds a touch of sweetness. sweetie, come eat outside. but it's too hot out there! perfect! make room for the judge! ♪ ♪ live together.
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lounge differently. ikea. ♪ ♪ the world's most famt portrait is brought to life. researchers at samsung used artificial intelligence to animate the mona lisa. the computer was able to make leonardo da vinci's mysterious woman appear to move her head, eyes, and mouth. it's the first time researchers have been able to take a single image and turn it into a talking head, but there are concerns that technology known as deep fake could be used to spread false or misleading information. >> good point. it's also a little creepy. >> it is. we've seen it with the slow up and slow down, you know, of video. so we'll see. wile that was presented by a top tech firm, we saw this week
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that it may not take kuing-ed technology to achieve a sill lar goal. amid his feud with nancy pelosi, president trump tweeted o it a video of the house speaker that was edited to make her appear to stammer during a news conference. that was followed by a second altered video of pelosi that made the rounds on social media. jeff pegues has that part of the story. >> reporter: here is the real video of house speaker nancy pelosi. now the doctored video in which she appears to be impaired. >> and then he had a press conference in the rose garden with all of this short sort of visuals. >> reporter: that clip received more than two and a half million views of facebook. hany farhi d says this video is just the tip of the iceberg of how videos and images can be manipulated.
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>> the most standard one is to take an image or video of a person, a candidate or president, and alter it to make it look like they're saying something that they never said. >> reporter: that is called deep fakes. in this example, former president barack obama's voice has been altered. the voice behind this video is actor jordan peele. the use of altered videos has led u.s. intelligence officials to issue a warning ahead of the 2020 elections. this year's worldwide threat assessment says adversaries and strategic competitors would likely attempt to use deep fakes to influence campaigns in the u.s., but they could also be used for other nefarious reasons. >> what if somebody create as video of president trump saying i've launched nuclear weapons against iran or north korea or russia, and we don't have hours or days to figure out if it's real or not, and the implications of getting that wrong very phenomenally high. and what you have to understand
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about this technology is it's not in the hands of few. it's in the hands of many. >> reporter: the video remains on facebook because the company does not have a policy that stipulated whatever you post must be true. meantime youtube has removed the pelosi videos. for "cbs this morning: saturday," jeff pegues, washington. well, there's a couple of issues there you have to deal with. one, the fact that they get left up, which is a major problem. and just the fakes themselves. >> we were joke about the mona lisa, but this is really in the worst form you can use them. >> seeing is no longer believing. >> very true. >> that's very scary. >> making life very complicated. a special delivery could transform the way may gets to your door. we'll see how the post office is already testing driverless vehicles. but first here's a look at the weather for your weekend.
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some high school students know all about high powered careers but others often lack that advantage. up next a story about a program that's trying to level the playing field. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." my insurance rates are probably gonna double. but dad, you've got allstate. with accident forgiveness they guarantee your rates won't go up just because of an accident. smart kid. indeed. are you in good hands?
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. a setback is nothing but a setup or a comeback. i want you to repeat that because i don't want you to ever forget it. a setback -- i cannot hear you -- is nothing but a setup for a comeback. how about that? class of 2019, here's to your victories and your losses. here's to all that makes you you. that ink you. >> i'm so proud of you, michelle miller. in brooklyn new york, st. francese college of 2019 sent out into the world this week by our very own michelle miller or shall we say dr. michelle miller
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after receive an honorary degree. you took a selfie. go>>at words. >> i love that. i have never heard you say that. >> all the time. that's my motto. my dear friend doug told me that after i was fired from my first job in broadcasting. it was an awful experience, but it was a learning experience, and i told all the people out there because my boss told me, you know, you need to think about a different career. ha. guess what? he follows me on twitter now. a setback is nothing more than a setup for a comeback. >> there's a comeback. >> i thank you both for being so supportive. let's talk about some young folks now. as some young students have been on a career track at a very early age for clear plans and goals for their working life,
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but others of immigrants may not have had exposure to high-powered industries. that's where a unique outreach program is providing them with both information and inspiration to make their dreams come true. inside this home in queens new york, bengali remains the spoken language. but six years after immigrates to the u.s., the mim family is living their american dream through their first born afirini. >> we want to have a better education for ourselves. that's why i want to be a judge. >> reporter: she's got a head start thanks to legal outreach, tameka edwards runs the after school program. >> do people take for granted what you're teaching here? >> absolutely, absolutely. you have parents who are connected to colleges, parents who are connected professionally, and our students don't necessarily have that.
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>> reporter: about 50 high school girls across new york city apply for summer internships and receive prep to succeed all year round. >> these are high school freshmen who are going to leave tonight with contacts at a major law firm in new york filled with women who want to help and support them. >> reporter: attorney leah godesky is one of the volunteers. >> what's the most important skill set that they take home? >> i think confidence. that's really what we're looking to instill in these girls so that when they walk into their internship or they wok into their first job interview, their shoulders are back, their chin is up, and they're looking at someone right in the eye and ready to grab that position, grab that opportunity. >> and that starts with what? a handshake. >> a handshake, right? >> i like yours. >> i like yours. >> it's firm but not too hard. >> we try to get to know each other. >> reporter: on this night, that i practice in the swanky suites
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of o'me lo & myerss, a midtown manhattan law firm with clients from ford to johnson & johnson. >> you want to make sure you're ttinrward your best food and giving a good impression the first time you meade someone. >> what's the most valuable lez son you learned today? >> always carry a pen and paper so you can write it don't. you don't want to forget anything. that's unprofessional. >> you should always get their business card. >> always pay attention. >> how would you describe the difference? >> wow. it's invaluable. it is invaluable. it's remarkable. >> reporter: and remarkable to a nining grader who quite literally came the furthest for
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this opportunity. >> nothing's going to stop you. >> nope. >> that's great to hear. >> it tells you with all the connects you have ow out there, it's like paying it forward. it really makes a difference. >> it does. >> and even just a little bit of time. >> and the confidence when you have that moment. coming up, author ben mezrich's books later became hit films such as "the social network" and "21." now he's turning his attention to the winking voss twins who were able to save face after losing facebook by turning bitcoins into billions. packed green room. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." not buzzword fresh. but, actually fresh-fresh. fresh. at panera, we hand-pick berries at peak-season. use creamy avocado. cage-free eggs. and a dressing fit for a goddess. oh and every ingredient is 100% clean. come taste what a salad should be.
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try metamucil, and begin to feel what lighter feels like. we tried writing a letter. i would ask you for the last time. let's take considerable resources at our disposal and sue him in if ed real court. >> that's a scene from "the social network" featuring armie hammer in the dual roles of tyler and cameron winklevoss. the famed twin brothers lost out to mark zuckerberg in a battle
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for the fortune generated by facebook. but they did walk away with millions of dollars and where f its own. it's detailed in the new book "bitcoin billionaires" by author ben med rick who also wrote "the accidental billionaires," the book on which "the social network" was based. welcome to the show. >> thank you. >> what was the perception of them after facebook? >> so it was really my fault actually. when i first met the winking voss twins, i grew up on the '80s movies and they were immediately thought of as the bad guys. when i wrote "accidental billionaires," they were the alf fa males, almost a joke, and i think that carried afterward. everyone saw mark zuckerberg as the loveable nerd and them as the bad guys, but that was actually wrong
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the winklevis. >> they got a settlement which they took in stock, so it became $500 million. they tried to invest in silicon valley but no one would take their money because they were the guys mark hated most. no one wanted them on their ledger. they went to abee za, the beach. and someone asked if they wanted bitcoin and it turned them into multi-billionaires. >> on their journey they see differing thoughts of what people believe bit coin should be. >> right. >> what are some of those? >> bitcoin started from this libertarian an arcky place. they wore suits to class. they're the ones
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l system it's digital money that i can send directly to you with no one in between. that to them is a freeing liberating them that everybody can use >> and help get them back in with the people at silicon valley who shunned them earlier. >> what's amazing is facebook is doing a by coin and it's partly in my book that zuckerberg has now been talking to the winklevi twins. >> time heals all wounds. >> i believe it's always been personal between the twins and zuckerberg that they're both driven by this personal battle going on, this shakespearean battle between the twins and zuckerberg and it's never going to end. >> there's another fascinating character in the book, charlie shrum. >> he was this very smart guy, 19 years old, lived in his mother's basement. he was the first person in bitcoin. he went the wrong way.
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he was sort of dragged into the libertarian anarchist fold and ended up making mistakes, became the first goal to jail over bitcoin. it's a big part of the story. they were trying to bring him to the right side. others were pulling him in the other direction. >> to the dark side. >> ya i. >> there have been a few trance for magsal events. talk about silk road. >> originally sulk road was the only place you could use bitcoin. silk coin was an underground dark website where you could buy almost anything, drugs, guns, big stuff. the guy ended up going to jail for multiple life sentences but the twins always saw that as a good thing. when silling road went away, that meant bitcoin could go reguesre billionaires. 8,000.
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>> all right. >> i didn't want to retitle it bitcoin millionaire, thousandaires and hundredaire section. >> ben, thank you very much. what could be the future of mail delivery is getting a test run. the u.s. postal service is already trying out driverless vehicles. we'll hitch a ride next. and if you're heading out the door, don't forget to said your dvr to record "cbs this morning saturday." coming up in our next hour, it's a new series about the notorious central park five case. >> plus, we'll look at the life-changing even life-saving impact of service dogs assigned to military veterans joopz. and music from grammy award winner anderson paak in our ♪ discover lindt excellence with all your senses explore the finest cocoa
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fehr. they knew it was me not doing my route. >> how do they know? >> too many people got their mail. snail mail as we know it may be no more. self-driving trucks will be making five round trips from phoenix to dallas on some of the country's busiest highways. >> the united states postal service and us are very excited about what this could mean about for the future. >> reporter: robert brown is head of public affairs and government relations at tusimple. >> so we move mail and boxes from the distribution senner to to the distribution center. >> reporter: in a statement usps said they're conducting the research in an effort to incorporate new technology, enhance safety, improve service, and reduce emissions. during the pilot program, each
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truck will have a safety engineer and driver on board to ensure safety and record performance. according to the american trucking association, thi en benefit a growing truck driver shortage. >> it's especially acute, the truck driver shortage, in recruiting for that long haul route. a cross-country trip usually takes around five days. with autonomy, we expect it could be two days. >> reporter: tusimple trucks are expected to operate without onboard human supervision by 2021. >> it doesn't get tired, it doesn't text, it is a very safe technology that would hopefully lead to less fatalities and safer roads. >> i wonder how they fill up the gas. >> it costs more money. >> how does it know the full service lane. actor michael k. williams may be best known for his work on ho hits such as "the wire"
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and ""boardwalk empire."" but his latest project comes from real life and a sorry chapter in new york's racial history. we'll talk to him here in the studio. for some of you, your local news is next. the rest, stick around. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." you make a very good point here. you say the idea of a soulmate is a myth. >> the idea -- you cannot find a soulmate. theer the search for a soulmate is like searching for a pair of trousers that would make you happy. you become the soulmate. eharmony and the pop songs and movies suggest i wasn't anyone till i found you and you completed me. that's not how it happens. you find somebody and you figure out how to get on with them and you become each other's soulmate as you learn them, get better at understanding them and loving them. it's not hard. there are such simple things you can do. one of the things research shows that stunned me is if you just
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learn to say thank you to a spouse. it seems to work in two ways. one, the spouse does not feel taken for thgh they're with you day. and secondly it changes the perspective, your perspective, because because if you look for things to thank them for, it means you can't be taking them for granted or be resentful or become contemptuous. >> it's a big, big deal breaker. i wish i had seen your book when i was younger. it's filled with a lot of advice and things that resonated with me. you read it takes communication, sense of humor, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. what i think is important is how you fight. all married couples fight. if they're not fighting, they're not telling you the truth iflt's how they fight. contempt is really, really key here. >> it's key. there are some very simple changes. when you're fighting, try to
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welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm michelle miller along with dana jacobson and anthony mason. and coming up this hour, it was the case that rocked new york city and resonated throughout the country. now a new mini series on the "central park five" is about to shed new light on the story of injustice. emmy manufacture nominated actor michael k. williams will join us to talk about the series. then america's soldiers protect our nation, but one veteran says her own life was saved by her canine companion. wheel look at the service dogs that help wounded warriors on their road to recovery.
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and later critics call his latest album both familiar and fresh and they say it's why fans fell in love with him in the first place. wel talk wit gra. y winneraak and he'll share new music right here in studio 57. that's ahead. figero weather is expected across the country this holiday weekend. another powerful storm is threatening the plains and midwest. last night in iowa a suspected tornado cut through iowa city and surrounding areas. there were no reported injuries. the powerful winds knocked down trees and power lines and flipped over a trailer park. in arkansas, they're watching the arkansas river that's expected to crest tomorrow. and triple-digit temperatures are expected in some places. an estimated 43 million americans will travel this
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memorial day holiday weekend. it's the second busiest in two decades. a republicanongrsman has single-handedly derailed a $1 billion disaster relief package. representative chip roy of texas block and attempt to pass the bill by unanimous consent in the house yesterday. roy argued there was no reason that the bill does not include, quote, the quite modest four $4.4 billion for president trump's u.s./mexico border wall. on thursday the senate passed the bill by a sweeping 85-8 vote. democrats said the house will try again on tuesday. meanwhile a setback for that border wall. a federal judge in california has blocked president trump from building two of the highest priority segs of the wall with money secured under the declaration of national emergency. u.s. district judge haywoodjr.' work from beginning on a 46-mile
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stretch in new mexico and a five-mile portion in yuma, arizona. on friday the judge said president trump was ignoring congress's wishes by diverting defense department money to pay for the wall. it's been a deadly week on the world's tallest mountain. at least nine people have died climbing mt. everest during a record business climbing season. that's more than all of last year. and there are still dozens of climbers on the peak. as carter evans reports some think bad weather and bottlenecks are to blame. >> reporter: it looks like a human traffic jam at the top of mt. everest as hundreds wait hours for their chance to stand at the top of the world. lukas furtenbach summited on thursday. he's still climbing down. >> its with very crowded. we lost about three hours waiting at the most difficult part of the rock. >> reporter: climbers call the area above 26,000 feet the death zone because the air is so thin.
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most need supplemental oxygen. >> and that's very danger oxyge. you can die within a couple of hours. >> reporter: almost all of them died while descending from the summit including 54-year-old don cash. he made it to the top wednesday but then lost conscious necessary. >> they cared him down and he kind of took his last breath. >> reporter: experienced everest climbers say crowds are not unusual, but this year there have only been five days of favorable weather to make the final push to the summit. >> the human body was not designed to survive above 26,000 feet. many decks happened on the descent. that tells me people were too slow going up and they reached the point of exhaustion. there's only so much a human body can take. >> reporter: most of the bodies will remain on the mountain, a solemn reminder to future climbers. for "cbs this morning: saturday," carter evans, los angeles.
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>> that photograph of that line of people is incredible. >> i had no idea there was that kind o hemoun >> the damager into thin air, a book a few years ago tells amazing and horrifying stories. in other news in hawaii, a hiker missing for 16 days has been found alive. amanda eller letter was in good shape after heiress cuers lifted her to safety. a helicopter rescue team spotted her as she waved them down. she said she had been stuck in a bed of a creek between two water falls. her suvs with found in the forest parking lot with her phone and wallet inside. >> whoa. it's about five minutes after the hour. now here's look at the weather for your weekend.
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"jeopardy" champion james holzhauer is in rarefied air. >> a male turkey andguitar. >> andy garcia. >> after once again risking almost everything the professional gambler finished with $74,400. that puts him above $2 million in winning since the streak began. he's just the second "jeopardy" winner to reach that mark. holzhauer is close to winning. >> i feel sorry for the guy who will eventually beat him or gal. >> i remember the first round and thought maybe this is coming. >> not happening. >> smart man.
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>> let's keep it rolling. it's a role ripped from real life. straight ahead, we'll recall the "central park five" case with actor michael k. williams, one of the stars of a brand-new new series on netflix. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." ♪ you hungry? ♪ ♪ ♪ here in my car ♪ i feel safest of all ♪ i can lock all my doors ♪ it's the only way to live ♪ in cars ♪ ♪ whenwhy wait?ows type 2 diabetes your way,... hit back now. farxiga, along with diet and exercise,... ...helps lower a1c in adults with type 2 diabetes. and when taken with metformin xr,
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michael k. williams is a multi-emmy-nominated actor who has had a few roles of a lifetime. he's best known for playing omar little and chalky white on ""boardwalk empire."" he was also nominated for playing betsy smith's husband in the hbo biopic "betsy" alongside queen latifah. now williams is starring as
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bobby mccray, the father of one of the five new york city teenagers convicted in the 1989 attack of a jogger in central park for the upcoming series on netflix title "when they see us." >> they say you raped a woman in the park. >> wait a second. this is my son. >> i'm don't know what you're talking about. >> kevin says they did. >> who's kevin. >> michael k. williams, we're just thrilled to have you here. thank you so much. you play bobby mccray as we said. you're the father of antron. and what is so tragic about your character's story is he's the person who tells him to confess to something he did not do. >> yes. >> that had to be incredibly gut-wrenching as an actor to play. >> yes. it was gut-wrenching as an actor but more so as a parent. you know, i just don't -- i don't understand -- well, it's
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easy to sit back and say i don't understand how he could cothat. however, the circumstances, the lack of information ow hoff the system works or what was league, what was not accurate, that mixed with the fear of they instilled in him with, you know, the threats. >> the police threatened the father basically to expose his job and the father was terrified and told the son to confess. >> absolutely. >> they put him in a horrible position. >> horrible. it was -- you know, i was the ignorance. he actually believed when they told him that, if you get your son to just, you know, go along with the story, you all get to go home. >> yeah. >> this is something, you were in new york at the time when this actually happened. this is what has been so interesting to talk to people about. what do you remember of that time that you then can sort of take to this as you were playing this role? fe
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fear. that's the main thing i remember. i remember looking on the news, hearing what they werthem, i saw myself. >> yeah. you were in your 20s then? >> 21, 22. >> you thought, this could be me. >> this could easily be me. by i also felt the fear of not wanting to be generalized or lumped in, whatever it was they said these kids were doing. >> when you think about these kids, these five young men, you look at them. it's such a hard story to tell, beautifully told, what did you takeaway from this? >> for me, i took away how easily that could have been my family and what can i do to prevent that. >> the hope of these young men, their resilient spirit. >> their ability to move on and to grow. the bond that they share together is none like i guess we
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-- none of us can understand, but for me, the way i wanted to honor them, to show how much i appreciate what they've gone through and what they've overcome is by playing through my parts and making sure we create the narrative, that we start to change what happened. this has to be accountabilile obviously on the police side. that was wrong. as a man from my community that looks like the community where they came from, it's my accountability to better educate myself, better inform myself with the way things were and to get to know my local politicians and my local police officers and make sure that they know me and they hear my voice. >> we should say, by the way, the city of new york never apologized to those five kids. >> absolutely. >> no one came forth and said i'm sorry for what you went
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through. >> we mentioned you played "omar -- omar on "the wire." what did you think? >> i had to grow up. i wasn't being my best self. the fuehrer president of the united states was singling me out. it was a little like whoa. what it did was set me on my journey. i thought, if this politician i. i didn't think that my input mattered. >> you saw power you didn't know you had. >> we see that in this series. i got a chance to watch it. it's a must-see for everyone. >> it's really powerful. >> it's really powerful. >> thank you so much for being
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here. "when they see us" will air friday on netflix. still to come, they're both kay nigh companions and caregivers. up next we'll see the vietdal role service dogs play in the lives of injured military veterans. and next week on "cbs this morning: saturday" reaching into the past for the perfect pint. we'll meet the beer maker who's brewing up recipes dating back thousands of years. >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ...glamping... ...graduations... ...music festivals... ...motocross... ...ziplining... what makes an amazing deal even better? how about that every new toyota comes with toyotacare, a two-year or 25,000 mile no-cost maintenance plan and roadside assistance? your summer starts here. toyota. let's go places.
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last year one point yant photo put the spotlight on service dogs that help our military veterans. it showed a service dog named sully at the foot of the casket of phammer president george h.w. bush whom he loyally aided in the final success months of mr. bush's life. but sully is just the best known of the lesions of dogs doing this important work. correspondent don dahler got a closer look and joins us now.
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don, good morning. >> good morning. veterans who've survived war zones can face all kinds of challenges from traumatic brain injury to ptsd. and these dogs have prove p to be both beloved companions and caregivers on their road to recovery. and that includes sully, who's now back on the job, helping other members of the military. ♪ with his genital devotion to former president jorm h.w. bush, the dog named sully won a permanent place in our hearts. but cliff miller fell in love with the lab years earlier. at just 8 weeks oil, the pup was chosen by millerer, his partner patricia summers, and their community service group, friends of america's vet dogs, for a very important job and gave him a name with special meaning. >> when we picked him out of the litter, his hair was closest to captain sullen bergers. >> reporter: sully, of course,
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was named for a man who exhibited heroism in civilian and military life. >> we chose sully to honor captain chesley sullenberger not because of his ability to save all of those people in landing the plane, because those particular flying skills came about when he was a united states air force fighter pilot. >> reporter: america's vet dogs, the long island-based charity that provides service dogs to veterans depends on donations from ordinary people. mill miller's group of 25 volunteers raise more than anyone else. >> i think a lot of people would be surprised this these dogs aren't supplied be i grateful nation to these vets. >> we group up in the vietnam era where when they were returning from combat it was a disgrace the way the vets were treated. now is the opportunity that we as a group of just frens can make a major difference.
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>> reporter: men and women like sharon rinier was a anniversary for 27 dwreers and treated 9/11 victims. soon after, she enlisted herself in the army and was assigned to an emergency room in baghdad. >> what was that like. >> we very having rockets and mortar lobbed in all the time. >> did you have an idea how it was affecting you emotionally? >> i think it hits you a bit later. >> reporter: after ten years in the united states army, sharon decided it was time to hang up her uniform and try to return to civilian life. that was not as easy as it sounds. >> i was put into the warrior transition battalion in bethesda because, you know, i had had an attempt, and this way -- >> an attempt? >> yeah. i had had an attempt. >> suicide attempt. >> because hayed so much guilt and so much -- you know, all these things had built up. >> reporter: she was having trouble functioning. in night terrors, c made her
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but a chance hospital encounter changed her life. >> one of the boston bombing vycles, marc fucarile was at walter reed. he had a dog comrade who kept coming to me. i said, i think that's what i need. >> reporter: easier said than done. vet dogs cost upwards of $60,000 to raise, train, and care for. but sharon was determined. >> i wanted a dog but little did i know i was getting better i was working toward this dog. so it was about four months after i actually retired out of the army that i got the phone call and i was like, oh, my god, i'm getting a dog. >> reporter: that dog is eddie, a bit of a gooflball when he's not working but all business when he is. the 4-year-old bringle labrador
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never leaves herbicide. >> i woke up and could not believe this was possible. i have night terrors and eddie interrupted my nightmare -- night terror the first night i had him and i was like in tears the next day. if he did nothing else for me but that, life was going to be great. >> so is being out like this something you could have done before eddie? >> no. like i said, i used to do a lot, a lot of isolation. >> reporter: not any longer. eddie has opened up the world to her again, getting sharon out of the house and into social situations, something she thought she would never be abe to do, like having lunch with her family. and as for that other lab sully, he now works at the same hospital where a service dog showed sharon there might be a way out of her ptsd. sully is now part of a team of rehabilitation dogs at walter reed medical center in bethesda,
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maryland. sundntha murdock is one of >>have a lit of ward patients where they go out and get visits every day. he knows certain offices he likes to go and visit people in and certain wards and clinics that he absolutely loves. >> they automatically calm you down. they put you back -- they put things back in focus, right? >> navy sailor robert hunter. >> they help us. it's really nice that walter reed does this for us among many other things. >> reporter: sully and the other dogs also help military beneficiaries like 11-year-old camden mcal pine who was diagnosed with a rare immunity disease. >> the dogs come and you can just like -- it just makes you file a lot happier to have a dog just with you. >> reporter: it's not always medicine that heals. >> sully salute? >> yes, good boy. >> reporter: sometimes just having a friend can work
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miracles. now, cliff's group actually names all of the dogs they sponsor after honorary military. they hope to travel soon to bring awareness to many of the issues our current veterans are facing. and as for sul y he'll be serving patients at walter reed for as long as he can. >> how old is he? >> i think he's 7 or 8. i'm not positive. >> you understand the power these dogs have. with sharon's story about the dog waking her up on the first night of terrors, that's fascinating. >> they're literally saving lives, and sharon wants to bring attention to suicide. it's an enormous problems an dogs can really help with that. >> there are other groups that do the training. t get money to. they're not supported.
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>> we thank you, don. we thank you. we're going to get back to you with "the dish" in just a few minutes. stay tuned. what say about you is about your positivity and your optimism. i've seen you many places, many times. you always have that. where did this come from? were you a happy kid? >> obviously i'm god's child. god is the greatest. my parents all treated me with love and showed me love and showed me how to work hard and also showed me that to succeed, you know, you must believe, and when you believe, you succeed. >> they encouraged you in music when others didn't. >> when i was playing my turntables in the room loud, they accepted it. >> they embraced it. >> can you at least take it to the garage? we support you. >> we love you, but take it to the garage. >> i've seen people tell my parnls, yo, why you letting your son do this. they're like, what do you mean? we love seeing our son happy.
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it's beautiful. >> you're a dad now. >> yes. >> he's 2 1/2 years old. >> i'm the father of a son. >> he produced two albums. >> yes. this is important. as a parnl, you're supposed to set up your son, your daughter, and give them security. you have to raise them on love, but as my duty, i need to set up his future. you know how people have to set up their college plan. i started from birk. the minute he came out, the minute he's on. it's my responsibility to make sure he's good. if i open a hot dog stand tomorrow, it's his. me talking on my show, i'm representing my son. you see what i'm saying? the way i walk, the way i breek, the way i move, i represent my son. and when my son came into my life, i became greater. >> yeah.
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this morning on "the dish" a chef with a true louisiana legacy. isaac toups was born in a cajun country to a food loving family that's lived in louisiana for more than 300 years. and from barbecues and fish fries to shrimp and crawfish boils his early years were filled with flavor. after starting out as a professional chef he worked for emeril lagasse in new orleans and that's where he and his wife amanda opened their own venue,
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tops meatry featuring house cured meats and other dishs to please any cajun carnivore. chef isaac toops, welcome to "the dish." >> i always want to put this dish on. my restaurant had another pork chop dish which had a riot that a riot. >> it was a giant plate of fried pork chops tochl make the sandwich was a kwib tee essential new orleans dish. i put my own spin on it with my father's pickles and lettuce so you can just bite into it. >> and this is -- >> these are my collard greens, plenty of pork, cornbread, dirty reich, essential i. that's my grandmother's dish and this is absolutely dynamite. in fact, all my parents, aunts and untils fight over them. >> i bet they do. this puppy over here? >> one of our signature
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cocktails. enjoy. it's never too early to drink in new orleans. >> i have to say, full disclosure, i do know the difference between cajun and creole country. >> congratulations. >> you can date your family back to the 1700s. >> that's right. >> but you say it's not just a lifestyle, it's a mindset to be cajun. >> absolutely. it's a flavor. it's this whole mindset. we keep our culture, and we're one of the few places in the south that really embraces that culture and really likes to bring those influences from france and from nova scotia. we've melled with the creoles and mexico is next to us. 've about nowadays we have the vietnamese. we have the irish. >> native american. >> native american. >> i love that you said your family was a family of foodies before foodies was a term
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everybody was using. you had these influences your dad was bringing to you. >> my dad's a dentist. but my dad was always the one, oh, let's go try this new thing, the kimchi. have some stinky cabbage. as a kid, it's like, you're going to try it. no, no, no. >> you ended up walking into emeril lagasse's restaurant at the age of 20 with eight months' food experience in. >> if this much. i walked in, green as hell, didn't know what i was doing. walked in there, got a job on awomen and worked my way up shoo that was like the finest emeril restaurant in town. >> yeah. >> that was bold. >> oh, totally. it was dumb. i walked into the restaurant and got a job as a fry cook. worked myself up as second in command and then broke off and did my own thing. >> and then you're like a fish
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amonger. >> bolder dumb on that. >> i was a fish amonger for three months. when i took my culinary breaks, i,000, e don't want to be a chef anymore, sold fish and realized i do not do well customers and almost slapped someone with a fish. i've got to open my own restaurant. >> what was it like to open a restaurant with your wife amanda? >> scary. too dumb to be scared? >> i like that. >> just rookies. let's just do it. >> and no slapping customers in the face. >> i had to throw someone. >> who was that? >> someho was way too inebriated that needed to be shown the sidewalk. >> your cookbook is a love letter to the way you grew up. what is it like for somebody who double like to measure and do a book like this?
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>> hellacious. we had to go back and measure everything in my head, which was difficult. we had to -- pinch of salt. what's a pinch of salt. it's like an entire teaspoon. oh, my pinch is a teaspoon. that was the hard ef part, going back to get in my brain and get out. >> you have stories upon stories, but as you sign this dish, tell us if there's anyone past or present you could share this meal with, who would it be? >> i think it's da markey assad. someone's going to throw a party i'm go doing cater, it's that guy. >> for more on the chef dish" head to our website at cbsnews.com. now here's look at the weather for your weekend.
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amar'e key da sad. that could be a painful party. >> he's a reigning grammy award winner who's a powerhouse behind the mic and behind the drums. up next on our "saturday sessions" we'll talk with anderson .paak about his life and career and then he'll perform right here in studio 57. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." or, here. kick your antacid habit with prilosec otc. one pill a day, 24 hours, zero heartburn. at kohl's memorial day weekend sale! save on kids' tops and shorts... flip-flops... and an anti-gravity chair. plus - take $10 off your purchase of $25 or more!... plus - get $5 kohl's cash for every $25 spent! this memorial day weekend...
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this morning on our "saturday sessions" it's been a busy year so far for singer/songwriter anderson .paak. in february he won his first grammy award for best rap performance in april. he released his fourth studio album. and this month he began a national tour headlining madison square garden next thursday. we'll hear some of his new music in just a moment, but first anc anderson pack here in new york. >> reporter: you will hear a world of influences in anderson pack's music. >> the foundation of me is like funk, gospel, soul music, you
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know. growing up my mom was listening to like frankie beverly and earth, wind & fire. but my sisters were into like mariah care are, whitney houston, new edition. i grew up in a house full of women, so i was just trying to keep the peace. >> reporter: paak grew up in oxnard, k. >> you didn't have an easy childhood. >> my pops, you know, battled with drug abuse and there was domestic abuse with my mom, and i saw a lot of craziness. and then he went off to jail. i never got to really, you know, like develop a relationship with him before he passed away. >> how kid you respond to that? how did you feel about it? >> i put everything into music, and i think there was a part of me that didn't want people to like pay too much attention. so i kind of just was like everything's cool, man, you know, put the smile on and was like everything's all right. >> reporter: but then his mother ended up in jail, too, for
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tax-related reasons. >> how old are you at this point? >> i was like 18. >> that's a lot for an 18-year-old. >> yeah. but i felt like some people were just built for more things than others. >> are you stronger than you thought you were? >> yeah, for your sure. i wunl the type to just break down and be like, okay, i'm going to be a bum and that's it. i was like, i'm going to be a square now and get a job. >> reporter: paak struggled to make ends meet, but his heart was always in music. he launched his career as breezy lovejoy before deciding he needed a different identity. playing around with his given name, brandon paak anderson, he came up with anderson .paak. >> that sounds prestigious, you know?
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that sounds legit. i put a dot to give it a little bit of mystery and a little bit of extra. i can't do anything regular for some reason. i put the dot and i thought it will always remind medetail reporr: as anderson .paak, buzz started to build, and then dr. dre heard his song "suede." >> he didn't know who i was, and i had to kind of show him proof. so i got into the studio with him, closed my eyes up to the mic, and did this. opened my eyes and dr. dre was like, oh, you've got the pain like you lit. >> reporter: paak never looked back and he's a father now. >> as someone who essentially never had a father, how are you
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looking at it. >> my boys can learn. i can't fool my wife and my 8-year-old son. >> it keeps you honest. >> it keeps me super honest. >> now performing music from his new album "ventura," here's anderson .paak with "make it better." ♪ ♪ how do you mend when you worlds apart ooh, carr carry on ooh from the start ♪ ♪ somehow we fell in love then fell right out of touch ♪ ♪ and ooh, that was hard but ooh here we are ♪ ♪ and it's easier to walk away than to look for what would make you stay ♪ ♪ remember when we first met
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we were having so much fun so now how can we both forget telling each other we're the one ♪ ♪ we would make love we would make love at the drop of a hat remember that yeah ♪ ♪ ♪ i remember you and me close as two can be ♪ ♪ now we're strangers in the night awkward in the tight ♪ ♪ baby, do you want to make it better do you wand to stay together snets if you do then let's please make some new memories ♪ it's easier to walk away than to look for what would make
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you stay ♪ ♪ meet me at the motel hotel aol even though we got a room at home ♪ ♪ go to a place we don't know so well ♪ ♪ try some spice would be nice ♪ ♪ try some seduction show me how give each other new instructions on what makes us feel good now ♪ ♪ i just wanna make you feel good now baby come on ♪ ♪ do you want to make it better ♪ ♪ i just want to make it right, come on ♪ ♪ do you want to stay together ♪ and it's easier to walk away than to look for what would make you stay ♪ ♪ do you want to make it better do you want to stay together ♪
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♪ if you do let' please make some new memories ♪ ♪ do you want to make it better do you want to stay together ♪ ♪ if you do then let's please make some new memories ♪ ♪ do you want to make it better do you want to stay together ♪ ♪ if you do then let's please make some new memories ♪ ♪ do you want to make it better do you want to stay together ♪ >> don't go away. we'll be right back with more music from anderson pack.
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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. ♪ from new love. ♪ to life long friends. ♪ moments together call for america's family favorite. ♪ lipton®. live alive. lipton®. and i recently had hi, ia heart attack. it changed my life. but i'm a survivor. after my heart attack, my doctor prescribed brilinta. it's for people who have been hospitalized for a heart attack. brilinta is taken with a low-dose aspirin. no more than 100 milligrams as it affects how well brilinta works.
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though it could be worse we've been moved around in a state of alert ♪ ♪ there's nothing new or sharp about the cutting edge if they build a wall let's jump the fence i'm over this ♪ ♪ cold stares can never put the fear in me what we built here is godly they can't gentrify the heart of kings ♪ ♪ let's just not talk about it if i make a move you're coming with me ♪ ♪ what about the love? coming with me what about the labor coming with me ♪ ♪ what about the seeds it's coming with me the people that you came with coming with me ♪ ♪ what about the love coming with me sri lankan what about the labor coming with me ♪ ♪ what about the seeds it's coming with me the people that came n you coming with me ♪ ♪ hey
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just don't stay now it's coming with me ♪ ♪ and let it fall like the leaves i want it all ♪ ♪ we continue stand to see our children shot dead in the streets but when i finally took a knee them crackers took me out the league ♪ ♪ now i'm not much for games but i play for keeps ♪ ♪ and we salute king james for using his chains to create some equal opportunities ♪ ♪ cold stares can never put the fear in me there's a movement we've been groovin' on ♪ ♪ you can move or stay your ass to sleep let's just not talk about it ♪ ♪ everything they tried to hide we're taking back for yours and mine ♪ ♪ what about the love what about the labor coming with me ♪ ♪ what about the seeds it's coming with me ♪
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♪ the people that you came with coming with me ♪ ♪ what about the love it's coming with me ♪ ♪ what about the labor coming with me ♪ ♪ what about the seeds coming with me ♪ ♪ the people that you came with coming with me ♪ ♪ hey ♪ ♪ just don't stay now let's go shake down ♪ ♪ get what you need ♪ i'm going to carry it out can't hold me down let's go shake down ♪ ♪ i want it all
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>> for those of you still with us, we have more music from anderson .paak. >> this is "tints." ♪ ♪ i been feeling kind of cooped up, cooped up i'm trying to get some fresh air ♪ ♪ you got the ruf off, roof off you know it never rains here ♪ ♪ and you ain't gonna flash when you taken your picture ♪ ♪ you anltds gotta drown or waste your potential paparazzi wanna shoot ya, shoot
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ya ♪ ♪ -- dying for less here i been in my bag anyway trying to throw a bag in the seich ♪ ♪ gig on tour, ensuring my bass waven my little ones and bathing apes ♪ ♪ i can't be riding, riding, i need tints. >> windows tinted. i need windows tinted ♪ ♪ i need tints windows tints ♪ ♪ i need windows tinted i need tints i need tints ♪ ♪ i need a presentation put the w dow up ♪
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we made some mistakes. i do owe appear apology. we may have violated absolutely. >> the sunning apology from san francisco's police chief. why he now saying sorry for a raid on a journalist's home. >> a big blow to the holiday weekend on the russian river. there is a new danger forcing beaches to close. >> and a sunny start to the holiday but it may not stay completely dry. how a chance of rain could impact your plans. good morning. >> let's get started this morning with our forecast. >> sunrise happened at 5:53 weis morning.
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