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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  July 27, 2019 4:00am-6:00am PDT

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captioning funded by cbs good morning morn. it's july 27, 2019. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." breaking overnight, people are hurt after a collapse inside a south korean club. we'll have details on what happened and the professional american athletes trapped inside. border wall victory. the supreme court rules the pentagon can use funds. see why it's not the only fight against illegal immigration. honeymoon nightmare.
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a couple hiking alone get more than what they bargained before when the husband falls more than 50 feet below. see how the bride who is afraid of heights saved the day. and trouble ashore. waves of foul smelling and potential toxic seaweed are washing up on some of the world's best beaches. what exactly is it and can it be stopped? we'll head south of the border and find out. but first this morning we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. it's as though he wants all of these other countries to step up, but in the meantime our country is not, anned we're a country of immigrants. >> the president signs an immigration deal with guatemala. >> this will really help. this is something that's going to be rather incredible. >> a decision will be made in a tamely fashion. this isn't endless. >> house democrats have taken an initial step toward pursuing the impeachment of president trump. >> these people are clowns. the democrats are clowns.
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>> a balcony collapsed at a nightclub in south korea injured some people including americans. >> a sunroof was ripped off of a car stuck in traffic that oh, my god. >> the major grasshopper invasion. >> thousands of the insects descending on the las vegas strip. >> they're very -- i don't like them. phobia. >> another high-speed drug bust on the high seas. >> suspected drug smugglers heaving cocaine into the pacific ocean. >> unbelievable pictures. a couple of bears get into an all-out brawl. here they are slugging it out. >> all that -- >> fouled back. >> what a job. are you kidding me! >> when's the last time you've seen a pitcher do this? >> never. >> woodstock 50 lost one of its head lined acts. jay-z pulled out of the festival. >> -- and all that matters -- >> i've always liked american wines better than french wines even though i don't drink wine.
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i just like the way they look. >> i like that. i just like the way they look. i'm with him on that one. >> -- on "cbs this morning: saturday." >> we're just days away from a second round of democratic presidential debates. papa joe took a bit of slapping around in the last debate, but he's still a front-runner. a recent poll shows biden is the only democrat beating trump in the swing state of ohio. although, they only one they agree on, cleveland browns rule all the way, i'm very drunk. >> those browns may be very real this year. come on. >> all right. well, welcome to the weekend, everyone. i'm jeff glor along with michelle miller and dana jacobson. coming up this morning, we're going to take you to the sandy beaches of mexico, normally a haven for touristser, but recently trouble has been
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washing ashore by the tons. it is sargassum, and keeping this foul-smelling and potentially toxic seaweed off the beaches has become nearly impossible and we'll show you what's causing it and why the mexican military is declaring war on it. >> then we'll go window shopping at barneys. the high end retailer is getting into the weed business with accessories that cost thousands of dollars. you'll see why they're not alone when it comes to bringing luxury to the pot industry. and for decades it's survived assaults from tv, video games, and the internet. but the popularity of pinball has held its own. see why people are still on tilt for these games. we'll take you to the museum where the machine's history is on full delay. first our breaking story. two people were killed overnight in a nightclub when a balcony collapsed about 150 miles of south korea. cellphone video from inside the club shows how people were
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literally holding up the balcony at one point to prevent it from falling. 16 before injured including four american athletes who were competing at the world swimming championships. kenneth craig is here. good morning to you. >> good morning, michelle. those four were u.s. members of the water polo team. they were there celebrating when the balcony collapsed without any warning. now officials believe the club owners may have been negligent. case job erupts as dozens appear to hold up an internal balcony as it was collapsing. two south korean men were killed when it suddenly came crashing down onto the crowd below. more than a dozen were injured including eight american athletes. players from the u.s. men's and
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women's water polo teams were celebrating after a win with spain from the day before. one suffered a deep leg laceration and understood wekts surgery at a hospital. three of her u.s. teammates are recovering from minor injuries. fina says it is monitoring the situation and providing assistance as needed. >> the u.s. water polo team says all of its athletes are safe and accounted for. police have detained two co-owners of the nightclub and two workers who are being questioned about whether or not the scrub tur was legally added to the nightclub. >> you're glad it's not worse. lives lost and people hurt. >> especially when you think of how many people were inside at the time. >> yes, indeed. kenneth,ing that you very much. there was more breaking news overnight after an intensive search. a group of nine girl scouts and
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their guide were found in minnesota. at least two suffered serious injuries after being struck by lightning. the scouts are between 15 and 18 years old. emergency crews are working this morning on getting girls back home. now, to the two major victories for the trump administration in its effort to crack down illegal immigration. on friday president signed what's a safe third country agreement in guatemala, requiring migrants who travel through the country to seek asylum there instead of the united states. paula reid is there this morning with more on all of this. good morning. >> good morning, jeff. an unprecedent number have arrived at the southern border. most are seek asylum here in the u.s. now, the white house insists guatemala will provide safety for legitimate asylum seekers but critics note it's one of the
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most dangerous countries in the world, and they say it's no place to seek refuge. >> we're doing a very important signi signing. it's a safe agreement between two countries. >> reporter: the trump administration signed a deal friday with guatemala requiring migrants who travel through the country to seek asylum there instead of in the united states. >> we're sending a clear message to human smugglers and traffickers that your day is over. we're investing in the future of guatemala. the safety of migrants and their families. we'll protect the rights of those with legitimate claims and we'll end the widespread abuse of the system and the cripping crisis on our border. >> reporter: the agreement would largely impact immigrants coming from honduras and salvador, both countries plagued in poverty and violence. acting department of homeland
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security chief kevin mcaleenan says anyone who doesn't follow the new rule will be sent back. >> they can make a protection claim if they would like in guatemala. le if they don't, they'll be returning. >> reporter: the trump administration has been pushing for the agreement, even thre threatithreate threatening tariffs if they do not cooperate. they say it's not a safe country for refugees and asylum seekers as the law requires. the deal is expected to face legal challenges as well as longist cal ones. the agency in charge of handling asylum claims, tells cbs news it only has eight employees. under this new deal they could potentially have to process thousands. they say they expect to hire more people but can't confirm. michelle. >> that's a lot. the supreme court ruled yesterday the president can use pentagon funs for his border wall.
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that seems like a big win for the white house. >> reporter: it is a big win. this case is not over. it will continue. as of now, the justices say the white house can tap into billions of dollars of the penl gone funds to begin parts of the border wall. that i will ask the lower courts to expedite this case but the justices did not seem optimistic that the aclu will all maetly be found to prevail in this case. even if they do, it's likely these sections of the border wall have already been built. >> paula, thank you. democrats in the house are making their loudest overtures yet toward impeachment as they begin their summer recess. they've asked a court for documents from mueller's investigation that judiciary chairman jerry nadler says are needed for an impeachment inquiry. nancy cordes has detailsen from capitol hill. nancy? >> we're crossing a threshold, absolutely. >> in a parting shot before a six-week break democrats said
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they're stepping up their probe of the president. >> i would say we are in an impeachment investigation. >> in a federal suit, the house judiciary committee is seeking underlying grand jury testimony from the mueller investigation, especially material related to president trump's knowledge of any potential criminal acts by him or his aides. the suit says the house is considering whether to exercise a constitutional power of the utmost gravity, a approvpproval articles of impeachment. >> all they want to do is impede, they want to investigation, they want to go phishing. >> the move comes as some democrats grow frustrated with the speaker's more cautious approach to impeachment. speaker pelosi cleared the air with one critic, new york congresswoman alexandria
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ocasio-cortez. tensions between the two over strategy and policy have grown personal in recent weeks, the two sides trading barbs in the press and online. >> do you think you were able to bury the hatchet with congresswoman ocasio-cortez in your meeting? >> i don't think there was any hatchet. >> well, she called you downright disrespectable. >> well, when we're in a political arena, we have our differences. rew e expect that. >> both down played their disagreements after they left. for "cbs this morning: saturday," i'm nancy cordes on capitol hill. here to discuss the politics of the week is ben goldberger, executive editor of "time" magazine. >> good morning. >> good morning. give us some sense with mueller testifying with this lawsuit and trying to get that redacted information, where do we stand with all of this? >> well, that's a really good question.
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the answer is nobody fully knows, but the democrats are unwilling to give up on the prospect of at least beginning impeachment proceedings if not the actually impeachment process itself. so the lawsuit that's filed by the judiciary committee is an attempt to preserve the potential for impeachment without forcing a full house vote which as of now is unlikely to pass and is exactly what nancy pelosi is adamant is to happen. >> we don't see any more interest from the american people right now in seeing this go forward. we haven't had as you and i were talking the social media moment. >> after mueller's testimony, as of today, there's somewhere around 100, 101 democrats who favor pushing for impeachment. but that's not a majority of their caucus. it's certainly not going to pass in the publrepublican controlle senate. nancy pelosi and her colleagues don't see a pushing for it. >> it will be interesting to see
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how much mueller consumes that conversation in that debate when they happen. >> absolutely. but that's a fundamental tension among many of the candidates running. i think 12 are in favor of impeachment proceedings, but if there's any lesson to be learned not just from clinton's campaign, but pretty much every single presidential election, you win by telling the voter as what you're for, not at what you're against. no matter, no democrat is going to beat him simply by railing against him. >> clearly the president took a victory lap after the mueller hearings, but how does this play into his overall strategy? i mean he has the squad issue with telling them to go back to where you came from. it's just -- it seems to be just, you know -- it keeps moving forward. >> well, he -- he has built a campaign predicated on a position that was a key theme of his election in 2016 and it's
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one he's going back to now, even though as many of his supporter es point out he actually has tangible accomplishments to run on, and yet he seems much more insistent on stoking certain nativist sentiment, racial sentiment. >> economy being one of them. >> indeed. but then again he's sort of a victim of his own expectations. the economy is doing very, very well. there's a lot of job growth and some of that is the rowel f the tax cuts and a lot of the very intense stimulus from the trump administration. but he's also promised there would be annual 3% growth. he has not achieved that. >> okay. ben goldberger, thank you very much. >> thank you. tomorrow morn,ing on "face the nation" right here on cbs margaret brennan will have maria mariane williamson and julian castro. sam lewis was found to be a
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member of the military. we have the latest on the man who had been on a journey across the globe. >> reporter: his mission was simple. sam goodwin would not return home until he visited every country in the world. and there were apparently no exceptions, not even syria, where the bloody, seemingly intractable civil war has killed an estimated half a million people in the last eight years. unable to get an official visa, the 30-year-old entered the country through a kurdish controlled checkpoint in the northeast, recordingly wandered the streets without a guide, and was eventually picked up by syrian government forces. he was convicted of illegal entry and spent more than two months in custody. >> it puts a lot of things in perspective. that's probably the biggest thing that i learned.
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it really makes you appreciate everything that you have here. >> reporter: good win, who grew up in st. louis, has been an avid traveler since college. in 2012 he told his campus tv station a trip to africa had changed his perspective on life. >> coming off an experience like that, you really realize that your problwhat you consider pro are not really as severe as you may think they are. >> reporter: good win's detention inside syria was not widely known. his surprise release yesterday was secured with the help of a lebanese general who negotiated with the syrian government on behalf of the family. we are forever indebted to lebanese general abbas ibrahim and to all others who helped secure the release of our son, that i said in a statement. it's short for these kinds of detentions which can drag on for
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years. everyone we spoke to yesterday inside and outside the government said they were thrilled by the outcome. dana, sources tell cbs news no ran some was paid for his relief. >> christina, thank you. two american teenagers have been implicated in the murder of a policeman in rome. the two were named by police this morning after the officer was stabbed to death on friday. seth doane joins us from rome. good morning. >> good morning. this is the prison where those two 19-year-old americans are being held. they're still awaiting formal charges, but italy's police forces say they have confessed and they're being detained for the crimes of aggravated murder and attempted extortion, this after a 35-year-old newlywed officer was stabbed to death on a rome street early friday morning. they say their investigation reveals that shortly before the murder twoion men stole a
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backpack from an italian man and threatened him during a phone call that they would not return the backpack unless they were given 100eers and a gram of cocaine. the man reported the incident who came to try to stop the individuals, but a scuffle unfold and the officer was stabbed to death. law enforcement officials found the two men staying at a hotel. they were ready to leave italy early friday morning and they also found the murder weapon, a knife of considerable size that had been tucked behind a removable ceiling tile. now, jeff, a funeral for that slain officer will be held on monday at the very same church where he was married just 43 days act. >> seth, thank you. my gosh, what a horrible, horrible story. >> 43 days ago, on top of the world. it's time to show you some other stories making news this morning.
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the "vancouver sun" reports the canadian military has been called in to join on the search for two teenagers accused of killing two people including an american woman. investigators have tracked the suspects to as far away as manito manitoba, about 2,000 miles away from the crime scene. they're accused of shooting to death american native chynna deese and her australian boyfriend. they're also accused of killing a lecturer. the military times reports the u.s. coast guard seized 2,300 pounds of cocaine in a high-speed chase at sea. video shows suspected smugglers tossing bails of what appears to be cocaine in the pacific ocean. "the cincinnati enquirer" report as federal judge has dismissed a $250 million lawsuit against the "washington post" file by a kentucky teenager at
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the center of ooh a viral video controversy. nicholas sandmann claims the paper falsely labeled him a racist after his encounter with a native american man at the lincoln memorial. philips claimed he get threatened. the judge ruled the post had the first amendment right to publish phillips's opinions. the "washington post" reports nasa has confirmed a so-called city-killer asteroid narrowly missed hitting encht scientists say they had no idea it was coming. >> that is alarming. they should know. >> it was about 45,000 miles from earth on thursday. theed a stroid came from the direction of the sun and was only visible a few days ago. scientists say it posed no immediate threat. >> what city? >> any city. and cbs new york reports two bears were caught on camera throwing punches in a backyard
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brawl in new jersey. a resident was safely in his car when he captured it. he said they fought for about eight minutes and growled much of the time. another neighbor said she yelled for them to stop when she noticed they were getting too close to a pool and she said apparently they listened. >> she must be a mom. everybody listens to a mom, right? >> crazy. >> good stuff. it's about 22 minutes after the hour right now. here's look at the weather for your weekend. a death that provoked outrage in the civil rights era has done so yet again. this time because of a photo apparently celebrating vandalism
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associated with the murder of 14-year-old emmett till. hear why this is only the latest chapter in a disturbing and ongoing saga. also, an intruder has shown up again this year in the blue waters of the caribbean. it's wreaking havoc on some of the world's finest beaches. we'll find out what's causing a massive environmental challenge. and later a modern problem finds an ancient solution as first responders learn how to handle extreme stress through the practice of yoga. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." there are moments in life that leave a lasting impression.
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into fashion literally. still ahead, found out which luxury retailer better known for cloaking is marketing specialty products that are truly "high end." plus, it's the archive of the arcade. pinball has been an american pastime for generations, and there's one place where you can see just how it's developed
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threw t through the years. we'll take you there. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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the images are 70 years of american history, immortalized onto pape eric mostly in black and white. this pulitzer prize-winning photo of martin luther king's wife and daughter at his funeral, muhammad ali stinging lie a bee and the crooner james brown. it celebrated regular people. >> the core of this collection is our history. it's the essence of the black story in america. >> perri irmer is the president of this museum in chicago. >> did you grow up reading "ebony" magazine? >> i sure did.
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you would be hard-pressed not to walk into a home and see an issue of "ebony" and "jet" magazines and knew we were getting the truth, seeing a version of us. >> but debt was forced to sell the magazine and put its prized photos up for auction. >> what do you have here? archivist vickie wilson gave us rare access to files, no fingerprints allowed. >> we travelled with the freedom riders. >> reporter: some photos were a catalyst for change when "jet" posted a photograph of an open casket of emmett till. it sparked the civil rights movement. rosa parks said she was thinking of till when she refused to give urp her seat. wilson says these are photos once shared with generations.
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>> why do you have this record. >> just to show how far we have come.
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police in riot gear fired tear gas into a crowd of thousands of protesters in hong kong this morning. the group gathered to respond to a recent attack. last week they attacked commuters at a train station. 45 people were hurt. officials say today's protest was not authorized and demonstrators defied warnings not to march. welcome back to "cbs this morning: saturday." we begin this half hour with new bullet-proof signs honoring civil rights icon emmett till. the signs were posted after three students at the university
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of mississippi were suspended from their fraternity after posting in front of a bullet-riddled sign marking the spot where till was found murdered. we want to warn you the story does contain images that may be disturbing. mark strassmann reports. >> reporter: in the photothree ole miss fraternity brothers posted with grins and guns and echoes of a rebel yell. behind them, a bullet-riddled sign marking the spot where 14-year-old emmit till's boss 1-800-found in 1955. mississippi investigative journalist jerry mitchell. >> you see the photography and you just go what? >> reporter: the instagram photo drew outrage but nothing like the disturbing one taken of till 64 years ago for "jet" magazine. it showed emmett till, his mutilated body lying in an open casket. the 14-year-old had been tortured, shot, and dumped in a rink. let the world see what they did to my boy, his mother said.
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>> this was somebody's child that was brutally murdered and it served as a catalyst for people to say no more, never again. >> reporter: nicole moore directs education at the national center for civil and human rights in atlanta. >> when we see images like these three young mendes crating the sign, it reminds us that the work isn't done. >> reporter: kappa alpha fraternity suspended the three students this week, but they remain enrolled at the university of mississippi. in a statement the school's interim chancellor larry sparks said this image is offensive and hurtful, but as a state institution, we have limits on the tools available to remedy this offensive behavior. as for the vandalized sign, it will be replaced with a new one and the three will face charges. for "cbs this morning saturday" mark strassmann, atlanta.
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the investigative journalist -- you look at it and go, why would anyone do that? >> why indeed. in fact, rosa parks said the reason she sat down on that seat in montgomery is because she was so outraged by what happened though this 14-year-old boy, so it really did launch this modern-day civil rights movement. >> we'll see. and how many years later now where it's being defaced? that's the problem, that's the never-forget problem. we'll have money more news ahead. but first here is a look at the weather for your weekend. some of the world's most beautiful beaches are a lot less
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inviting these days, and that's not the only problem growing in the middle of the atlanta. we'll find out what's causing it. that's next. and later. they're learning yoga to face violence or even a life-and-death situation. that story coming up on "cbs this morning: saturday." a lot will happen in your life. wrinkles just won't. neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair's derm-proven retinol works so fast, it takes only one week to reveal younger looking skin. making wrinkles look so last week. rapid wrinkle repair® pair with new retinol oil for 2x the wrinkle fighting power. neutrogena® so kim, you going for our big drive safe & save discount?
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the pristine beaches and crystal clear waters of the caribbean may be unrivaled the world over. nearly 4 million people a year travel from the u.s. to cancun for vacation each year. another 2 million from other countries including europe and canada, but all of this a is now under threat from the newest manifestation of a changing planet, seaweed. it is the biggest algae bloom in the world. massive waves of seaweed called sargassum washing up on shore day after day. >> this beach was just cleaned today? >> yes, a couple of hours, and the seaweed will be on the beach again. >> reporter: jose escalante has owned a small hotel in tulum, mexico, for eight years. every day workers here up and down the yucatan peninsula
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remove tons and tons of decomposing sargassum from beaches every night. it comes back. rosa rodriguez martinez from mexico's national university is trying to figure out why. >> we're getting sargassum almost from march to october. basically massive amounts. >> whereas before, how long? >> before, maybe two or three weeks during the summer. >> that's a huge difference. >> it's impressive. >> impressive is one word. it's a problem, a big problem. >> it's a problem. >> reporter: since 2011 the amount of sargassum in the atlantic has increased dramatically. it currently forms a 5,000-mile mass from africa to the caribbean. it's estimated to weigh 22 million tons. >> why is it so bad right now? >> i think it's because we have polluted the sea too much. now we have a lot of newt trepts and the algae are taking advantage of it. >> reporter: fertilizer runoff from brazil increasedy
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deforestation is believed to be the largest fuel source for the sargassum. that combined with warming ocean water and changing ocean currents has put the yucatan squarely in the crosshairs. it's gotten so bad the mexican navy has just been put in charge of dealing with it. they took us on a reconnaissance mission to locate the largest sargassum waves. >> translator: we're aware we're only addressing the effects of the sargassum. >> reporter: rear admiral enrique flores morado tells us the navy will build new sargassum-busting ships to reel in as much as they can. >> reporter: but that does not solve the problem. >> reporter: right now many towns and resort owners are using floating barriers to corral and collect sargassum including in puerto morelos, half an hour south of cancun.
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>> we can say for sure we're the first destination in the whole mexican caribbean with already a control about the sargassum. >> there's a lot of it though. >> yeah. because in this area -- >> it doesn't look controlled. >> no, no. >> reporter: hector tamayo is in charge of tourism here. how many trucks go in and out each day. >> more than 50. >> more than 50 trucks just of sargassum every day carted in and out of here. >> yes. >> and then we start mixing that with the sargasso. >> reporter: some are developing novel ways to use sargassum including omar vasquez who is building homes with it. >> it's ironic because i grew up without a house, without a home. we crossed the border to the states when i was 8 years old. >> you came back. >> i came back to live my mexican dream. >> your mexican dream. >> yes. it does not have a gram of
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cement. everything is organic. >> reporter: oven though vasquez says his homes are 100% organic, there may be an issue with what accumulates in sargassum at sea. rosa rodriguez's latest research shows sargassum is high in heavy metals line lead and arsenic, and disposal is a major issue. this is one of the places we found where the sargassum is taken. it's a dump site miles into the jungle far away from the ocean. it's unclear if the sargassum left here seeps into the ground, goes up into the air, or just sits here forever. sargassum is either being dumped inland or buried under the beach, which is illegal. it's a crisis stretching across the caribbean with no end in sight. for folks watching this who may not be familiar with the problem of what's happening here, what do you say?
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>> it's something that the entire plant could be in trouble. >> can we see this washing up in south carolina, georgia. >> it's worse now. yeah, potentially, if it increases. i've been going to this area for years and you watch it get slowly worse every year. >> it's frightening. they try to dispose of it but as you were showing, if it seeps into the groundwater, goes into the air, you're not getting rid of it. >> nobody knows what to do with it right now really and it continues. >> eye-opening. >> yep. >> really, really good record, jeff. thank you. it's yoga to the rescue. the nation's first responders deal with enormous stress on the job, and one woman thought this might be the perfect solution. we'll find out what effect her programs are having at departments around the nation. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." this summer at panera, we're going all in on strawberries. at their reddest, ripest, they make everything better.
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ouch, okay. huh, boring, boring, you don't need to see that. oh, here we go. can you believe my client steig had never heard of a home and auto bundle or that renters could bundle? wait, you're a lawyer? only licensed in stockholm. what is happening? jamie: anyway, game show, kumite, cinderella story. you know karate? no, alan, i practice muay thai, completely different skillset. like soldiers on the battlefield, the nation's first
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responders can experience extreme stress as a retune part of their jobs, and those encounters take a toll. one woman saw the problem and found a unique way to help her nonprofit yoga for the first responders, teaches mental, physical, and emotional resilience through the practice of yoga. barry petersen shows us how it's helps our heros. >> reporter: when crisis strikes, superman is the ultimate first responder. he is always calm, and that is yoga lesson one for real first responders. >> you don't see his shoulders up. you don't see the short fast breath. no matter what's going on, superman has the chest up and is calm breathing, and that's relative of power. >> reporter: you'll find yoga teacher olivia mead with unusual
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students, firefighters in full gear. or trainees to become sheriff's deputies in denver, colorado. >> we have to stay focused and concentrated to be ready for anything. >> reporter: they're learning the superman lesson, control your breathing to stay calm and you stay in control. >> when you're in a threat response where your survival is at stake, you're not always making the best accurate decision. you're just trying to survive. >> reporter: olivia fouped a nonprofit called yoga for first responders and crisscrosses the country teaching yoga to police and firefighters. >> you know how to grab your weapon, you know how to talk to people, you know how to use your body. same thing with yoga. it's going to happen automatically because you've trained with it beforehand. >> reporter: this is now a mandatory class at the training
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academy for denver county sheriff's deputies. deputies in the jails are unarmed, dealing with prisoners who may have mental health or drug problems or be angry about being in jail. trouble explodes fast, says denver county sheriff patrick firman. >> it may be inmates fighting with one another. >> how important is calm when you're dealing with this? >> it's critical. if you go into a crisis situation and you're not calm,y you're going to escalate that situation. >> reporter: there is another need once the fire is out or the s.w.a.t. team is finished. first responders must deal with what they saw and did. if that, yoga can be a vital alternative says captain anthony gettler who commands the training academy. >> there has to be a way to decompress without using other means. >> like alcohol or stuff like that.
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>> in this line of work there's alcoholism and high suicide rates, so we want to give people a different alternative. >> is there a preventive quality for yoga for the first responders. >> yes. and i think practicing it proactively is wrer we're most effective. that's why i love teaching in the academy. >> reporter: which means what they master now may pay off for years to come. for "cbs this morning: saturday," barry petersen, denver. >> how fantastic. there you go. >> i am a yoga believer just in my own life. i've seen how breathing makes such a difference. even if you don't believe in anything else in the practice and you figure that part out, it makes such a difference. >> it's subject a huge problem. i did my master's thesis on that subject. the fact that they found something to help is just tremendous. >> something without using a drug or anything else. >> exactly. >> all about the breathing. >> yes. >> totally. las vegas is sometimes referred to as sin city and it's
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dealing with its very own plague right now. up next, we'll show you how swarms of these creatures have come out of the decembereret and right onto the strip. >> and they're not gambling, right? >> that's right. and if you're heading out the door, don't forget to set your dvr to record "cbs this morning: saturday." coming up in our next hour, legal marijuana may be going mainstream, but you may still be amazed where pricey pot paraphernalia is now being sold. also we'll go to a special museum dedicated to the love of pinball and we'll catch up with veteran rocker nick lowe. he'll perform music from his new e.p. in our "saturday sessions." you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." my insurance rates are probably gonna double.
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what some are calling the great grasshopper invasion of 2019 has taken over las vegas. within the past week these harmless insects have migrated in swarm, covering doors, even testing their luck on the vegas strip. state officials attribute the migration to the weather. >> when we have a wet winter or spring, these things build up and then we'll have flights around this time of the year, migrations, and they'll move northward. >> experts say these grasshoppers are known as pal lot winged and should fly out. >> that prime rib special doesn't look so appetiting when
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you're walking among a million grasshoppers. >> isn't it a delicacy? doan they fry those up? protein. >> there you go. grasshoppers for dinner. all right. coming up, our image of the marijuana head shop may be going up in smoke. still ahead as pot goes mainstream, we'll take you to the surprising places where pot accessories are being sold. but first one couple's hiking adventure on a dormant volcano turns into a harrowing story of survival. for some of you, your local news is next. the rest, stick around. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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you're a different person than you were at 18, 19, now 32. >> yeah. >> and you seem to be looking at life and even business differentally. are you? >> yeah. i have a record label i'm starting with jay-z and rocnation. we've been working and we've been building this relationship and brand forever and we're just making it official. >> what does jay mean to you as a mentor, as a friend, as a person? >> i think jay is like a really smart guy. i think he's one of the best to ever do it and not just, say, rapping, coming from the worst part of america to becoming a
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billionaire. that's the thing we idolize and dream of. i always thought it was not obtainable to become a billionaire for a guy who never stepped a foot in college. he's breaking barriers for ones who come afternoon me to shoe hiding it. he's the goat. >> greatest of all time. in the name of your record label, dream chaser, what does that mean? >> yeah. in the beginning of my life, everybody used to say, you can be whatever you want to be. i seen so much bad every day, i never believed that. you could have martin luther king come from the daepd have a conversation with me and try to inspire me back at the age of 15, it would go in one ear and out the other, that's just how rough my life was. i always wanted to sent a message to people across the world. if you have a dream, you really can achieve your dream. i actually really did it. it's almost confusing now. i don't know where to go from here because i was living what i was chasing for the last 15
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years. >> you're living your dream now? >> yeah. definitely living in my dream.
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♪ welcome to "cbs this morning." good music. always. >> you left the "saturday" out just to say good music. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm jeff glor with michelle miller and dana jacobson. coming up this hour. for some price is no object. for on secrets that enhance the consumption of -- >> -- marijuana. >> way to go. >> we'll see how a famous name in retailing has gone high
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fashion. >> then from 1930s diners to 1980s arcades and beyond, pinball has been a beloved feature of american life. we'll pull the plunger and go for a wild ride through a pinball museum and see how these machines have developed and changed through the years. and he's considered a punk rock pioneer, a masterful songwriter and even helped launch the career of elvis costello. we'll talk to music nick lowe about the one decision that ended up saving his career and he'll perform in our "saturday sessions." 's ahead. on friday the u.s. and guatemala signed an agreement that paves the i roy for guatemala to serve as a safe country. it will require them to pass to the u.s. to seek asylum.way they would stay in guatemala instead of the u.s. >> today we're sending a clear message to human smugglers and traffickers that your day is
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over, and we're investing in the future of guatemala, the safety of migrants and their families. >> meantime the supreme court ruled in a 5-4 decision that president trump can use funds from the defense spending to build the border wall. there's breaking news overnight. two were killed what the upper floor of a nightclub collapsed. cellphone video from inside tshw at one point people were holding up the balcony trying to prevent it from falling. it's believed 16 others were injured including four american athletes among those competing at the women's swimming champions. there's also breaking news from hong kong. police have fired tear gas this morning to control tens of thousands of protesters who converged on a rural town where
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gangsters attacked demonstrators at a train station last week. ramy inocencio has more. >> reporter: for the past hour, they're stationed right behind me here. over this past time, there has been teargassed. we ourselves were teargassed. you see tear gases, umbrellas, water bottles, but this gets to the reason of what's happening here. basically a week ago an angry mob of people attacked people at a station. that's why police are out in full force. they have been pushing these riot police back further and further. they're furious. they're asking, demanding that their chief executive resign. ramy inocencio, cbs news, hong
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kong. brazilian authorities are searching for the thieves behind a $30 million gold heist. officials have found the cars which were pointed to look like federal police vehicles during the sting at sao paolo's main afrmt investigators say the group of about ten first held the airports cargo director and his family hostage to force him to cooperate. police say within minutes the group left with 1,600 pounds of gold. a husband and wife were hiking when he plunged 50 fight. his wife was the only one to rescue him. the indianapolis couple was hiking a dormant volcano. clay found a rope dangling down. as he headed in, his wife stayed up top. >> i was holding onto the ropes walking down backward like a
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ladder. the next thing i notice i'm sitting on the ground with my head between my knees and vomiting up blood and there is ooh blood all down my shirt. i think a rope snap and i fell but we're not entirely certain because i don't remember falling at all. >> when his wife reached him, clay had no idea where he was. >> he was incredibly lethargic and had no sense of balance. he was like an intoxicated person. >> reporter: she had to push, pull, and coax her husband out of the volcano and down the mountain. >> i was completely freaked out because i knew we were entirely alone. >> reporter: after nearly four hours she was final able to get cell service and call for help. >> i think it was just by god's grace that we were able to make it all the way down or make it to safety. >> clay sustained a serious head injury. the up canal's family raised nearly $36,000 to transport clay back to the hospital in the
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states. >> he had a fracture at the base of the skull in the temporal bone. this is a very serious injury. fortunately the fracture was where the bones did not actually become displaced. they stayed together. >> reporter: doctors expect he'll make a full recovery and the newlyweds say when they return to indianapolis, they'll enjoy the rest of their honeymoon on the couch. for "cbs this morning: saturday," jamie yuccas, los angeles. >> good idea. >> stay on the couch. >> talk about performing your wifely duties. >> wow. >> she's not going to ever live this down. >> for better or worse right away. >> there you go. it's about six minutes past the hour right now. here's a look at the weather for your weekend.
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some retailers are taking the legalization of pothead on. changing our image of the traditional head shop with boutiques dedicated to getting high in high style. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." this summer at panera, we're going all in on strawberries. at their reddest, ripest, they make everything better. like our strawberry poppyseed salad and new strawberry summer caprese salad. strawberry season is here. panera. food as it should be. you don't see psoriasis. you see clear skin. you see me. but if you saw me before cosentyx... ♪ i was covered. it was awful. but i didn't give up. i kept fighting. i got clear skin with cosentyx.
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when it comes to legalized marijuana, business is booming. according to one estimate, worldwide legal spending on cannabis will hit $16.9 billion this year. by 2022, that figure is expected to almost double to $31.3 billion. now a well known name in retail is looking to get in on that action. jamie wax is here to explain all the news.
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jamie, good morning. >> good morning, michelle. with recreational pot now legal in 11 states and the detective, it's clear that marijuana has gone mainstream and so, too, has pot paraphernalia. once only sold in small low end smoke shops, you can now buy it in some pretty surprising places, and that includes one of the country's most fashionable department stores. ♪ >> reporter: take a walk inside this boutique, and you'll find it isn't your average head shop. barney's new york, one of america's best known luxury retailers is now offering a new kind of indulgence. ♪ >> reporter: in their beverly hills store just off the main floors with their fashion displays is the high end, a specialty shop dedicated to marijuana accessories. and barney's being barney's, price is no object. taic this unique guest set from
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devambez, a french company that once made stationery for royalty. it's so exclusive, barney's employees only handle it with gloves. >> you have an $8,000 gift box of rolling papers and accessories. >> and accessories. it's super special though. it comes with a solid gold rolling tray and also you get a gold temper that has the shape of the queen's scepter. >> reporter: matt mazzucca is creative director at barney's. mazzucca says the national expansion of pot legalization finally reached a tipping point for the company. >> you can see and smell marijuana in the store and you can tell customers were engaging with it. >> could you imagine that barney is would have an area dedicated to cannabis? >> no. i think the voice that i've been able to kind of develop within the company has allowed for this kind of opportunity to come up because our brand is based on addressing cultural shifts.
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>> reporter: with far more experience in fashion accessories than smoking pot, barney's needed a collaborator to help curate the line. they found one in beobe, an l.a.-based luxury cannabis vendor known for their celebrity cliente clientele. >> what they need right now is relevance. >> reporter: leslie ghize is from tobe, a consumer and cultural think tank. >> relevance is sort of where the consumer apped culture meet and the legalization of marijuana is a cultural moment. >> reporter: barney's may be the first major retailer to open a cannabis lifestyle shop but other smallerr this type of sto as legalization changes across
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the country, the traditional consumer is shifting. >> reporter: eric hammond is general manager of higher standards. >> there are recreational uses in recreational markets, and all of these types of consumers come to expect a much higher level of experience in all aspects of their life, and this should be no different. >> reporter: jessica cadmus is a stylist who created rogue paq, a luxury marijuana carrier case. >> i'm was seeing toiletry bags, pencil cases, shoe boxes, all kinds of unsophisticated ways to hold the ritual. i did some investigation and then ended up designing something because i really didn't find anything that i thought was beautiful. >> reporter: like barney's, higher standards found collaborators like top home product designer jonathan adler,
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to create a line of accessories including coasters and ashtrays. and if you think about it. luxury products like these dedicated to enjoying intoxicants aren't really all that new. is this the same thing as barney's selling beautiful cut glass glassware or licker quor decanters? >> a thousand percent, i think especially with the culture of los angeles, people are shifting from a fine wine to a fine strain of cannabis. >> this is the new wine? >> this is every-evolving. >> reporter: the team at barney's was always cautious spending almost a year exploring what this new kind of smoke shop would look like and how it would be positioned for its target audience. >> well, think i in the first place we have to understand the
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legals and what is permissible. >> how is it messaged? >> the more it's stigmatized, we'll see more in this category. >> the price point ranges from $20 for, get this, 20 karat rolling papers to the $8,000 gift box set. that i ee set to go high end in their new flag ship store this summer. and these items are available online where some of these places marijuana is legal. >> if you want to go online, you can. >> can you come up with a pot deodorizer? >> they have some infiltration systems. >> we need that. >> for 10 grand. >> it's clearly growing because as more states legalize, more people are looking for a luxury way. >> the comparison to barware is
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pretty fair. >> thank you. if you're a pinball wizard or just a fan of the machines, stay ahead. we'll see how pinball is still thriving in the age of video games and we'll look back at its colorful past. we'll be right back. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." . >> announcer: this portion sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ even in the age of video games, pin ball remains one of america's great pastimes.
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its popularity has bounced around over the years. but in the last decade, the number of international tournaments has climbed from the hundreds into the thousands. while attendance at the events has risen more than five-fold, pinball's popularity dates back to the 1930s. for these kids in alameda, this is day camp. >> welcome, everybody, to week five of season seven. >> reporter: late their night it's the adults who meet for league night, competing for bragging rights and the chance of a world pinball player ranking. >> there was no place to play pinball back in 2002. >> reporter: michael schiess changed that, starting in this 350-square-foot room. >> what was were the early days like? >> it was kind of a backdoor speak easy kind of thing. >> reporter: it was called lucky juju pinball back then, open
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just one night a week. >> it was bring your own beer, five bucks in the jar, and come play pinball till midnight. it was a saturday night thing. i wasn't going to be getting a business license. it wasn't really a business. >> so how did you go about building it? >> i had a bad habit. >> reporter: schiess bought his first pinball machine at age 14. by the time he had 36, he figured he'd better do something with them. >> i started looking. there was no museum. no one was doing any preservation on any pinballs. there were commercial commodities we were going to toss in the dumpster. i,000 this is an important part of american culture and it shouldn't be discarded like that. >> reporter: with that, the pacific pinball museum was born and schiess took it one step further. >> people come here to something
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they think is an arcade, but they're getting instead what? >> a lesson in art, a lesson in history, a lesson in physics, and a lesson in engineering. >> and you get to play pinball that and you get to play pinball. >> reporter: through purchases and donations there are now more than a thousand machines in the museum's collection. about 100 are on display, spanning more than a century of the game's history. >> we have games from as early as 1887 to the late '70s. >> reporter: manager darcy bruno gave us a tour of the museum which includes an old bagatelle, the french precursor to the modern game. >> it's kind of built along the lawn bowling, sort of croquet things. >> this humpty dumpty from 1947
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is the first to feature flippers the players can control. which is crazy. you can't imagine not having flippers. >> that's the whole point. >> reporter: as the game evolved, so did the techniques to master it. >> it is a gail of skills, so is lights and arrows and things really tell you where you should be hitting the ball. >> that wasn't there. >> that's when you would have used your nudge. this is one of the most popular games in the museum is upper deck. >> oh, baseball. >> one button launches the ball and one button is the bat. this is your game, dana. >> reporter: we stopped by gorgar, the first talking machine from 1979 before entering the modern room. >> this is where we have all of the games from the '80s to the early 2000s. >> every backglass is kind of a little snapshot of american culture. you can go through the whole history of pinball and get a
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pretty good idea of where america's coming from. >> reporter: most of the museum's collection is in storm and selective will i brought out for show and display. when we visited, it featured pinball artist art stenholm. maintaining so many vintage machines is one of the biggest challenges like a broken flipper on this sea witch game. the museum relies on volunteers like mike harris or as the silicon valley software engineer is known here, google mike. >> what is it that draws you to the game? >> i enjoy playing them, but i enjoy the social sight. >> some could go hang out, play on a softball league. someone else might say i'm going to trivia night at the bar.
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is that what this is like for you? >> oh, yeah, totally. >> reporter: that, says, darcy brew moe, is the key to the game's longevity. >> it brings people together. >> it's kind of funny. it doesn't take brains or brawn. it's gravity and which way the ball's going to go. >> you can play for 20 bucks. it's a nonprofit. they're leasing their space, so they would love to have an actual space to call their own. i'm telling you, really fun afternoon >> i'm happy to give my 20 bucks. >> i'm curious. i'm sure the video games ushered in the demise of the pinball, but what brow it back? >> they had a rise in it as people gravitated toward the past, something vintage. they're looking for a way to connect it, to have interconn t
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interconnectivity so you can have the scores up. what's grown in the bountiful state of california often doesn't stay there. and some of the very best produce, seafood, and other treasuries end up at the chicago restaurant. that's next on "the dish." with three critic will i acclaimed musical albums, kacey musgraves certainly has made her name. the singer/songwriter says her love of music began when she was just a little girl. >> i grew up wanting to be a singer. i mean i grew up just singing, singing, singing. >> did you sing into a hair brush? >> hauer brish, karaoke mike, broom stick, yeah, singing all the time oopds. it's interesting. i fell a shift. i moved to nashville when i was about 19.
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i figured out you could have an actual career as a songwriter and not put your face out there. i was kind of turned off by the whole artist side of things. and then somewhere along the way, i started collecting these songs that felt like i wouldn't want to give them up. >> musgraves released her debut album back in 2013. she insisted merry-go-round be the first single. it was an edgy choice that a record executive told her would not work for radio. >> i wouldn't be proud of changing myself to try to apiece to a wider rage of people. >> and what did he say to you? >> he said, well, sometimes in this business, you have to do things that you're not proud of, and i said that's where you and i, sir, are very different. >> you would really prefer not at to have the career you have than to have a hit song and not be proud of it. >> no oh, my gosh. i can't imagine something more
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excruciating. it's not worth it to me. >> staying true to herself has paid off beg. big.
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this morning on "the dish" the chef who brought his own version of california cuisine back to the midwest. his mom became an executive chef at google. in california she was inspired by the state's incredible produce and he was too. >> at the top chicago restaurant he opened pacific standard team featuring fresh california produce and local meats all
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cooked on wood-fired grill. the restaurant won the james beard award and now the rooftop venue is set to open later this month. chef, good morning and welcome to "the dish." >> thank you so much. it's a pleasure to be here. thanks for having me. >> oh, absolutely. you tell us you're going to start with our favorite. but tell us what's on the table here. >> this is a very easy cocktail, hibiscus margarita. cheers. >> cheers. >> cheers. >> cheers. >> thanks so much for having me. >> thank you. >> we have this basel slat with a vinaigrette. this is a steak with pluck cucumber and like a pumpkin seed pesto for lack of a better term. this is a pacific classic-type greens. grilled broccoli with peanuts and corn and maybe most
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excitingly, the cake. >> it looks absolutely amazing. we mentioned that your mom is a chef. you grew up. your dad is cajun? >> yes. >> so what was that like as far as the influences on you in your childhood? >> i mean it was -- it was the kind of household where we would talk about what was for dinner at breakfast. >> i like that. >> life revolved around food. you know, it was kind of the fabric of life was just how we related to each other. that's how we relate to each other too. >> that's what we do here. >> does mom say you should be cooking what i'm cooking and dad says cook what i'm cooking. >> mom gets mad. >> and she should. >> you love influences too. i love reading rick bayless, an influence early on. >> yes. rick was a good friend of my mom's and became a good friend of mine and was really influential. the major lesson i took from him
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is people don't go out to eat what they eat at home. it's like put some vn gar inega it, add salt, cook with fruit, grill things, the fire is delicious. >> i'm interested in how you see your interpretation of california cuisine being from the midwest. how did you put that twist on it. >> to rewind a little bit, my mom is a food writer, she's chinese. first-generation immigrant. we went to the mar get. average grocery star was a thai grocery. we were cooking this really intimate american cuisine at home. it's american cuisine. she moved out to california. and the food that we werie inkk already became more of itself because of the access of ingredients out there, because there's a massive chinese population out there, because there's a massive hispanic
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population out there. so the essence of the food increased. then you go out there and eat in those restaurants. there's a real food conversation going on in california. >> what do you mean about that? >> i wish i could take credit for this line. stewart, one of my favorite chefs, says the california expects cross-cultural conversations in their food, they expect to go out and eat interesting things in their pasta and put interesting things on their steaks. i feel like it's this mishmash of kifrmt cultures that represents america in general. >> is the wood fire part of your cajun background? >> no, no. it's a part of key to good food, right? everyone comes in and says what makes the food so good. i say, it's the fire. they say, what's the secret. it's the fact we cook it over wood sthiet's wood and it's flames. >> exactly. >> your college degree was in what? >> philosophy. >> philosophy. >> with us that a real i'm going
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to become a philosopher or was it always about food? >> not one bit real. it was always going to be with food with my parents being who they are. it was never -- besides wanting to be a firefighter when i was 4. >> that's in everyone's dna. >> it's something my family does. it helps me deal with people, which is another part of my job. >> you have lived it and continue to live it. i'm going to ask you to sign the dish. if you could have this meal with anyone past or present, who would it be, besides us, of course? >> my staff. i'd love to share this meal with my staff. i think that kitchen staffs and dishwashing staffs and service staffs never get enough credit, so i'd definitely want to share it with my staff and a quick bruce springsteen mention. >> hello. >> if i could share it with the boss. >> the employees. >> and bruce. >> there you go. >> thank you so much. >> thank you for having me. it with us amazing.
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>> if you want to learn more, you can head to our website at cbsthismorning.com. >> that would be employees and the boss, right? >> i like what you did there. >> that was good. >> that was brian actually. >> thank you. >> our behind the scenes. >> here's a look at the weather for your weekend. up next in our "saturday sessions," nick lowe, singer/songwriter, has been churning out songs for more than 50 years. we'll talk with nan credited with shaping punk rock, in making some of the most beloved power pop around. plus he and his backup band the straitjackets will tear it up right here in studio 57. i'm phil mickelson.
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that's me long before i had psoriatic arthritis. i've always been a go-getter and kinda competitive. flash forward, then psoriatic arthritis started getting the better of me. and my doctor said my joint pain could mean permanent joint damage. and enbrel helps relieve joint pain, helps stop that joint damage, plus helps skin get clearer. ask about enbrel so you can get back to being your true self. enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been someplace where fungal infections are common. or if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores have had hepatitis b, have been treated for heart failure or if you have persistent feve, bruising, bleeding or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. nice! visit enbrel.com to see how your joint damage could progress.
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enbrel fda approved for over 17 years. -keith used to be great to road-trip with. but since he bought his house... are you going 45? -uh, yes. 55 is a suggestion. -...it's kind of like driving with his dad. -what a sign, huh? terry, can you take a selfie of me? -take a selfie of you? -yeah. can you make it look like i'm holding it? -he did show us how to bundle home and auto at progressive.com and save a bunch of money. -oh, a plaque. "he later navigated northward, leaving... progressive can't protect you from becoming your parents. but we can protect your home and auto when you bundle with us. are confusing quilted northern for robes. they're both cushiony, comforting, and add elegance to your home. but quilted northern is not a robe. it's just really nice toilet paper.
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♪ miles and miles and miles. ♪ chasing a dream only fools like me would follow. ♪ i'm just go with the flowing ♪ no matter where i am going ♪ and i got no plans on slowing down. jeremy. jeremy, you ready to go? ♪ i'm a nomad, nomad... jeep compass. freedom to do it all. this morning on our "saturday sessions," the legendary nick lowe. he's had many roles in the music
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business. as a performer and as a songwriter and producer for other top afts including elvis costello and the pretenders. in just a moment he'll perform root here in studio 57. but first our music man anthony mason sat down with nick lowe here in new york. >> reporter: nick lowe has written many chapters in his long and illustrious music career. >> last year was my 50th year in the music business, and i can hardly believe it, you know, that i'm still doing it. ♪ change your mind sound of breaking glass ♪ >> reporter: the singer and producer is perhaps best known as a master songwriter. are you the kind of person who gets up at a certain time, goes into a room, and says i'm going to write? or are you waiting for something? >> no, no. i wait. i'm a waiter. yes. it's a very strange process, which i am. i don't know how it works and
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why it works. it's really mysterious. >> reporter:et took lowe nearly a dozen years to finish one of his best known songs, "the beast in me." >> which they finished the very first episode of "the sopranos" with, which i'm extremely proud about. >> reporter: lowe originally wrote the song for johnny cash. ♪ o, the beast in me >> reporter: who recorded it on his 1994 album, "american recordings." lowe's first wife was cash's stepdaughter carleen carter. footage of their wedding appeared in the video of his biggest solo hit, "cruel to be kind" in 1979. the british singer had launched his career with the band brinsley schwarz, who made their
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american debut at the fillmore east in new york in 1970. >> we were on with quicksilver messenger service. >> what did you learn? >> i resolved to figure out a way to courting it without ever actually going out with it, if you see what i mean. >> reporter: in the '70s, lowe helped start an indy label, stiff records, producing the first five albums of its biggest act, elvis costello. one of costello's most popular recordings, "what's so funny about peace, love & undering," was written by lowe. the song would see even greater
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success when curtis stigers recorded it for the soundtrack of the 1992 film, "the body gard." >> did you see that coming? >> i really didn't think about it until it came out. it started to do well and it sold a million, two, three, four, it got about five million. that was an undreamt of number. and then it goes, you know, 8 million, 10, 12, 15, 20. it was ridiculous. then it gets up there and you do the math as they say. that's a lot of dough. >> reporter: it helped lowe reignite his career. >> that "body gard" thing, i fall to my knees and give thanks for that because it came. it couldn't have come at a better time. >> reporter: now 70, nick lowe says he's learned to use his age to his advantage. >> things become a whole lot easier if you embrace your flaws and actually use them -- it
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becomes part of a new act in a way. >> looking good for his age. now performing from his new e.p. alongside the masked members of lowe's straitjackets, here's nick lowe with "love starvation." ♪ ♪ i woke up early with love starvation hugging my pillow all alone in a rickety bed ♪ ♪ baby, if it's any consolation the needle's in the red ♪ ♪ it only hit me when i went by a mirror that's when i saw what was written all over my face ♪ ♪ i'm suffering love starvation a very bad case ♪ ♪
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♪ i'll tell you something about love starvation it's like a prison in your mind you're locked up in ♪ ♪ disappointment, desperation your two old friends ♪ ♪ make it stop, make it stop if only i could turn back the clock ♪ ♪ make it so, make it so 'cause i tell you that i can't exist in a world like this ♪ ♪ ♪ show me a love that comes in colors or even one i can dream in black and white ♪ ♪ any love is better than no love so any love's right ♪ ♪ make it stop, make it stop if only i could turn back the clock now ♪ ♪ make it so, make it so
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'cause i tell you that i can't exist in a world like this ♪ ♪ i woke up early with love starvation hugging my pillow all alone in a rickety bed ♪ ♪ baby, if it's any consolation the needle's in the red ♪ ♪ the needle's in the red ♪ love starvation, baby ♪ it's got me on the back foot ♪ it's put me in a dark and lonely place it got me never knowing if i'm v going to start living again ♪ ♪ love starvation, baby ♪ love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love ♪ ♪ >> don't go away. we ooh bell right back with more
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music from nick lowe. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> announcer: "saturday sessions" are sponsored by state farm. go with the one that's here to help life go right. well it finally happened, zachary. somebody burned down my she shed. nobody burned down your she shed, cheryl. well my she shed's on fire. your she shed was struck by lightning. zachary, is my she shed covered by state farm? your she shed's covered, cheryl. you hear that victor? i'm getting a new she shi-er she shed. she shi-er? mhhm. that's wonderful news. home insurance trusted by more people than any other. state farm. home insurance trusted by copdso, to breathe better,the. i started with anoro. ♪ go your own way copd tries to say, "go this way." i say, "i'll go my own way" with anoro. ♪ go your own way once-daily anoro contains two medicines
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from new love. ♪ to life long friends. ♪ moments together call for america's family favorite. ♪ lipton®. live alive. but allstate helps you. with drivewise. feedback that helps you drive safer. and that can lower your cost now that you know the truth... are you in good hands?
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morning: saturday," it's summ summer's annoyance but a creature of the world. we'll look at the mosquito how
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it's changed cities and led to scientific breakthroughs that could get rid of it for good, but should we. >> fascinating. >> have a good week, everybody. >> we leave you with more from nick lowe. >> this is "half a boy and half a man." ♪ ♪ you'd better run you'd better hide you'd better lock your house and leave the kids inside ♪ ♪ here come the 20th century's latest scam he's half a boy and half a man ♪ ♪ he amt a fool but he's a tool because history left don't know what his right hand's doing ♪
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♪ he'd keep a king kong eating out of the palm of his hand now he's half a boy and half a man ♪ ♪ ♪ the spg's on the streets they never made no provision in the original plan for half a boy and half a man ♪ ♪ when his fingers do the walking in the middle of the night he's got the people talking and baby let me tell you nothing's going to turn out right ♪ ♪ well, you'd better be quick on your feet the spg is coming in the street they never made no provision in the original plan for half a boy and half a man ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ when his fingers do the walking in the middle of the night he's got the people talking and baby let me tell you nothing is going to turn out right ♪ ♪ well you'd better run better hide you'd better lock your house and keep the kids inside ♪ ♪ the 21st century's latest scam he's half a boy and half a man he's half a by and half a man half a boy and half a man half a boy and half a man look out ♪
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>> for those of you still with us, we have more music from nick lowe. >> this is his classic song "what's so funny about peace, love, and understanding?" ♪ ♪ as i walk through this wicked world searching for light in the darkness of insanity ♪
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♪ i ask myself is all hope leost ♪ ♪ is there only pain, hatred, and misery ♪ ♪ and each time i feel like this inside there's one thing i want to know ♪ ♪ what's so funny about peace, love, and understanding ♪ ♪ ooh what's so funny about peace, love, and understanding ♪ ♪
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♪ and
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strauch a heat advisory is underway in the inland valleys. we will see the hottest temperatures this weekend. a san jose police officer arrested. the case involving drugs and weapons charges. fire destroys another construction project in the east bay. federal investigators are searching for a cause. help cameras may play a critical role. it is about 6 a.m. good morning. flock let's get started with the forecast. i am starting off with the ugly numbers and

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