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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  September 14, 2019 4:00am-6:00am PDT

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good morning, it is september 14th, 2019. welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." paying the price. the first and perhaps most famous parent in the college bribery scandal is sentenced to prison time. we'll have details on what is next for felicity huffman and what it may mean for other parents involved. a second big storm less than two weeks after a deadly category-five hurricane hit the bahamas. a new threat moves in. details on the danger facing those still without shelter. cheerleader sentenced. a young woman accused of killing her newborn daughter two days after her prom learns her fate
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in court. and a search and recovery. one person's online curiosity accidentally solves a decades' long mystery. what he saw and what it uncovered. first we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> how do you feel about going to jail? >> this is a symbolic sentence. i think it's a message sentence which is wealth and privelidge can't get you out of this. but wrong. >> the first sentence handed down in the college admissions scandal. >> it's upsetting because it's like a slap on the wrist. >> reporter: a new tropical storm has formed near the bahamas, threatening the same islands hit so hard by hurricane dorian. >> welcome to the peak of the atlantic headquarter season. we're monitoring four areas of concern. like 30 cops with assault rifles came running up the stairs. >> one person dead, two injured after the shooting. >> we don't believe the shooting was random.
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antonio brown iset to play on sunday. he was not placed on the exempt list following his civil suit for sexual assault. a harvest moonlighting up the sky. >> it won't happen again nationwide until 2049. >> kind of creepy. this guy head a wife. she's refusing to stand around him while he is motivating an entire organization. all that -- >> sad news from the music world. legendary rock star eddie money has passed away. ♪ two tickets to paradise ♪ won't you pack your bags we'll leave tonight ♪ and that you will matters -- >> president trump wages a new war against a light bulb. i said it. you don't all have the bulbs to report it because i do. >> the bulb that we're forced to use, number one most importantly, the light's no good. i always look orange. [ laughter ] >> on "cbs this morning saturday." >> so do you. >> 3-2 pitch, sliced to right.
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aquino giving chase. reaches over and makes an outstanding catch. or did he not -- he didn't come up with him. ticked off his glove. that young man made a nice play there. the little dude caught it. >> stay with it. atta boy. >> nice play. [ laughter ] ♪ >> he had his eyes on it the whole way. >> the kid didn't interfere either. >> i don't think so. he was there, player had the opportunity. if it was an adult people maybe saying something different. >> good for him. that's tough. welcome to the weekend, everyone, i'm jeff glor along with dana jacobson and michelle miller. coming up this morning, while many of us look for that work-life balance, we're going to look at one person's work work balance. we'll meet the man who is trying to excel in his career in the military along with his other job playing in the nfl. dana spoke with this true patriot. plus, she's an expert at one of the world's greatest
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restaurants, but her latest challenge is actually getting kids to expand their palates. meet this newly printed author who is trying to change the way the next generation looks at food. >> that is truly an issue from experience. i can tell you. then they are the tunes that tell our american story. but many don't know the true history of country music. we're going to talk to ken burns on the eve of his new documentary about the men and women who created a sound like no other. that is all ahead. first, our top story -- the first parent in the college bribery scandal has been sentenced, and it is a high-profile one on. friday, actress felicity huffman was sentenced to 14 days in federal prison and other penalties after pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit fraud. legal observers say huffman's sentence could be a sign of things to come for the 51 others charged in that scandal. kenneth skrag here with more. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. huffman is one of dozens of parents charged with paying
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mastermind rick singer's organization to get their children into elite universties. prosecutors looked at huffman to make an example out of the "desperate housewives" star to pleaded guilty in may. actress felicity huffman stared straight ahead as she left the courthouse with her husband, william h. macy, now a convicted felon. in court she told the judge, her voice shaking, "i am deeply sorry. i've inflicted more damage than i could ever imagine." she said her daughter told her, "i don't know who you are anymore." prosecutors argued she should spend 30 days in prison for paying $15,000 to have her daughter's satd answers corrected -- s.a.t. answers corrected. "a message must be sent," prosecutors argued, "and imprisonment is the only way to send that message." the judge agreed telling huffman that, quote, being a good mother did not excuse her actions. in a statement released after sentencing, huffman said, "i accept the court's decision
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today without reservations. there are no excuses or justifications for my actions, period." now that the judge has ruled on huffman, 14 others who also pleaded guilty will soon learn their sentences. cbs news legal analyst rikki klieman. >> the message this sentence sends to those who have already pleaded guilty is that you are not walking out of this courtroom. you are getting a minimum of 14 days, and likely more. >> are you satisfied -- >> reporter: actress lori loughlin and her husband, designer mossimo giannulli, both pleaded not guilty. the couple is accused of paying half a million daughters to get their daughters into the university of southern california by creating fake athletic profiles for them. >> right now they should be feeling very nervous because if felicity huffman wasn't walking out of there, nobody was. >> reporter: huffman also received one year probation, 250 hours of community service, and a $30,000 fine. she's required to self-report to
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prison by october 25th. her lawyers are hoping that's in california. >> lot of people watching that right now to see if justice is served. thank you. breaking overnight, there's more trouble for the hurricane-ravaged bahamas. now tropical storm humberto is threatening grand bahama island. the new danger is creating new worries for the more than 2,000 living in shelters and those trying to rebuild their homes. meteorologist jeff berardelli is tracking the storm. good morning, everyone, we have good news with tropical storm humberto. winds are only 40 miles per hour. the worst of the storm to the east of the abaco islands by about 50 miles. this could turn out to be a decent situation for them. very limited impacts on florida's east coast as it takes more of a turn toward the east. we have tropical storm warnings out for the bahamas, but not florida's east coast. you can see why. at the closest approach it's going to be 150 to 200 miles to the east of the florida coast,
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keeping the worst impacts to the east. the system is likely to be rushed out to sea. watch out, bermuda. as it moves your way it's going to be a cat one, two, maybe low-end cat-three hurricane. here's a look at the wind and the gusts. the drier said of the storm doesn't have too much action. passing breezy showers, wind gusts to 40, 50 miles per hour across the bahamas. maybe 35, 40 miles per hour along florida's east coast, places like cape canaveral. the other big story in the southeast is this -- big crashing waves along the coast. up to around 30 feet which means we're going to see rough, rough conditions on the beaches and strong rip current risk, as well. that's your weather forecast. >> all right. thank you so much. this morning an alert from the food and drug administration about a popular heartburn medication. small amounts of a cancer-causing chemical have been found in zantec as well as generic forms. the fda's not issuing a recall and says patients can continue
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taking the medication. zantec's maker says it takes patients' safety seriously and is committed to working with the fda. medical contributor dr. david agus has more on all of this. doctor, good morning. >> good morning, jeff. >> last year the same chemical was linked to dozens of recalls in blood pressure drugs. why not now? >> reporter: this is a chemical that's involved that when you make ramidadine or zantec, it was found in quantities -- they haven't said how much. my gut is they don't know all of the details. they found it in june, they're telling us now. there are other medicine that's do the same thing. if it were me and i were taking z zantac, i would switch. i don't know why the fda didn't, but i would advise viewers to get a different medicine. we know the concentrations they found were higher than that seen in food. in a statement they weren't high
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enough to cause a recall. that being said, i would probably just switch medicines now to things that don't have m dna to our knowledge. >> there's prescription and over the counter. if you have a prescription or over the counter, what are you looking at? >> they're both different strength. talk to your doctor and say what's an alternative prescription or ton help your stomach. >> all right. dr. david agus, thanks for the good information. we'll see you later in "morning rounds." >> i'll be here. >> we're working you hard today. a food and drug administration panel is recommending approval of the first drug to treat life-threatening peanut allergies. the experimental treatment calls for daily capsules of peanut powder that gradually helps children build up a tolerance. as dr. jon lapook reports, it's already offering hope to the more than one million children battling a peanut allergy. >> when i was younger, my mom always had to make everything from scratch. >> reporter: danielle tryon has
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had multiple allergies including to peanuts since she was a toddler. from early on she found out how to avoid exposure. >> just being in rooms, any time i smelled peanut butter i would be hyper alert. it's something that can kill you. >> reporter: she's had to get adrenaline four times to counter life-threatening reactions. her mom -- >> it was really hard. >> reporter: in 2016 she enrolled in a trial for a new treatment. patients swallow a trace amount of peanut protein and gradually scale up. >> you slowly make your body get used to it over time. >> reporter: dr. jonathan spergle in philadelphia is one of the trial's investigators. in patients ages 4 to 17, 2/3 taking the drug were able to tolerate the equivalent of two peanuts. nearly 12% withdrew because of allergic reactions or side effects like stomach problems. >> it means cross contamination's not such a big issue. you can't go home and have a peanut butter sandwich. but you should be able to walk
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out with less fear. >> reporter: the treatment has already given danielle, now 17, a taste of her new freedom. like getting a sundae at an ike shop for the first time. >> we gave it to her and watched her eat and taking pictures. people probably thought we were ridiculous. >> reporter: imagining life in a college dorm. >> i could not even just believe that that's right down the line now. >> she's got her wings. she might as well go off and fly. >> reporter: this is not a cure. this is about that accident al exposure to a small amount of peanut protein. think about a child afraid to go to a birthday party or restaurant because they're afraid of having a life-threatening reaction. they're still not going to be able to have a peanut butter ice cream cone but they will have a more normal life. for "cbs this morning saturday," i'm dr. jon lapook. >> hope for a lot of people. president trump is turning his attention to guns days after calling for my restrictions on cigare. the president is spending the weekend at the white house considering an even more contentious issue.
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his administration could be ready to release some type of gun-control proposal as soon as next week. ben tracy is at the white house. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, the white house has been talking to both republicans and democrats on capitol hill trying to figure out what if anything they can all agree to. the president wants to be seen as taking some issue -- some action on guns, rather, in the wake of all these recent mass shootings. a moment at this week's democratic debate may have again changed the dynamics. >> i met the mother of a 15-year-old girl who was shot by an ar-15 -- >> reporter: beto o'rourke may have had the most memorable line at the debate -- >> hell yes, we're going to take your ak-14, your ak-47 -- >> reporter: now some of his fellow democrats fear o'rourke's words will be used against their efforts to pass new gun-control legislation. >> i frankly think that that clip will be played for years at
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second amendment rallies with organizations that try to scare people by saying democrats are coming for your guns. >> reporter: o'rourke has made gun-control the centerpiece of his campaign since back-to-back mass shootings in his hometown of el paso and dayton, ohio, last month. >> a lot of progress was made i believe on the background checks and various things having to do with guns. >> reporter: president trump met with his top advisers thursday to figure out what measures the president would actually support. most likely focusing on mental health and expediting the death penalty for mass shooters. after the recent mass shootings, mr. trump had said this -- >> we have to have meaningful background checks. i'm talking about meaningful. add that word, meaningful background checks. >> reporter: after several calls with the national rifle association, the president backed down. >> we already have very serious background checks. we have strong background checks. >> reporter: and thursday, mr. trump seemed more focused on protecting second amendment rights from what he views as
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overzealous democrats. >> democrats want to confiindicate guns from law-abiding -- confiscate guns from law-abiding americans so they're defenseless when somebody walks into their house with a gun. it's like whatever you want, whatever you want, i'm defenseless. whatever you want. how crazy is this? >> reporter: now it's worth noting that this week the president called for a ban on flavored e-cigarettes in part because they have been blamed for the deaths of six people. so far this year, nearly 10,000 americans have been killed by guns. jeff? >> thank you so much. three of president trump's rivals for the republican presidential nomination are criticizing the gop for canceling primaries in four states. republican officials in kansas, nevada, arizona, and south carolina called off their nominating contest for next year, handing all of their delegates to the incumbent, president trump. in response, republican challengers william weld, joe walsh, and mark sanford wrote an
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op-ed in this morning's "washington post." in it they call that decision a disgrace and write, quote, the saying "may the best man win" is a quintessential value that the republican party must honor if we are to command the respect of the american people. only the weak fear competition. none of the challengers is expected to defeat president trump. sentencing was friday for a former ohio high school cheerleader accused of killing her newborn daughter two days after attending her senior prom. brooke skylar richardson was acquitted of the most serious charges including murder but was convicted of abuse of a corpse. the judge told richardson the young woman had a grotesque disregard for life after the infant's body was found buried in richardson's back yard. richardson was 18 at the time. >> i'm forever sorry, and i -- i'm so sorry. i'm really, really sorry and wanted. >> reporter: brooke skylar richardson emotional before
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learning she would be sentenced to three years of probation and seven days in jail. >> i can sometimes be selfish, but i would like to think i've become better with the knowledge that i've upset everyone and hurt so many people with what i've done. >> reporter: the trial began last week with prosecutors arguing richardson kept her pregnancy a secret and never intended to keep her baby. >> brooke took her own daughter's life, destroyed all evidence of her birth, and buried her in the back yard. >> reporter: in an interrogation room in 2017 she described the events of the birth. >> how did you know you were going to have her? did you have -- >> i could feel it, something needed to come out. i could feel it. it just came out when i pushed, and it was freezing. didn't make any noises. >> reporter: medical experts testifies for both the prosecution and defense agreed there was no proof the baby was alive. and it was that lack of proof that prevented the jury from convicting richardson on the
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most serious of charges. >> we didn't have the evidence to prove it beyond a reasonable doubt beuse we could not present medical cause of death. >> reporter: the baby's paternal grandmother spoke friday and said her family did not know about the baby until long after the baby's death. >> may 7th. i don't get to have a birthday party for my first grandchild. instead i get to send her balloons to heaven with notes telling her how much her daddy loves her, how much i love her, how much we all love her. >> richardson was credited with time served so she walked out of the courthouse on friday. if she violates her probation, she could spend a year in jail. a taliban delegation is in russia this morning to talk about the prospect for the withdrawal of u.s. forces from afghanistan. the extraordinary development comes days after president trump announced u.s. talks with the taliban had collapsed. whatever the outcome, some afghan ibm fear their hard-won freedom may be in jeopardy. charlie d'agata is in kabul, the
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afghan capital, with their story. >> reporter: good morning. one phase of the taliban talks has resumed today in moscow which may be a sign of progress. but women here feel that even a partial power-sharing agreement with the taliban will mean that that progress is actually a significant step backwards. >> there is all kind of threats. >> reporter: this was an aspiring medical student when the taliban swept into kabul pulling her dreams of a brighter future from beneath her. >> for a woman it was not allowed to go see a doctor by themselves. they ask all the women to wear a burqa which is not islamic. it's basically like a prison. you sit and look at the world and the city from the windows of your house. >> reporter: like a prison. >> like a prison basically. >> reporter: the former m.p. is head of movement for change in afghanistan. women who are brutally oppressed under the taliban can now be educated, hold top jobs, take part in voting, and run for
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office. in talks at the u.s., the talsz have -- taliban have promised to safeguard some of those rights. they can hold a job, but they can't be the boss. run for office, but they can't be president. kuthi is skeptical but hopes the progress is irreversible. >> there's a new afghanistan that accommodates women, younger generation, media. if anything happens to the woman, she can inform the whole world by using all these technologies. >> reporter: she says young women born in the dying details of taliban rule are now 18-years-old and empowered by an independence they've only ever known. when u.s. forces first invadesed this country after 9/11, the name of that mission was operation enduring freedom. 18 years later, enduring freedom is exactly what women here are determined to fight for now. for "cbs this morning saturday," charlie d'agata, kabul.
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at least five people are dead after heavy rain ravaged southeast spain. two straight days of devastating downpours in the region forced officials to shut down local airports and train stations. torrential rain swept away cars and destroyed houses. the spanish military used helicopters to lift stranded residents to safety. police there are warning residents to stay off the roads. sunny, dry weather is expected for the next nfew days. eddie money who rose to fame with hits like "two tickets to paradise" has died. ♪ i've got two tickets to paradise i've got two tickets to paradise ♪ >> money revealed last month that he was suffering from stage-four cancer of the esophagus. and 1987 he was nominated for a best rock vocal grammy for his biggest hit, "take me home tonight." ♪ take me home tonight i don't want to let you go till you see the light ♪
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>> that was one of my go-tos. ed money was born edward mahoney in brooklyn, new york and briefly served on the police force before moving to career to pursue a career in music. eddie money was 70 years old. >> want to dance there. >> i wanted to do that a little. ♪ take me home tonight >> there's a lot of social media about "two tickets to paradise" and eddie money. a lot of comments. it is about 22 minutes after the hour. here's a look at weather for your weekend. ♪ many of us hop on google to get answers, but rarely is a mystery like it this uncovered. see what one person found when
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they zoomed in on this unassuming lake. also, a new generation of young people is health cared on nicotine after years of declining smoking rates. coming up on "morning rounds," a look at the number of serious lung illnesses and deaths linked to vaping. and later, it takes a lot of discipline to be a u.s. navy lieutenant. the same for being a pro football player. we'll introduce you to a standout guy who manages to balance both very demanding careers. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday."
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♪ for many kids eating the same three or four things over and over again is just fine with them. some food professionals want to turn the page on that. we'll show you how a book series and a relatable character might have the recipe for success. and what makes country music cotry music? ken burns tries to answer that in his ambitious documentary. we will speak with him and the people behind the music. we'll be right back. y you and
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by megan. you told us some never-before-things likes -- i have to say, bravo, too, to gwyneth paltrow. she played a much bigger role i think than -- i think than many people realized. >> when we were starting out, i barely thought we should call her. i thought, she was harvey's biggest star. she's not an activist type. she's not going to talk to us. when only a few people like ashley judd were helping us, gwyneth told us her story of pre-dation with harvey weinstein, told us how he
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threatened her, and she was afraid she was going to lose those critical early roles. and also, tween was obsessed -- weinstein was obsessed with the question of whether or not she was speaking to us. at one point i got a panicked phone call. she was hiding in her bathroom from harvey weinstein because he showed up to her house. she had showed up -- she knew he was coming to the party, but he showed up early, and that was scary. >> that's an extraordinary moment. another thing you reveal for the first time is harvey weinstein's brother bob wrote a letter to him two years earlier in which he said "you have brought shame to the family and your company through your misbehavior." >> one of the lingering mysteries that we wanted to dig deeper on is what was bob weinstein's role? he was his brother, he was his co-founder of these two companies. and megan twohy, my partner, sat down with bob for reflective interviews. we also were able to publish this very long searching letter that he wrote to his brother in
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2015, two years before we broke the story.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning saturday." we begin this half hour with a decades' old cold case solved by an unwitting internet sleuth. a grim scene last month just outside of west palm beach, florida. police pulling a car from a pond in a gated community. inside, the body of a man who disappeared more than 20 years ago, and as manuel bojorquez reports, the body was found even exist when the man was last seen alive. >> reporter: it's clearly visible in this google earth satellite photo. the outlines of a submerged car on the bottom of a retention pond in wellington, florida. for more than two decades, the residents of the grand isle
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community had no idea it was there. and the answers it unlocked. in a 22-year-old missing persons case. the discovery of the white saturn in late august was made by a local school board member who was using google earth to map bus routes. police pulled the highly calcified vehicle from the lake and found the skeletal remains of william moult inside. the 40-year-old's clothing and personal belongings were all intact. he was last seen on november 7th, 1997, at a nightclub in lantana, florida. around 9:30 p.m., he called his girlfriend to say he was heading home to lake worth, but he never made it home. arthur jacobs has lived here nearly as long as the car was submerged. >> if you knew there was a car in the lake, nobody but nobody would have thought a body was in the car. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning saturday," manuel bojorquez, wellington, florida. >> solves a mystery but another one, what happened. >> what crazy, fascinating and
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disturbing story. >> sounds like a "48 hours" piece. >> i agree. >> there you go. presented by michelle miller. more news ahead. first, here's a look at the weather for your weekend. ♪ smoking e-cigarettes was often considered to be safer than smoking regular cigarettes. coming up, the sharp increase on the number of vaping-related illnesses and the rest of this week's medical news. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." ♪ when you have diabetes, dietary choices are crucial to help manage blood sugar, but it can be difficult to find a balanced solution.
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time for "morning rounds." one of the biggest health issues lately is raping. this can mean using e-cigarettes or other vaping devices that contain thc, the active ingredient in marijuana. >> according to the most recent data from the centers for disease control there have been 380 confirmed and probable related illnesses linked to e-cigarettes or vaping products. this has occurred in 36 states with six confirmed deaths, major questions remain. here to discuss that and more is cbs news medical contributor dr. david agus. got to ask you, this never
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seemed like the best idea to inhale any substance for a lot of people. so what -- what is going on now? >> you know, vaping came from a pharmacist in china said, hey, there's not enough tobacco, and it costs too much for china. let me figure out a way to get nicotine into the lung. you need a carrier molecule. this molecule carries nicotine in the lung, and it stays there and over time can cause problems. you know, it took over two decades to show that smoking tobacco caused lung cancer. and when we put this on the market and allow kids to use it really without long-term testing, bad things can happen. i not that's what we're seeing now. and so it scares me that we're doing experiments with children. and there's new regulations by the fda, take away the flavor components to hopefully limit its use in children. >> do you think that doing that this is going to hamper use not just in children but adults also? >> it's a start. you're right. we need a much stronger fda to
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say, hey, we have to test this. it's going to the lung, directly to the blood stream. we have to test this before we allow it on the market. when you had companies like juul than smoking and last week the r fda said, hey, you can't do that until you show it, that's what we need. we need data. >> if the fda is designing guidelines moving forward then, what should they be doing at this moment? >> the hard part is that you need time. in order to test the safety of something, you have to test it for years to see what really happens. we have to do real testing on these compounds that kids are using. we have to do testing of things that go into the lung to see does it cause problems with the lung. does it cause dna changes that can lead to cancer. the answer in this case and many cases is yes. they do cause problems. >> according to the alzheimer's association an estimated 5.8 million americans are currently living with alzheimer's disease. and by 2050, the number is projected to rise to 14 million. >> it's a disease that not only
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impacts the patient but also their loved ones and caregivers. earlier this week, dr. mehmet oz announced that his mother was diagnosed with alzheimer's writing in a post, quote, hearing the official diagnosis was devastating, but just as painful for me was the realization that the signs were there all along. i had just been overlooking them. and we know he's a friend of yours. in your conversations that you've had with him since, what has stood out? that line right there does when a doctor doesn't recognize the signs. >> first of all, when someone talks about a mistake they made publicly to help others, i think that's powerful. and mehmet did that this week. and you know, i think he felt bad when he looked back -- those symptoms were there for a year, and he didn't notice them. and since then, he's been tested, and he has one of the genes for alzheimer's. and he's talked about that. we talked about ways he can actually prevent or delay the onset of alzheimer's in him and how he's taking those actions. and hopefully he can be a lesson for others to do that. >> are there risk factors people
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can control? >> no question. is that -- what you can do is things like just at night having quiet. when you have your partner snoring or noise in the background street, that actually, your brain needs quiet. put orange foam earplugs, you reduce the level of cognitive decline as you get older. every year you put off retirement you lose 3%. all of those need to be talked about about your doctor and your lifestyle. hopefully dr. oz stepping up can help other people. >> always the earlier you see some signs, the better off you are. dr. david agus, double duty for you today. thank you. good seeing you. speaking of double duty, he's an officer and a gentleman. a pro football player, too. joe cardona on the challenges he faces to his commitment to his team and to serving his country. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." ♪
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with high-profile skill positions such as quarterback and receiver. long snapper doesn't quite make the list. snapping a football through your legs as far as 15 feet directly into another player's hands in less than a second takes precision. perhaps military precision. that is certainly the case for joe cardona. in june the patriots long snapper in the second year of a four-year, $4 million deal, was promoted to lieutenant in the u.s. navy. ensuring another season of double duty. one weekend a month, and at least two weeks a year, joe cardona is like any other member of the naval reserves. but come sundays every fall -- >> 25 yard -- >> reporter: lieutenant cardona becomes a different kind of patriot. what has that meant to you to be able to represent the navy in the nfl but also represent the nfl in the navy? >> i think it's a tremendous opportunity that the reserves has really granted me and
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allowed me goals to bring back knowledge that i've learned and put it into service. >> reporter: the idea of service to country was instilled in cardona at an early age. having grown up the son of a sailor. his first love was football. >> i've played football as long as i can remember. i was just talking to my mom the other day, and i mentioned -- i don't know the last time i had a fall without football. it's like, you ner had a fall without football. >> reporter: cardona's father didn't think his undersized son would make his high school team, so in military-like fashion, they would arrive early at practice and focus on drills that would arm cardona with an array of skills. >> so he was having me kick the ball, punt it, snap it, you know, anything that i could do to -- to get better. and that really stuck. >> reporter: his passion for the military also developed with marine corps air station miramar about 20 miles from cardona's home. >> i mean, you grow up near miramar and you see jets flying
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over. there's nothing cooler than that. i wanted to fly. i wanted that experience. >> i feel the need, the need for speed. >> reporter: miramar served as the inspiration for the movie "top gun," which in turn became inspiration for cardona's dad. >> this is ghost rider requesting a fly by -- >> reporter: every -- >> every time i asked for something out of the ordinary my dad would give me the, that's a negative, ghost rider, the pattern's full. he was give me that line. >> reporter: as if hollywood scripted it, cardona was able to combine his two passions when it came time for college. he'd filled out and grown enough to be recruited by the u.s. naval academy to play football. his 6'3" size would keep cardona from the cockpit, it became his advantage as a long snapper. four-year starter for the midshipm midshipmen. >> the length of my torso disqualified me from flying in every platform that i wanted to, you know. that's when i really had to take
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a moment and reassess what i wanted to do. so i had to give up on my dream of flying jets and, you know, being maverick or goose. >> reporter: in 2015, cardona became just the fourth long snapper ever drafted in the nfl. but there was still the issue of his military service which at the time meant active duty for all service academy graduates. >> there was a point where i didn't know whether or not i would actually play in the nfl or whether i'd have to, you know, go active duty and be in that role that i'd prepared forment. >> reporter: cardona would spend his rookie season fulfilling his servicing on gas statie ing oin for the navy at night and one full day a week at the naval academy preparatory school. >> i had to spend my leave to go to training camp and being a rookie in the nfl is hard enough. but i was also trying to find my bearings as a junior officer. fortunately, you know, if you do your job on the military side and you're taking care of everything you need with your
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command, you know, we don't care what you do with your free time. >> reporter: go ahead, play football for the patriots. your full-time job is being in the navy, but your full-time job is with the new england brots. does that stound -- patriots. does that sound crazy to you? >> it does sound crazy. looking back, i can't imagine doing florida again. i was so ingrained with those core values of the naval academy. you know, it's like honor, courage, and commitment. you know and having to uphold those. >> reporter: his dedication hasn't been lost on his teammates. including kicker steven gaskowski. >> we're here all day every day and talk about football and work out for football and do training for football. and you know, he would come in and practice and have to work another job. it put things into perspective. >> reporter: after two super bowl titles and a switch from active to reserve duty, cardona remains as steadfast in his commitment to both the military and the nfl. in june, his military promotion ceremony was held on the same
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day as the patriots got their new super bowl rings. >> just a really special thing. to see, you know, guys like brady and hug them and tell them thank you for your service. >> reporter: when you look at where you are now, early in your nfl career, early in your military career, how long can you keep doing both? >> that is a great question. i don't know how long. but i'm going to continue to do the best i can as long as they, you know, let me fulfill either role. >> cardona talks about this idea, the ideals behind both the military and the patriots. and those idea alls instilled i him and both organizations having flexibility to allow him to do this, as well. >> i have one question -- isn't he tired? he seemed as he thought back with it how tired he was. with the reserves obviously it frees up more time. but there are others doing this, the vikings also have a long snapper who came out of the air force. the army, the eagles squad.
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the steelers have someone, hay handful of guys -- a handful of guys with service -- >> he's tired but it's working for him. >> no time to get in trouble or anything else. he was an influential singer/songwriter, and the work spawned a generation of the most popular musicians but was unknown to most of the world. a look back on his life. if you're heading out the door, record "cbs this morning saturday." coming up in our next hour, a distinctly american art form. a new documentary by ken bruns looks at country music from its roots to its modern day. plus, a new book series encourages children to be as curious about food as they are about other things. we'll show you how it's roped in some culinary heavy hitters. and rafael sadiq is a founding member of the iconnick
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r&b group tony, tony, tony. and we'll hear the story that up until now he was reluctant to tell. and he'll perform in our "saturday session." your watching "cbs this morning saturday." the pink? let's go mets! go time daddy! [ giggling ] ohhhh man. took my hat off. [ "to love somebody" by bee gees playing ] that's crazy! [ crowd cheering ] [ screaming ] let's go mets! ♪ [ cheering ]
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♪ listen up and i'll tell a story about an artist growing old ♪ with heartbreaking lyrics, a ghostly voice, and an offbeat childlike style, daniel johnston was not cut from the same cloth as most rock stars. he inspired so many of them. johnston who died this week at the age of 58 became a cult figure in the 1980s when tapes of his homemade music began circulating in austin's underground music scene and spread from there. he was working at mcdonald's in austin, texas, and he came up with the idea of putting a
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cassette in every hip musician's hamburger sack. what was important wasn't the medium, it was what was on the cassette. >> reporter: the director of the 2005 documentary, "the devil and daniel johnston," -- >> he created his own genre and body of work, that's why we're talking about it today. it lives up to a springsteen, a lou reed, a bob dylan. ♪ true love will find you in the end ♪ >> reporter: johnston's songs about unrequited love and his own meant will -- mental illness struck a chord with some including kurt cobain who brought johnston to prominence when he wore a t-shirt with the hand-drawn cover to the music awards. it landed johnston a record deal and led to artists like pearl jam, willco, and lanna del ray, to perform his songs. his stays in mental hospitals, however, often sidetracked his
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work. news of johnston's death sent heartache through the music community. tributes poured in on line. artists like da national and the flaming lips incorporated johnston's songs their performances this week. ♪ true love will find you in the end ♪ >> reporter: in austin, a mural painted by johnston of the same album cover that brought him acclaim has turned to a place to remember an artist who often feared he was living his life in vain. ♪ he was not living his life in vain. and last year the city of austin declared daniel johnston's birthday as a day to raise awareness for mental health. >> that's great. i never heard of him, and i'm so glad i had a chance to listen in -- >> why we put that together and tried to tell more people about him. >> yeah. thank you, jeff. >> sure. >> thank you -- >> thank tony and brian. up next, behind the music, an authoritative new documentary
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by ken bruns looks at the sometimes surprising roots of country music. we'll get a look. for some of you, your local news is next. the rest, stick around. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." were you angry at donald trump? >> no. >> not at all? >> not for that. >> uh-huh. >> no. i mean, he was being him. i think part of that personality and character is why he was successful in a board room making people fight over lemonade stands. >> what have you learned from that? >> i look back at that time, and i look back at when i was released, and i thought -- i was due for some kind of reckoning -- >> why? >> in my life. i just -- you know, i don't anything difficult. >> did you were you were a -- did you think you were cocky, overconfident? >> sure. elements of that, yeah. if things went wrong, i used to get really like, come on, who
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did that? why did that screw up? >> yeah. yeah. >> you realize now, i'm not going do that. >> yeah. >> there's always tomorrow. >> yeah, yeah, yeah. >> so i think i needed to grow up a bit even though i was, you know, in my 40s. some of the missing tools to be better at my job, i think i picked up. >> did you have to go through such a personal and professional fall to get to this point do you think? >> apparently so. >> wow. this is very cool. >> yeah. there's our newsroom. >> what are you most looking forward to with the new show? >> speaking the truth. i won't be the guy that, you know, piles on. i'm not going to do that. >> were you like that before? >> sure. i -- i was judging, what's the latest -- i was part of that follow the herd. you can't now. if you do, oh, you haven't grown at all. >> uh-huh. >> so i look forward to interviews. i look forward to sitting with people who have been through something. and i hope that they look forward to sitting with me
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because they know, well, there's one person that's not going to be getting super judgy on me.
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♪ that music will get you going. welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." i'm dana jacobson with jeff glor and michelle miller. coming up this hour, you could call it hurricane rage. teams from around the world are in washington with an urgent message about the threat from the increasingly wild and intense weather. also, some top minds in food have put their heads together to bring the world's most picky eaters to the table. we'll show you the recipes they've created to get children to expand their food -- were you picky eaters? >> i was not, but my nephew is. >> i liked all food as a kid. we'll catch up with grammy winner raphael sadiq, the
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versatile singer/songwriter, speaking out about a family tragedy. hear how he's taking his music to a place it's never been before. that's ahead. first, our top story this hour -- actress felicity huffman is going to prison for 14 days. a judge in boston handed down the sentence on friday. huffman is the first parent to be sentenced in the massive college admissions bribery scandal. huffman paid $15,000 to have her daughter's s.a.t. answers corrected. cbs news legal analyst rikki klieman says the other 51 people charged in the case should take note. >> right now they should be feeling very nervous because if felicity huffman wasn't walking out of there, nobody was. >> the 14 others who pled guilty will learn their sentences in the next few weeks. huffman was also ordered to spend a year on probation, pay a $30,000 fine, and perform 250 hours of community service. she is expected to self-report to prison next month.
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the bahamas is bracing for more severe weather as the island chain recovers from the widespread devastation of hurricane dorian. the center of tropical storm humberto is passing just east of great abaco island. this morning with winds of about 40 miles per hour. it's not expected to make a direct hit, but its heavy rain is creating new worries and concerns for the more than 2,000 people living in shelters in the bahamas. the california dive boat that caught fire on labor day killing 34 people is now back on land. the burned out vessel was towed by a tugboat. federal investigators say the boat did not have a crew member keeping watch overnight. a violation of coast guard rules. that could bring criminal charges. the captain and four crew members were asleep on the upper deck when the fire broke out. they survived. 33 passengers and a decade hand who were below deck were killed. at least five people are
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dead after torrential rains battered southeast spain. two consecutive days of downpours forced airports and train stations to close. cars were submerged on several roads. the spanish military used helicopters to lift stranded residents to safety. more than 3,500 people were evacuated. sunny, dry weather is expected for the next few days. in hong kong, another weekend of violence as scuffles broke out between rival protesters at shopping malls. this morning, police used batons to break up fights between protectipro pro-democracy and other supporters. they waved chinese flags and sang the national anthem. quickly turned violent as the dueling groups threw punches and even umbrellas at each other. a teenage climate change activist from sweden has brought her environmental campaign to
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washington. gre greta thunberg arrived two weeks ago after sailing on a zero emotions yacht from europe. the protests come as polls show increasing numbers of americans disapprove of president trump's handling of charge. -- climate change. >> it's important that we take action now because the government is not doing enough for our futures. >> thunberg isn the u.s. for several days of lobbying and rallies ahead of the climate strike planned for next friday. about hour fins after the hour. -- four minutes after the hour. here's a look at your weekend. ♪ speaking of weather, those lucky enough to see it, and i did and took a picture, got a
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rare look at a harvest moon overnight. the farmers almanac says for the first time in 19 years, a full moon coincided with the date being friday the 13th. ooh. the full moon gets its special billing by appearing so close to the fall equinox, if you're eager to catch the next harvest moon you'll have to wait. it's expected to appear in 2049. >> that's crazy. i feel like we've had a lot of harvest moons. >> i know. >> it was beautiful last night. >> it was. >> i got three -- three really good pictures. >> three really good harvest moon pictures. >> on my scrampage. >> okay -- my instagram page. >> okay. she's a food ambassador with the goal of helping kids try new meals. we'll meet the restaurant industry stars behind a book series aimed at creating the next generation of foodies. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday."
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a new children's book series and brand is inspiring even the pickiest of eaters to try new foods. it is being backed by some culinary icons all in an effort to bring people together, not just around the table but around the world. >> when people ask if i'm cal plata, i'm like -- kalamata, i'm like, no, she's cooler than me. >> cooler maybe but her childhood alter ego may have a hard time competing with sara thomas' unparalleled palate. as sommelier toin manhattan her hands were already full matching taste to typicity. she and her partner dreamed up this the heroine food
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adventurer. >> everybody wants to share a food memory. kalamata wants to go on an adventure inspired by the food memory. >> you see the significance of kalamata being a nontraditional character on paper? she's going to be brown, and she's going to be curly haired. when did that germinate? >> i think it was pretty immediately. this idea that we could bring people together through food. there's a lot of things in the world i think that are teaching adults about that. but there was nothing that was really effectively bridging that for children and helping them understand how they could learn about new flavors and places and cultures. >> in the series, kalamata and her friend al dente the alligator try sophisticated fare with pretty famous friends including thomas' boss, the co-owner, eric ripert, one of the most awarded chefs. >> i would love it but i was happy to be the number two. >> it's almost like she's
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opening up a whole new audience for people like you. >> so you mean she's working on my next client -- clientele? i like that. it's going to create a generation of young people who will have appreciation for the planet, for the basis point of what we can -- bounty of what we can find, and for good food and for interacting with people. the book looks like it's a children's book, and it is, but it's much more powerful than that. it's creating the future really in many, many ways. >> for ripert, kalamata carries on a tradition he had with his son adrian. >> i wanted him to be exposed to a lot of different cultures and to be excited about eating different ingredients, not -- i see so many kids they eat only pasta and french fries -- >> and hot dogs, hamburgers. >> some of them. i didn't want that for my son. i would say to him we are going to open a restaurant tonight. and you are going to be the
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maitre d' and are you going to be my sous chef, as well. you have to decide what you want to eat. we're going to travel the world. and then you will be in charge of creating the menu. you will help me a little bit with the shopping and so on. and then we eat together as a family. and he was so excited about that. >> is everybody hungry? >> yes! >> even better -- >> kalamata has generated that kind of excitement with tasting events in several cities. but it's more than just books. >> hey, what's going on? great to see you -- >> there's a line of kitchen-ready products for kids and kalamata's city guides, maps to family-friendly eateries that treat kids like vips. it's a moogz root in thom -- mission rooted in thomas' child. what was it like as a kid for you? >> there weren't a lot of people whose families were like mine. we're traditionally indian, but we were born in the united states. any first gen kids are sort of spanning this like where do i really belong and how do i fit
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in. the thing that was always -- that was always, i always could come home to was that my mom cooked all the time. the smells of my childhood, all of her south indian cooking, being in the kitchen with her, sitting in the kiftden and reading -- kitchen while she was cooking, those things made such a strong impression me as a child. >> loyalty to that memory inspired what wallace has dubbed "the tastebud pledge." >> i promise to keep my mind open and my fork ready. to try each new food at least two times and share what's on my plate when someone doesn't have enough. and that is everything that we stand for in one sentence. >> is that a tear? >> i -- i get emotional. i get emotional when i talk about it. the people we get to work with as a result of this, some of them are our heroes literally. it's the best work that we've all ever done. and if -- we don't want to stop doing it. >> for thomas, it's all about expanding kalamata's circle of friends. who's on the list? >> i mean, kalamata's definitely friends with michelle obama.
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i don't know if michelle obama knows it yet. >> i think she's going to. >> i think in the market now -- >> right. yeah. they might be going on a food adenture already. i just need write the story. >> and she will. i have to tell you, i went to one of these food tastings with the kids, and it's -- they will taste, but they'll tell you what they really think. they may not like it, but just the enthusiasm -- >> to try -- >> that they have being around this fancy food. >> i can't imagine kids speaking their minds. what's cool is that they have the guidebook,too, for parents to go to the restaurants in these cities with kids where the kids are going to be taken care of and you know you'll be welcomed. >> my nephew is a very picky eater. mark and stacia, don't worry, you're getting a book. >> i urge you all to take the taste bud challenge. it's a wonderful thing. it is one of the nation's most popular types of music. a new documentary by ken bruns looks at the surprising roots of country music. next we'll sit down with bruns
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and country legend marty stewart. next week on "cbs this morning saturday," he's known for closing out baseball games. what washington nationals john dol'il tries to span his passion during the team's long roadtrips. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." ♪ driving up the mountain, i met chloe kim. you know...us olympic gold medalist. she was very humble. can i get a lift? where you headed? up there. nothing my all-wheel drive prius couldn't handle. and then... nope, not today caribou.
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here in new york and one of the film's stars in nashville to look beyond any current definition of country music and uncover its true roots. ♪ can the circle be unbroken ♪ ♪ please do not be ♪ you got to know when to hold 'em know when to fold 'em ♪ >> country music has never gotten the kind of comprehensive treatment you're about to see. what was it about that one do this"? >> i suddenly realized that this would be american history firing on all cylinders but just great stories. ♪ >> reporter: defining country may be impossible. but what is possible is tracing its roots back to america's coming of age. ♪ from the fiddlers -- ♪ and the banjo players --
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♪ to jimmie rodgers and his yodeling. [ yodeling ] bruns over the 16 hours and eight days explores the highs and lows of country's history m. gene autry's "singing cowboy." ♪ dolly parton's break through. ♪ jolene and the meteoric rise of garth brooks. ♪ i got friends in low places at the heart of so many of the stories is the carter family. starting with the carter family singers in the 1920s. ♪ keep on the sunny side always on the sunny side ♪ later june carter and johnny cash's marriage created a dysfunctional dynasty that affected nearly every corner of country music's future. >> hello, i'm johnny cash. [ applause ] >> my dad, he worked out all of his problems on stage. that's where he took his anguish
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and fears and grief. and he worked them out with an udience. that's just who he was. ♪ >> reporter: instead of focusing on historians in this documentary, bruns went straight to the musicians. legends like merle haggard, kris kristofferson -- ♪ and marty stuart. >> the thing i love about this all the sudden country musical in the 21st century is now elevated next to ken bruns. >> reporter: is there a reset for country -- is this a reset for country music? >> i think so. >> reporter: stuart is the unofficial record keeper, he was the person who guided bruns and his lead writer dayton duncan more than anyone else. >> he saved every scrap of paper, every telegraph, every photograph, every uniform. he knows the history back and forth, and he in the course of it has seen everything. >> reporter: we met stuart in nashville where his famous
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mandolin is its own piece of history. >> bob dylan, ricky skaggs, b.b. king, charlie pride. >> reporter: what was it that grabbed you at such an early age? >> i didn't want to go to new york, didn't want to go to l.a. i wanted to go to nashville and play country music because of stories that i heard johnny cash sing, and johnny western sing me. those stories that they sang, it was like folks heroes talking to me. ♪ you've got to kiss an angel good morning ♪ >> reporter: one thing often ignored or misunderstood in the history of country music is the influence of african-americans. >> everything in america, every manifestation is never one thing because it's america. it's a many things. it's an alloy stronger by that combination. country music is itself born in as much african-american history as it is in what we think is sort of white rural southern history. >> reporter: so many of these musicians had black mentors. i think a lot of people don't understand that. >> no. take the mt. rushmore of early
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country music and say a.p. carter of the carter family, i put up there, troubobviously ha williams, obviously bill monroe, obviously johnny cash. those men all had african-american mentors. ♪ >> reporter: also covered, another sometimes sidelined part of country's history. >> the women's role in country music. you could never diminish that. you pull out loretta and patsy and connie and dolly, they're -- there's a vast void in the story of country music. >> reporter: maybe not after this series. >> i hope not. >> we tend to in the way we categorize country music, we denigrate it. it's never been given the respect it deserves. and so you know, we don't think it's got the same chops as jazz or blues or rhythm and blues or rock and roll. yet in the mid '60s loretta lynn is singing "don't come home with drinking on your mind."
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♪ >> nobody in rock are focusing on that. that's way ahead of everybody else. she's not going to call herself a feminist, but she's speaking for women and their aspirations and frustrations better than anyone else. ♪ a lot of things have changed since way back then ♪ >> if you write the truth and you write the song and you're writing something you're write being your life, it's going to be country. >> reporter: loretta lynn singing about motherhood and birth control was as honest as it gets. ♪ a canvas covered cabin and a crowded labor camp ♪ >> reporter: so is merl hogards talking about what it was like -- merl hogards talking about what it was like to grew up with okies, migrants who went to california during the great depression where they were seen as a lower class. haggard died in 2016, but spoke to bruns at length before he passed. >> the human being has a history of being awful cruel to some -- something different.
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>> merle haggard is distilling all of that pain and suffering and channeled it into poetry that all of us can identify with. >> reporter: country music is about love and loss. >> i think so. and if you think about the great songs, you know, johnny cash, "at my door the leaves are falling." ♪ at my door the leaves are falling ♪ a cold, wild wind will come. ♪ a cold wild wind will come >> i wonder if she's sorry. ♪ i wonder if she's sorry >> for leaving what we'd begun. there's someone for me somewhere because i still miss someone. i mean -- >> reporter: can't beat it. >> you cannot beat it. ♪ i still miss someone >> three chords and the truth as they say. country music. so of the more than 100 people that ken bruns talked to for this documentary, 20 have since
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died including merle haggard which makes it historically even more important documents why it's been donated to the country music hall of fame of museum. he didn't diesel with any country music from the past 25 yes because he's a historian, and we don't know where the placement of all those folks currently singing might be. it takes time to get there. and there's so much to deal with from the 1920s to the 1990s. >> but 16 hours. >> 16 hours-plus. >> right. divide it up -- >> i'll tell you what, this is what's surprising -- you walk in, it is heavy. so you go in, and it is powerful. and whether you're a country music fan or not or think you know country music, it is worth checking out. >> you learn something -- >> that's exactly it. i love loretta lynn. when you write about truth, about life, it's country music. >> if you're writing about truth in a song, it's country music. amanda haas keeps it simple and helpful. with a few ingredients she can show the most time-pressed person how to have a quick, easy, and delicious dinner.
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that looks good. all in her new cookbook, straight ahead on "the dish." you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." you called asberg petersburger's a -- asperger's a gift. what do you mean? >> yes, in some circumstances it can be an advantage to have some kind of neurotypical diagnosis. and to be diverse. because that makes you different, that makes you think differently. and especially in such a big crisis like this one, we cathedral think outside the box -- we need to think outside the box. we need to think outside our current system that we need people who think outside the box and who aren't like everyone else. >> this began as a one-kid
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hunger strike in sweden. now -- >> not hunger strike. school strike. >> school strike. okay. >> even better. and now you have -- now you have millions of kids around the world following you. what's it been like to watch that change? >> it's been very surreal because i think no one could have predicted that, and least of all me. so it has just been an adventure seeing all these things that have been happening. [ chants ] and to see the millions of children school striking for the climate, demanding a future, saying that why should we study for a future that is being taken away from us. >> yeah. >> when we are not doing anything to stop that. >> what's the one thing we could do, greta, all of us who are listening to you? >> i think the most important thing to do right now is to try to understand the crisis, it's to grasp the problem.
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♪ this morning on "the dish," the wide-reaching career of amanda haas. she spent more than half her life living around san francisco. and after attending cooking school, she freelanced developing and testing recipes. often working with award-winning cookbook authors. >> that led to a dream job overseeing the test kitchen and culinary programs for williams-sonoma stores. in 2018 she stepped away from corporate life to pursue writing and has just released her third cookbook, "the vibrant life: eat well, be well." good morning, and welcome to "the dish." >> thank you so much for having mean. >> welcome. what's the rundown here? >> my gosh, all of my favorites from this book starting with
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dessert. nacho panicato, coconut milk. the roasted cauliflower with curry for antiinflammato-inflam sources. and we have the haas sauce, snapped pea and green bean salad and scallops with a succotash and a beautiful salad with strawberries and almonds and arugula and a little goat cheese. cocktail, you can't forget. california cocktail. a little vodka, st. jermaine. >> cheers. >> have you always loved food? >> from the moment i could speak, my parents tell me the first thing i was always like, what's for the next meal, what's for dinner. always, always, always, i loved food. >> you were a french and econ major. how did you jump into food specifically? because you were in a safe corporate job. >> i was in a safe corporate job. it was funny. at williams-sonoma, doing nothing related to food. i always, always knew i wanted to cook for a living. i took the leap and went to
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cooking school, then i went back. >> you were a corporate suit at williams-sonoma, right, and left -- >> yes. >> and went back. >> and then went back. it's funny, i spent ten years after i went to cooking school writing recipes and working on books for other people and found a way back to do my dream job, to be the culinary director and run the test kitchen. pretty amazing. >> most people find their love in the restaurant. what was it about the test kitchen that drew you in? >> the one thing i knew i never wanted to do with my life was work in a restaurant. it's funny when i did my ex-ternship after cooking school, i worked on someone's cookbook and fell in love with recipe writing. i loved the idea of writing and writing for others and helping translates it for the home cook. going back to williams-sonoma and getting to do that, develop recipes and have that passion to bring this to life for others, is what i really love to do. >> what is the hardest thing? you think about in the kitchen, you have the recipe set, and you're creating these things. >> in my book it's interesting because i explore topics for aging well that didn't have to
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do with cooking. writing the recipes is always the easiest part for me because i know what i love, and i think as i've gone on this health journey with food i've realized what ingredients work for me. there is the fun, creative piece. and i could write recipes for days on end and forget about the world. >> reading about your history even, as your life has changed, your recipes have changed with it. >> so much. so much. and i was starting to tell you before this that i realized about eight to ten years ago that gluten was making me really sick. so i had to make some changes. but i really wanted my food to be about what i can have and what makes me feel great. i was able to evolve my cooking style and hopefully you see in my new book that the food's delicious. we're not worried about what's not in it. just really clean, amazing ingredients that work for most of us. >> we love the name, "the vibrant life." >> thank you. we love that word. we're also happy with that word. >> some folks are calling if the fountain of youth book. >> you know, i think that's the most exciting part for me is that i finally realized when i was having health issues that food can make me feel great, or
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it can make me feel awful. in this book, to actually explore all of these other topics like yoga and meditation and time and nature and sleep, i can see why it's maybe the fountain of youth. >> dana found it -- she's got something -- >> if you could share this fountain of youth meal with anybody, who would you be? >> i can't pick. a group of amazing women. ina garten at the time, jennifer garner, gayle, and -- gayle king, our gayle king. and katy couric who i met yesterday, too, who i just have so much passion with these women. i think we'd have a great meal together. >> awesome. >> sign it for me. i forgot to tell you that part. thank you. for more on amanda haas and "the dish," head to cbsthismorning.com. >> thank you. now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. ♪
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up next, raphael sadiq. once part of the legendary soul group tony, tony, tony. now he's back with his most personal solo effort. we'll get the incredible story behind his new album, and he'll perform right here in studio 57. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday" with scallops. ) i'm an ice cruncher. so i was excited about colgate total. it has sensitivity relief, so i don't have to give up doing what i love. aren't we lucky. colgate total. do more for your whole mouth. mytill he signed up for atunitedhealthcareealth medicare complete. ♪ now, it's like he has his own health entourage. he gets medicare's largest healthcare network,
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visit xarelto.com. ♪ singer/songwriter and record producer raphael sadiq has been working in the music industry for more than 30 years. i remember. he started his career with the r&b group tony, tony, tony, and later moved on to solo work. the grammy award winner has collaborated with stars such as mary j.legend, and whitney houston. after eight years, sadiq recently released his latest album "jimmy lee," and says it's his most honest work yet. anthony mason sat down with him at a penthouse recording studio here in new york. ♪ i'm still out here living >> reporter: raphael sadiq says his new music may be his most honest ever. >> i went down the rabbit hole and said, you know, it's time for me to talk about it. >> reporter: were you surprised at what came out?
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>> i'm very surprised at what came out, yeah. ♪ should be here in the morning time ♪ >> reporter: as a solo artist and before that as a member of the r&b group tony, tony, tony, he scored a string of hits in the late '80s and '90s. ♪ sadiq became known as a musician who could swing easily between styles. ♪ to make it come together but there was one subject he stayed away from in his music -- his family and a series of tragedies he's endured. ♪ something keeps calling me i feel the burden ♪ >> reporter: the 53-year-old singer has named his record "jimmy lee" after his older brother who died of a heroin overdose. >> he was an addict. people look down on addicts.
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he was sort of the black sheep of the family. he was looked at like nothing to a lot of people. >> reporter: why did you choose to flame it after him? -- to name it after him? >> immigrationy was everything to me -- jimmy was everything to me. i always say he would drop off a puppy, leave it in the back yard for me, you know, always doing something really nice. >> reporter: jimmy lee was one of four siblings sadiq has lost. his brother desmond, also an addict, committed suicide in 1987. >> my other brother alvie was murdered by my sister's boyfriend when i was 7. and then my sister was in a car accident -- i just always kept progressing and moving forward. you know -- >> reporter: you carried it with you. >> i carried it. i have them tattooed on my arm, all four of them. been on my arm for 20-plus years. >> reporter: yeah, it has to have affected you in some way. >> it made me a little hard. it made me not respond to simple things that people respond to. like what's your deal?
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>> reporter: yeah. >> like really, you complain about that? a steinway piano is therapy for me, big, huge, black, steinway piano. it's -- i felt like that's all the therapy i need. >> reporter: yeah. music works wonders. >> it's amazing. incredible. ♪ ♪ i lost a brother to aids he left every day ♪ >> reporter: the album, he says, is for anyone who's had a jimmy lee in their life. do you feel like you've freed something in a way? >> i feel like i freed the energy, the spirit a little bit. also, i guess one of the biggest things watching my mother through this process -- >> reporter: it's cool your mom gets to hear this record. >> yeah, it's pretty sweet. sweet. she's 86. she's into artwork. she definitely wants to see it. she's like, where's my record? i want to see it. >> reporter: his late brothers and sister are also in the album
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artwork for "jimmy lee." >> that's pretty trippy for me. >> reporter: uh-huh. did you need put it someplace do you think? >> i've always said somehow i need connect the dots. i feel like that i'm finally connecting the dots for myself. and also for people who have been, you know, listening to me for all these years. >> and now performing from his album "jimmy lee," here is raphael sadiq with "something keeps calling." ♪ something keeps calling i feel the burdens on me ♪ ♪ something keeps calling this is so heavy for me ♪ ♪ you might say i can never love
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again and you might be right at least tonight ♪ ♪ my friends say i can never pull it together and they might be right at least tonight ♪ ♪ my kids say i'll never come home again and you might be right at least tonight ♪ ♪ if i fail my whole life goes to hell and it don't seem right i need help tonight ♪ ♪ something keeps calling me i feel the burdens on me ♪ ♪ coming keeps calling me
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this is so heavy for me ♪ ♪ my wife says i'll never have money again and she might be right i lost tonight ♪ ♪ my heart says i can get it all again and i hope i'm right but not tonight ♪ ♪ the priest says you're gonna lose family and i know he's right at least tonight ♪ ♪ my mind says you can get it all today and it's also right but not tonight ♪ ♪ something keeps calling me
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i feel the burdens on me ♪ ♪ something keeps calling me this is so heavy for me ♪ charlie barrell. ♪ ♪
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♪ something keeps calling me i feel the burdens on me ♪ ♪ something keeps calling me this is so heavy for me ♪ ♪ ♪ uh uh this is for everyone ♪ ♪ ♪ never ever turn back i'll never ♪
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♪ so heavy on me i'll never ♪ ♪ so heavy i'll never ♪ ♪ so heavy on me [ applause ] >> don't go away. we'll be right back with more music from raphael sadiq. [ applause ] >> you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." so josh, you going for our drive safe and save discount? ♪ yup, using the app. driving safe. heh. you wanna go? wanna go bro?
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will the music, by the way. have a great weekend, everybody. >> we leave you with more music from raphael saadiq. >> there is "i'm feeling -- this is "i'm feeling love." ♪ i'm feeling love lovelove love i'm feeling love lovelove love i'm feeling ♪ i turned on every light because i love my life ♪
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♪ i been feeling more than blessed even through the hardest times ♪ ♪ i thank god for my few friends yes i can count them on one hand ♪ ♪ and as random as i sound i still manage to hold it down down down ♪ ♪ i'm feeling love love lovelove love i'm feeling love love lovelove ♪ ♪ i'm feeling love love lovelove love i'm feeling love love
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love love ♪ ♪ you are my rehab the only needle that i have ♪ ♪ injections every day vein to vein i'm here to stay ♪ ♪ i'm drowning in good love the only space i need to grow ♪ ♪ needle was my life someone pass me a glass of wine ♪ ♪ live my life like willy wonka it's that tv edith bunker ♪ ♪ uncle fred and jimmy walker george jefferson had that walk and ♪ ♪ live my life like willy wonka it's that tv's edith bunker ♪
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♪ uncle fred and jimmy walker george jefferson had that walk and ♪ ♪ live me life like willy wonka it's that tv edith bunker ♪ ♪ uncle fred and jimmy walker george jefferson had that walk and ♪ ♪ live my life ♪ >> for those of you still with us, we have more music from raphael saadiq. there is "the world is drunk." ♪
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sheet he's always in three places -- ♪ he's always in three places spaces undefined ♪ ♪ heart is always racing for something he will never find ♪ ♪ eyes are black black and cold ♪ ♪ his soul has been shaken so shaken i believe he knows ♪ ♪ the sun could never reach him the view looks like a bomb ♪ ♪ the paradox is far away his brain weighs at least a ton ♪ ♪ he's always been the class
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clown trying to be a king ♪ ♪ with everyone around him
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