tv CBS This Morning CBS October 19, 2019 4:00am-6:00am PDT
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good morning, it is october 19, 2019, welcome to "cbs this morning" saturday. nestor's march. breaking overnight, the newest tropical storm lashes florida's gulf coast as it continues to race toward the panhandle. we are live with the latest. grave mistake. president trump's decision to pull out of syria gets new criticism. this time, from the republican head of the senate. why mitch mcconnell is slamming the strategy that the president calls a total success. bitter tariffs, the trump administration begins its new round of tariffs on european goods, affecting billions of
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dollars of wine, liquor, and cheese. find out what it will cost you. and the cashless backlash. as more and more businesses say they will not accept dollars, one u.s. city is saying no. see why it thought the ban was unfair, illegal, and un-american. but first, we begin this morning with a look at today's eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. >> i think after what we've been through, people are being cautious. >> you got to heed the weather because you never know what it's going to do. >> the southeast braces for nestor. >> it's going to hit hard down in florida, heavy rain from tallahassee to atlanta. a momentous day in westminster. >> order. >> a rare saturday session, another attempt to get the brexit agreement through parliament. >> it is a burning desire to get brexit done. now to an extraordinary development in the presidential campaign. hillary clinton called tul
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tulsi gabbard, quote, the favorite of the russians. >> the reason why she's doing this is because ultimately she knows that she can't control me. the duchess of sussex has revealed she has struggled to cope adjusting to her new life as a wife and mother and living in a new country. >> not many people have asked if i'm okay but it's -- it's a very real thing to be going through behind the scenes. rioters fighting with police in barcelona after a fifth straight day of protesters. all that. >> the yankees avoid elimination in the alcs. >> aaron hicks huts one to the si sticks. >> and all that matters. a giant leap for woman kind to american astronauts. >> you're very brave, brilliant women. you represent this country so well. on "cbs this morning" saturday. young hockey fan is going viral for his star moment at a washington capitals game.
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jackson friedlander got an interview. >> who's your favorite caps player? >> ovechkin and always. i have a trant la named michael. he's a curly hair. he gets two crickets on monday, one on sunday. he has a big appetite. >> you scored two goals out there and guess what? we're going to watch them on that big screen. you ready? >> yeah. i'm so excited. i'm, like, seriously excited. i'm kind of shy but mostly excited and courageous. >> this morning's eye-opener is >> this morning's eye-opener is plet's go places.ta. captioning funded by cbs kind of shy but mostly excited. >> and courageous, i think. >> that was awesome. how about a saturday session in parliament. >> i love it. the brexit becomes very different saturday session. >> not as good as our saturdays. >> we have them all the time. >> that's right. >> not a rare one. >> yes, we do. welcome to the weekend, everyone, i'm jeff glor along with dana jacobson and michelle miller.
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this morning we are going to take you to wine country, napa valley, where wine makers are trying to figure out out to deal with several threats to the wine we know and love. we will see how they're investing millions to try to develop a better ask more problem resistant grape. then to the uk where for 275 years the auction house sotheby's has been the absolute axis of art and commerce. we'll look back at how it all began and the highs and lows of a business on the block. then take a trip back in time to a place where some of the greatest american inventions were created. we'll go to thomas edison national historical park to explore a new biography of edison. we'll also talk to the wife of the acclaimed pulitzer prize winning author who spent the last years of his life writing the book. that's all ahead. but we begin this morning with the southeast bracing for more severe weather. powerful winds and possible tornados from tropical storm
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nestor batter parts of central and eastern florida overnight creating potentially dangerous storm surge along the florida panhandle. right now, more than 10,000 customers have no power. >> nestor did weaken overnight but it's packing sustained winds of 50 miles an hour and could make land fall this morning. it is putting communities still rebuilding after hurricane michael last year on edge as they prepare for more powerful weather. hilary lane is in shell point beach in low-lying crawfordville this morning. that's about 20 miles south of tallahassee. hilary, good morning. >> reporter: good morning and florida's panhandle, the winds topped out at 50 miles per hour overnight and this morning, the wind is still gusting and the rain just starting to pick up. the beaches here are eerily quiet as the waves crash on to the shore. dramatic cell phone video captures powerful winds lifting a semitruck and throwing it on to a moving suv. witnesses say it was a tornado
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that turned the tractor-trailer on to its side. neither of the driver suffered injuries. the incident occurred overnight after the national weather service issued a tornado warning for parts of inland and coastal florida. another driver on the same highway recorded large chunks of hail striking their windshield. >> it just sounded like a big old train coming. >> reporter: residents in the seminole mobile home park reported damage to their homes and downed power lines. pinellas county firefighters say a roof caved as a result of powerful winds from a possible tornado. >> we jumped in the tub and just as we did, the carport came off. >> reporter: in panama city, residents are weary after hurricane michael decimated 75% of the city one year ago. >> anything that's associated with the word, storm, for mexico beach, you know, it's fresh on our minds. >> reporter: mexico beach mayor says the rebuilding process after michael has left parts of the city vulnerable to large storms.
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>> you can't have 75% of your city destroyed by a hurricane and a year later think that any disturbance in the gulf is not concerning. >> reporter: they lost their home during michael when the tree fell through their roof. they've since moved their family of nine into a fema trailer further inland. >> i'm more nervous than i was last time. i'll say that. >> reporter: and the national weather service is trying to determine whether it was heavy winds or a tornado that caused the damage and while nestor has lost steam overnight, residents here along the coast are on guard as the wind gusts and the rain continues to fall. dana. >> hilary, thank you. we want to get more on the storm now and the rest of the nation's weather so we're going to bring in jeff berardelli. good morning. >> good morning, dana, and good morning, everybody. so this is not a hurricane. it is a tropical storm and it's a run of the mill tropical storm but every tropical storm brings with it threats and the threat here, especially on the eastern
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side, the possibility of tornados, we've already seen some of those tornados. now notice the storm itself located here most of the action on the east side. that's because this is a hybrid system, a mix between a front and a real tropical storm. this is going to be making land fall in the next hour or two right around apalacicola but that box you see is the tornado watch box. wind gusts up to 40, 45 miles an hour at times but notice that the wind is funneling the water right into apalachi bay and that's where we're worried about possibility for significant storm surge. generally the max here down to cedar key, about 3 to 5 feet. watch out for that if you're near the coast. this is the progression of the storm. it's going to move through the carolinas later today and overnight tonight dumping a couple inches of rain and eventually move into the new york city late in the day. but here's the blessing in disguise. there's been a really bad
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drought, rainfall deficits, 15 to 20 inches, a lot of rain's going to fall on the eastern side of georgia, south carolina, so every cloud has a silver lining, jeff, this is going to help the drought situation in the southeast. they desperately need the rain. >> all right, some good news and bad news there, jeff, thank you very much. president trump is urging republicans to stick together, in his words from a tweet last night, fight. this as the white house tries to recover from an admission by the president's acting chief of staff this week that the u.s. did withhold $400 million in u.s. military aid to ukraine. the new fuel for impeachment in the impeachment inquiry comes amid growing bipartisan criticism of the president's decision to withdraw u.s. troops from syria. weijia jiang is at the white house with more on all of this. >> reporter: good morning, everybody. president trump insists that he made the right call in syria, even though backlash is sharp and continues to grow. meanwhile, few voices here at
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the white house and in his own party are sticking up for the president when it comes to that impeachment inquiry. and finally, even though acting chief of staff mick mulvaney made public remarks this week, he ended up doing much more harm than good. >> i think he clarified it. >> reporter: on friday, president trump quickly changed this subject when ask to clarify a stunning admission from his acting chief of staff. >> and i have news for everybody. get over it. there's going to be political influence in foreign policy. >> reporter: mick mulvaney admitted there was a quid pro quo involving u.s. military aid to ukraine and said the president froze the money to get ukraine to investigate debunked theories about 2016 election meddling. >> the look back to what happened in 2016 certainly was part of the thing that he was worried about in corruption with that nation. that is absolutely appropriate. >> reporter: hours later, mulvaney reversed his comments in a statement saying there was
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absolutely no quid pro quo. president trump tried to shift the attention to the biden family after deputy assistant secretary of state george kent testified he raised concerns in 2015 about hunter biden serving on the board of the ukrainian gas company when his father was still the vice president. but those red flags were ignored. >> he excoriated the obama administration and joe biden and joe biden's son, saying that has tremendous problems, tremendous problems with joe biden's son and the ukraine. >> reporter: mr. trump is also punching back against fierce criticism over his decision to pull u.s. troops out of syria. leaving kurdish fighters to fend for themselves against the turkish military. >> we're doing very, very well with turkey. there's a ceasefire or a pause or whatever you want to call it. >> reporter: but the turkish president has vowed to resume the attack in three days if the kurds do not leave the area by then. senate majority leader mitch mcconnell, usually a trump ally, warned of a resurgence of isis.
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in a "washington post" op-ed, he wrote, withdrawing u.s. forces from syria is a grave strategic mistake. it will leave the american people and homeland less safe, embolden our enemies and weaken important alliances. president trump says some european nations have agreed to take in isis fighters that were being detained by the kurds but so far, no countries have made that announcement. back here at home, the president is dealing with another departure from his cabinet. he announced that dan, the number two in the energy department will take over when secretary rick perry leaves by the end of the year. perry insists this has nothing to do with his role in the administration's ukraine policy which, of course, michelle, is at the center of the impeachment inquiry. >> it has been a revolving door. thank you. in syria, kurdish forces are accusing turkey of failing to abide by the terms of the u.s.
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brokered ceasefire and its leaders are calling on vice president mike pence to take responsibility for its enforcement. it comes as russian leaders reportedly huddled in syria today to discuss de-escalating tensions in the region. holly williams is near the syrian border in turkey. >> good morning. the united nations say the border between eastern syria and turkey was mostly calm yesterday but there are reports of violations of the ceasefire but both sides. 14 civilians were killed by turkish-led air strikes and mortar fire, according to a syrian monitoring group. 200,000 civilians have reportedly fled the area in recent days and turkish-backed militants have been accused of atrocities against syrian civilians. the u.s. effectively opened the door to this turkish incursion into syria last week when president trump announced that u.s. troops would be pulling back from the border region. u.s. forces numbering around 1,000 are now in the process of
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withdrawing entirely from eastern syria. that decision is a betrayal of the syrian kurds, according to many, both in syria and in the u.s., including republican members of the congress. a kurdish dominated militia group has been america's closest partner on the ground in syria in the fight against isis and now they are the targets of turkey's assault. turkey views the kurdish group that partnered with the u.s. as a terrorist organization. president trump called the ceasefire agreement a, quote, great day for civilization, but the u.s. withdrawal could ultimately benefit the syrian regime and its allies, russia and iran. if the ceasefire breaks down, there are also fears for accused isis fighters being held by the kurds. we were given exclusive access to one of their prisons last month. they say they're holding around 12,000 former isis fighters, including 4,500 foreigners. the nightmare scenario is that with renewed fighting, the kurdish group will no longer
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have the forces to properly secure the prisons and there could be a mass escape of isis fighters. dana? >> holly, thank you very much. democratic presidential candidate tulsi gabbard is responding to veiled claims made about her by hillary clinton. in a podcast, clinton appeared to call gabbard a favorite of the russians. clinton, who did not mention the hawaii congresswoman by name went a step further, alleging the russians are, quote, grooming her to be the third party candidate, adding they have a bunch of sites and bots and other ways of supporting her so far. in an interview on cbsn last night, she called clinton's remarks despicable. >> hillary clinton is labeling me as a foreign agent and a traitor, smearing and undermining my campaign, both directly herself and indirectly through her proxies, who have been doing this, really, since i announced my candidacy for president. the reason why she's doing this is because she knows that she can't control me. >> gabbard added she has no
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plans to launch a third party candidacy. more than three dozen people could face disciplinary action following the investigation into hillary clinton's personal email server. the state department has completed its three-year investigation into 33,000 emails that the former secretary of state turned over for review. 38 current and former state department officials were cited for violations. they sent classified information that ended up in clinton's personal email 91 times but investigators say they found no evidence of deliberate mishandling of classified information. in alaska, officials are expected to move the wreckage of the pan air commuter plane from the runway where it crash in a remote part of the allusion islands. one passenger was killed when the plane went off the runway. about 800 miles southwest of anchorage on friday. it's the second deadly crash in a decade involving a u.s. airliner. kris van cleave reports on the
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investigation. >> the 24-year-old prop came to rest just feet from the waters of captain's bay. its nose and front section down an embankment. 38-year-old david died after suffering traumatic injuries during the crash landing. ten others were hurt, one critically. on board were three crew members and 39 passengers, including a small child in someone's lap and a high school swim team from cordova, alaska. no one on the swim team was seriously injured. school superintendent alex russen talked to us via skype. >> at first notification of the event, certainly a person's heart sinks and you become weak in the knees. knew within a matter of minutes that it appeared that all of the kids were safe, accounted for, and were off of the plane. >> reporter: preliminary witness reports to the ntsb say the pan air flight from anchorage aborted its first landing attempt at the airport that's
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notorious for its to ppography d winds conditions. images from the scene show damage to the fuselage of the plane. there's concern a propellor blade from one of the engines may have entered the cabin. this is only the second deadly accident involving a u.s. commercial airliner in more than a decade. in 2018, a woman was killed when she was partially sucked out of a southwest airlines plane. the ntsb recovered both of the plane's black boxes friday. more investigators will be on scene later today. for "cbs this morning" saturday, kris van cleave, washington. through new clues in the disappearance of a 3-year-old alabama girl, kamille mckinney vanished one week ago. now police hope a surveillance video can help them find her. police believe this is the last image of her, a video showing kamille outside an apartment complex with another toddler. watch closely. police say the two were playing when a man passes by but it's the second man police are
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focused on. they say he appears to talk to the children before they follow him away. kamille, nicknamed cupcake by her relatives, never returned. some children at the party said a man was handing out candy in the neighborhood. >> i don't believe that a lot of planning went into it. i think that maybe it was something done impromptu. >> reporter: birmingham police chief patrick smith. >> in my heart, i believe that she is in and around the area and we are hoping to bring her home safely. >> reporter: a year week long search continues as this community bands together in prayer. carmela williams says it feels like kamille is one of her own. >> seeing how the birmingham community is all coming together to find this little girl, she's like our kid now. >> and birmingham police are asking volunteers to help them in a massive search for kamille tomorrow. in britain, it is decision time. after years of fierce debate,
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members of parliament are holding a rare saturday meeting to consider a crucial vote on brexit. the house of commons is discussing whether to adopt the revised deal reached earlier this week between prime minister boris johnson and the european union. ian lee is in london with the latest. ian, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. it could be do or die for prime minister boris johnson today as they vote on his brexit deal with the european union. this is the first time parliament has sat on a saturday since 1982 during the falklands war. speaking with people here, a lot of them are not only against the prime minister's brexit deal but against brexit in general. they want to see the uk remain with the european union. >> it's a spasm right wing reaction and as a citizen of europe and a citizen of future, i'd like to stay in the eu. >> reporter: we need to remember, though, that this is just a snapshot of what's going on in the uk right now. there are other places that not only support the prime minister's brexit deal but that want to see the uk leave the
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european union. i think a lot of people, though, were surprised that the prime minister was able to get a deal. but it is going to come down to parliament and that magic number is 320. he's going to need to convince rebel members of parliament within his own party as well as opposition labor party members to get on board for this to pass, but if this isn't complicated enough, there could be a curveball that postpones the vote until monday. but the clock is ticking. they have 12 days to either ask for an extension or get a deal as the brexit deadline is halloween, october 31st. for "cbs this morning" saturday, ian lee in london. we here at cbs news are grieving after the loss of two of our colleagues. chris raine was an editor in our london bureau. he died at the age of 62 from cancer and chris meyers was a veteran journalist who enjoyed working with students, was a bears fan, wanted to teach the
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next generation how to be responsible journalists and his giving continues. eight lives have been saved as a result of chris's decision to be an organ donor. and we talk a lot here about mow we are family. we all spend so much time together and it really is, and it's times like these where our hearts go out to each other. >> chris was such a light, chris myers, every time he walked into the bureau, he was there with a great smile. >> great guy, great journalist. we were all still coming to terms with this. it was sudden. life is beautiful. we'll have much more ahead in just a moment. right now it is 22 minutes past the hour. time for a local check on the forecast for your weekend. there's never been an all
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women's team quite like this. still ahead this morning, a pair of astronauts makes history with the first ever all female space walk. we'll look at their achievement and at the next out of this world gender barrier women may soon break. plus the no cash backlash from swiping a card to tapping a watch, there are plenty of high-tech ways to pay but not everyone has them, and some say they're being shut out as the cashless economy spreads. and later, bidding happy birthday to a venerable auction house. we'll help celebrate almost three centuries of sotheby's and look back at some of the most coveted items that have come through their doors. all head on "cbs this morning" saturday. this is hamish.
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you say you're a waitress at heart and a cook in your soul. >> i am a waitress at heart, that's how i stay employed primarily. we have a nice chat show and it's wonderful when people like gayle come by to visit. >> you say you're a cook, not a chef. >> i grew up in industrial kitchens and our family, my mom was one of ten kids, our family was always in the kitchen but that's where i learned -- you know? >> you say that people working in restaurants should be a compulsory part of education. >> i think that everybody should have to be a dishwasher. i think they should learn how to take an order and serve people,
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you know? it's very humbling and it's -- i think it's the luckiest thing that ever happened to me that i was born into that industry. >> because you say this was a hard book to write because it's so personal and you want people to know you write all of your books. >> i do. >> but this was extremely personal. >> this one was personal, it wasn't just me writing recipes, it was looking back on 50 years and telling the story of being -- how i got to be where i am today. the point of the book was really to teach anybody that they could be rachael ray, not that everybody has the first word vino in life but my grandpa used fill my bottle with his homemade wine and people thought i was a happy baby but really i was just a little drunk. >> i love that. >> you think anybody can cook? >> anybody can cook that has an appetite. if you have an appetite, you can cook. if you're a person -- like i have some friends that just literally like to eat to stay alive. if you don't enjoy food, no, you can't cook. but if you do enjoy food, yes,
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welcome back to "cbs this morning saturday." we begin this half hour with a routine maintenance mission aboard the international space station that made history high above the earth. nasa astronauts christina koch and jessica meir completed the first all-female spacewalk and while the eyes of the world were watching, the mission went off without a hitch. >> jessica, christina, we are so proud of you. you're going to do great today. we'll be waiting for you here in a couple hours when you get home. >> thank you so much. our pleasure working with you this morning. >> it began at 7:38 eastern time
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when christina koch and jessica meir first stepped out into outer space. >> oh, wow, one of my favorite things to look at. >> reporter: tethered to the space station but all too thin cords and began their mission to replace a faulty power controller. >> the wobox is just to your right. >> reporter: seven hours and 17 minutes later the job was complete and they closed the hatch behind them. the repair job marked koch's fourth spacewalk and meir's first but it's the first time two women have ventured out as a team. >> this is president donald trump. do you hear me? >> we can hear you. >> that's great. >> reporter: and president trump congratulated them while the two were still at work in a video call from the white house. thanking them for their bravery and service. >> and i just want to congratulate you, what you do is incredible, you're very brave people. >> reporter: the first woman to ever walk in space was russian
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cosmo naught svetlana. cathy sill v cathy sullivan followed a year later but plans earlier this year had to be scuttled when nasa realized the space station lacked a second propery fitted suit. it was an embarrassing oversight that was not overlooked by "saturday night live" back on earth. >> this has got to be disappointing for you. >> nope. >> reporter: nasa's next milestone could come in 2024 when the agency planned to return trip to the moon, very possibly with a woman taking that small step and giant leap on to the lunar surface. one good indication, the mission is named artemis, after the twin sister of the greek god apolo. >> i love how a routine mission is 7 hours and 17 minutes. >> i don't have the attention span for that, i'm not going to lie.
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congratulations to them. great step forward. there is more news ahead for us but first here's a look at the weather for your weekend. you've got the money but you can't make the purchase because the store or straurestaurant no longer accepts cash. that is a predicament more and more consumers are finding themselves in. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." i had always heard stories about my great grandfather, but family can only tell you so much... about your history. i found some incredible records about samuel silberman... passenger manifests, census information,
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no matter what life throws down ♪ roomba is up for the challenge. only roomba uses 2 multi-surface rubber brushes that powerfully clean up debris on all your floors. and only the roomba i7+ system empties its bin into allergenlock™ bags that trap 99% of allergens. forget about vacuuming for months. if it's not from irobot, it's not a roomba™ be right back. with moderate to severe crohn's disease, i was there, just not always where i needed to be.
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is she alright? i hope so. so i talked to my doctor about humira. i learned humira is for people who still have symptoms of crohn's disease after trying other medications. and the majority of people on humira saw significant symptom relief and many achieved remission in as little as 4 weeks. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. be there for you, and them. ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, remission is possible.
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this month in philadelphia, a first of its kind law went into effect mandating that all businesses accept physical dollar bills or coins in exchange for goods and services. overall, the percentage of cash payments in the u.s. has been dropping from 33% to 26% in just the past 4 years. that's prompted some businesses to go entirely cashless but not everyone is buying in. brook silva is here with more. >> this move away from cash comes as digital options have become more popular. amazon has opened stores that automatically charge you for what you pull off the shelves. the cashless craze has also been embraced by lots of upscale, fast casual restaurants catering to city office workers.
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for some these so-called frictionless transactions offer speed and convenience but many americans are still reliant on cash and they have the support of an unlikely champion. >> reporter: there's a good chance you know a guy like william greenlee. >> if you like the good old philly cheese steak we can go here. >> reporter: chatty, salt of the earth type, the guy who slides up to a register. >> one lemon. >> reporter: and still pays cash. >> thank you very much, sir. thank you. >> reporter: and so when greenlee found a coffee shop right downstairs from his philadelphia office that wouldn't take cash, well, that just rubbed him the wrong way. >> everybody comes into center city, business, employment, entertainment, whatever, but not everyone can buy a coffee and not everyone can go in there and buy a basic product. >> reporter: the thing is, greenlee is a philadelphia city councilmen and so he proposed and passed legislation making philadelphia the first city in the country to force retailers to take cash. >> unfortunately, philadelphia
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has been called the poorest big city in america, which means that, you know, there are people who do not have credit. telling people who do not have the ability to have credit that you can't buy a basic product is not treating people fairly. >> reporter: poor people have a lot of serious problems. why focus on the right to buy a $14 salad or a $5 coffee when there are other, more pressing issues? >> well, i guess i would say we can do more than one thing at a time. >> reporter: in an era of vast income inequality and skepticism over fast-moving tech, william greenly had stumbled upon a strangely galvanizing issue. san francisco and new jersey followed with similar bills, legislators from new york city and washington, d.c., have called him for advice. i think it hit a nerve with people, to be perfectly honest with you. what's the nerve? >> you're telling me that i can't use the currency of the united states of america. >> reporter: just last year, cashless seemed cool.
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the owners of dos torros tack ree yeah told cbs news they rarely have to turn customers away. two forks, another fast casual spot, touted the increased efficiency of going cashless. >> with every cash transaction, the payment process was slowing down significantly. >> reporter: what a difference a year has made. at least one cashless company, sweet green, is now accepting cash again and the others don't seem excited to talk about it. we reached out to every cashless company we could find and none of them would speak to us on the record. in the past, they've argued cash is a headache to manage, it slows down the line and lves ores vulnerable to theft. you see this trend continuing. we won't be using cash. >> we'll be using less and less. >> reporter: economics professor ken was willing to talk about the problems with cash. he's the author of "the curse of cash" and argues, among other things, hard money fuels crime.
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>> human trafficking, drug smuggling, big-time tax evasion. >> reporter: it would be better, he thinks, if we were more like sweden where cash has nearly been phased out and the u.s. will get there too, rogoff says, in another five or ten years. >> there's no question that cash, you know, is in its last era. electronic payments are being favored by consumers. forget the businesses. we're on the harvard campus here. if you talk to my undergraduates, you know, they'll say, well, what do we need cash for unless we're buying marijuana? >> reporter: that's pretty funny. if and when cash fades away, rogoff has an idea for helping the 20 million americans who live in unbanked households. >> it would not be that expensive to provide free basic debit cards to people and a number of other countries have done this. india's done it. i mean, if india can afford to do it, we can afford to do it.
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>> reporter: but the march from paper money to the digital future has taken a notable detour in philadelphia as the city considered its cashless ban, amazon warned officials that the legislation would discourage them from opening a cashless amazon go store in philly but in the end, it was not william greenlee who caved. >> i understand amazon go, am i saying it right? they do take cash. they did not at first and then they have decided to do it. >> reporter: that might have something to do with you. >> well, maybe. not just me but i think the fact that this anti-cashless thing, it's spreading around. i think it did have something to do with it. i don't apologize for doing this. i think it's the right thing to do. >> reporter: greenlee told us that after the bill passed, sweet green reached out to him and said they had never intended to give the impression that they were excluding certain customers. >> when you still have 20 million unbanked americans, you have to figure out some way forward. >> right. >> without just saying, we don't
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take any cash. >> and this isn't just about salads, obviously, as the economy is moving in this direction, more and more products will be harder to buy with cash and that's what people are worried about. >> go ahead. >> i was just going to say, maybe everyone should have a credit card of some kind issued by our jolly green giant, you know? i mean, let's be real here. that's what it's going to take if we're moving in that direction. >> that's what rogoff, the professor, wants to see happen. some countries have done it. not easy to implement. >> it's also, you look at the homeless on the streets now, so few people carrying cash, that issue, and it still is one for them but you wonder if you could create some type of credit system for everyone, could that change some of that? different issue but it is something out there without the cash. >> certainly is. thank you, brook. up next, checking the bid history, ebay and other websites have brought auctions to the masses but we'll visit one place where the art of the auction has been practiced for almost three centuries. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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last year, art enthusiasts were left speechless after a painting sold for $1.4 million. turns out the subversive british street artist had planted a shredder inside the frame. it was perhaps the most infamous sale held by the historic london auction house. but for centuries, sotheby's has been at the crossroads of art and commerce, selling off countless works for record sums. as the venerable firm marks its 275th year, roxana has a look at its past and present. >> $8,500,000. >> with a mix of suspense. >> alex, are we going to come in? congratulations, sold. >> reporter: soaring prices and glamour, sotheby's has turned into one of the top fine art auction houses in the world. but what's now a $4 billion
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business in 40 countries. >> and a very warm welcome to sotheby's london. >> reporter: putting on more than 400 auctions a year started with the sale of scarce secondhand books in london, 275 years ago. the man wielding the first gavel was samuel baker, a book seller and the kaepernickcompany's fou. through the centuries, sotheby's expanded from aristocratic libraries into jewelry, estates, and art. >> when i came to sotheby's, there were 120 employees. >> reporter: marcus linell is sotheby's longest serving employee. he joined as a trainee. two years later he snuck into what turned out to be the biggest sale yet in the company's history. >> and the room was totally packed with celebrities, need i say. >> reporter: nearly $2 million worth of paintings gone in just 21 minutes. >> it was a cezanne, a manet, a
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monet, a renoir, and they were stunning pictures. >> reporter: sotheby's has brought in prices for other pieces classic and contemporary and sold the private collections of icons such as elton john, david bowie, and jacqueline kennedy thonassis. oliver barker has overseen some of sotheby's most prestigious auctions. >> a masterpiece. >> reporter: like the 2017 sale of this painting by jean michel basquiat. >> $98 million. thank you. congratulations. thank you very much. >> this is an artist who was never collected by american institutions during his lifetime, which tells you a lot about black american art as well. this felt like an absolutely transformative moment. $1,100,000. >> reporter: after more than 20 years an auctioneer, he still gets nervous. >> it's absolutely no safety net. strange things can happen too.
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>> reporter: like last year when he sold a painting by the street artist, banksy for nearly a million and a half dollars and it started falling through its frame, emerging in shreds. >> i remember this alarm going off and subliminally thinking, is that a fire alarm or, you know, do we need to safely evacuate everybody, the audience, from the room. ultimately i realized immediately this had to be banksy, it had to be a stunt that he pulled, basically. >> reporter: over the years, sotheby's has survived controversies. in 2002, it was fined for colluding with the world's other leading auction house, christy's, to fix commission fees. it's also been fighting the image that it's old school and elitist. can somebody like me who doesn't have a ton of money buy anything off of sotheby's? >> yes, absolutely. but you do need enough money to buy it. >> reporter: what is enough money? >> 45 pounds is one possibility. >> reporter: so i could buy something for $60.
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>> yes. not very often. i have to say. >> reporter: still, anyone can look at the items up close before they hit the auction block at free exhibitions and online bidding has opened up auctions. >> we talk about, now, sotheby's being a start-up, it's like a 275-year-old start-up but that is abundantly true. >> reporter: while the world of auctions is transforming, linell says their essence remains timeless. these items bring joy to people's lives. >> i do think they do. yes. >> reporter: is that why this job brings joy to you? >> oh, undoubtedly. >> i'm selling to you, sir. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning: saturday," roxana, london. >> have you ever been to one of these auctions? >> no. >> oh my god, they are just exhilarating to sit there and -- >> you were at one. >> i was over at christie's and i attempted to make a bid on something with eight other friends. >> it was not $60. >> didn't win. >> i want to know what sold for $60 that somebody could actually afford. >> seriously.
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we hope roxana gets it. >> one wonders. roxana, get on it. well, if you're heading out the door, don't forget to set your dvr to record "cbs this morning: saturday." the land of reds and whites could soon be feeling blue. we'll head to napa valley up next, famous for its wine production and see how climate change is now affecting a multibillion dollar industry. plus his new jersey workshop was a place where magic was made. we will revisit the life and work of inventor thomas edison, the subject of a new biography. and we will meet the grammy-winning indy band bon iver and they will perform in a special on location session. the nba controversy over the anti-government protests in hong kong reverberating once again here at home. the story is straight ahead. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." this is the age of expression.
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the nba's china controversy was front and center at the brooklyn nets preseason game against the toronto raptors. a few hundred demonstrators packed barclay's center in brooklyn, new york, friday night. they wore black t-shirts that read, stand with hong kong. this was the nets' first game back home since playing exhibition games in china. relations we relations between the league and chinese officials became strained after houston rockets general manager daryl morey sent a tweet supporting hong kong activists. days later, lebron james criticized the timing of that tweet. >> interesting situation here, the nets owner being born in taiwan. i know the league wants this to end and the talk to stop, but it does not feel like it will. >> not over. >> without a doubt. well, he wrote biographies
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of roosevelt and reagan but the last work of acclaimed author edmond moore sheds new light. for some of you, your local news is next. the rest, stick around, you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." i love it when they round up to 300 million. >> it was 300 last year. >> but john, are you doing a book a year? i said, wasn't john just here? are you doing a book a year? i marvel that you can do this. >> i've done a book a year since 1991. >> wow. and every one has gone to number one. >> yes. well, yeah. but who's counting? >> so, with the new one, cullen post is a lawyer turned minister. i was not aware that lawyers could become ministers, at least not lawyers in your book, typically. >> he's a reform lawyer, a lawyer in recovery who finds god. >> and does what with that? >> it's his calling to take o co
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innocents' cases and exonerate innocent people from prison and it's based of some real-life innocence lawyers i know who dedicate their careers to exonerating innocent people because there are a lot of innocent people in prison. >> he tries to help a character named quincy miller, who's a black man convicted of murder, maintaining his innocence. >> yes. he becomes convinced that quincy is innocent. he takes the case, and he gets more than he bargained for because the real murder in quincy's case does not want quincy out of prison. >> right. >> and so the real murderer is still out there so it gets really complicated. >> and they're still trying to get quincy and you tell about duke russell who was also on death row. we was this inspired by your own work with the innocence project? you started looking at these cases and said, there is a story here. because you're right, there are a lot of stories like this. >> every wrongful conviction is a fantastic story because of the level of human suffering, the injustice, the, just, storytelling, all the factors that we love in stories, they're in a wrongful conviction case.
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♪ hi there, welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday," i'm dana jacobson with michelle miller and jeff glor. coming up this hour, china isn't the only target of trade war tariffs. as of today, european food products have been hit with hefty new duties of up to 25%. we'll see what impact that's having on both ses of the atlantic, including the places where some favorite products are made. also, fine wine is often synonymous with the place where it's grown but those places are now being hit hard by climate change. we'll look at how some wine grapes may now be pressed for time and what's being done to save them. also, his only tv show his
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only tv interview, a special edition of our saturday session, meet members of the influential indie rock band bon iver and see a special taping just for us. >> just for us. i like that. but first, our top story this morning, more severe weather taking aim at the southeast. damage assessment teams will be out today after powerful winds and possible tornados from tropical storm nestor struck eastern and central florida overnight creating a potentially dangerous storm surge along the florida panhandle. more than 10,000 customers have no power. >> nestor is packing sustained winds of about 50 miles per hour and could make landfall this morning. communities still rebuilding after hurricane michael last year are on edge as they brace for more powerful weather. hilary lane is in shell point beach this morning about 20 miles south of tallahassee. hilary, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. here in florida's panhandle, the
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storm topped out at 50 miles per hour overnight and even this morning, the wind is continuing to gust. the beach here eerily quiet as the waves crash on to the shore. the national weather service overnight issued a tornado warning for parts of coastal and inland florida and we want to show you this dramatic video. an suv was picked up by the wind and it was thrown into an suv and in panama city, residents are on edge. these conditions make them nervous. it was a year ago that a category 5 hurricane, hurricane michael, decimated 75% of the city there. back out here, nestor is continuing to bring heavy wind gusts and rain all throughout the area. now it is expected to lessen as the day progresses and it is continuing to move up the east coast. jeff? >> all right, hilary, thank you. if you don't have to drive, do not do it in those conditions. hilary lane, appreciate it.
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the trump administration posed a fresh round of tariffs on european goods on friday. they affect $7.5 billion worth of products including wine, liquor, and parmesan cheese. in italy, cheese producers say their traditional product and its sale to the u.s. is now under threat. seth done has the story from, where else, parma, italy. >> reporter: good morning. could your spaghetti dinner be getting more expensive? this is a warehouse where thousands of wheels of parmesan, the real stuff, parmigia parmigiano reggiano are aged for years before being shipped around the world and now the cheese destined for america is also headed for a price hike. the price of their parmigiano reggiano was already at a premium. after all, they control each step here, tracking which cows ate in which fields and were milked on which days. >> parmigiano reggiano is a piece of italy.
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>> reporter: he's the fourth generation to run his family business in this specific region where parmigiano reggiano is made. bertenelli, who heads a group of cheese makers, says the u.s. is their second most important export marked and they had planned to double business there in the next five years, at least until these tariffs. >> we are worriedhat the price is going to achieve a level that after that, it's a broken price. >> reporter: people won't buy it. >> it's too expensive. >> reporter: cheese from almost every country in the eu will be hit by the 25% duty. >> when you look at the list, you say, hey, why these products are inside the list? and the other products are not. >> reporter: the u.s. tariffs read like a shopping list of european specialty products from clams to coffee to whiskey produced in scotland. there's yogurt or olives from spain, sparking protests there. german tools are on the list, so
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are sweaters made in the uk. ench wine and france i general is a big target. the unlikely trigger for these tariffs was the 15-year battle between boeing and french airplane maker air bus, so aircraft parts will get a 10% duty. the u.s. government argues european subsidies have undercut american workers. >> it hurts products that had nothing to do with airbus and boeing. >> reporter: he's italy's biggest exporter of parmigiano reggiano. he estimates the price in the store could go up by about $2.50 per pound. >> the american consumer, they're going to pay for this. >> reporter: at bertenelli's, they're ready for a fight and armed with their own spin. >> let's say trump says american first, parmigiano reggiano says, american consumers first.
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>> reporter: it's a good line. cheese makers here say there is no match when it comes to their taste or tradition and while they are used to competing for a place in your grocery cart, they say these new u.s. tariffs place unfair pressure on both producers and consumers. for "cbs this morning: saturday," seth doane, parma, italy. >> it's cool to see him there, right, just in that setting outside of the debate. >> it's hard to think that the cheese we love so much is going to cost so much more when it's already -- >> michelle's going to italy, she's going to bring us back a whole bunch, right? >> that will be fantastic. can't wait for that. >> thank you. well, it is about 6 after the hour now, and here's a look at the weather for your weekend.
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gelato, too. can you bring gelato >> yeah, sure. from recorded music to the movies and even the lightbulb, all got their start in the workshop of inventor thomas edison. up next, we'll learn more about his incredible legacy, the subject of a new biography. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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research and writing, is a raw and unflinching look at a man whose inventions have shaped nearly every aspect of modern life. it is also a stirring final act from edmund morris. ♪ >> reporter: walking through the thomas edison national historical park is a trip back in time. ♪ from all you rounders if you want to hear ♪ >> reporter: machines commissioned by a mind that produced the greatest inventions in history, the motion picture camera, the lightbulb, the phonograph. that's insane. it's more than a hundred years old, right? it is almost incredible to think about what thomas edison accomplished. what edmund morris does is explain how and why. what edmund accomplished is amazing. >> because there are more than 5 million documents in the edison archives here in west orange,
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and edmund mastered this body of material, both published and unpublished. >> reporter: leonard debraaf is the archivist at edison's west orange lab. his team worked closely with morris to make sure the author had access to everything. >> from the laboratory of t.a. edison. >> reporter: the archives. >> this is where he figured out the lightbulb. >> reporter: oh my gosh, look at that. his custom tools. this was edison's home depot. >> basically, yeah. >> reporter: even the contents of thomas edison's personal desk. inside his lavish library. >> important visitors would come in here. mark twain was in this room with edison in 1888. >> reporter: degraff said this facility sets the template. team-based research and development, which companies like google and other tech giants, use today. >> i would argue that the research and development laboratory is his most important invention. >> reporter: not the lightbulb. >> no. >> reporter: that's pretty fascinating to hear. >> no question about it.
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>> reporter: edison led it all with a punishing schedule, often working 50-hour stretches, sometimes napping on his workbench for short breaks. that routine had consequences. the personal side of thomas edison has never been examined the way morris does it. what does edmund morris explain about the thomas edison story that hasn't been explained before? >> edmund is able to convey the true nature of who edison was as a person in a way that reveals the aspects of his character that are less favorable. he could be cold, edison could be cruel. >> reporter: edison had very difficult relationships with his six kids and both his first and second wife. in part because he was almost never home. the complications of the man in full became the last work of one of the world's great biographers. his passing was sudden. >> very sudden, yes. and i think in our entire marriage, he only had two colds. >> reporter: sylvia jukes morris
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is edmund's widow, an accomplished biographer herself. the bound galleyed had just arrived this spring when edmund morris collapsed inside the couple's home in connecticut. >> all of a sudden i hear this bang and i look up, he's not in the chair. and i said, oh, darling, i called out, did you trip? i rushed over and found him on the floor and i picked up his head and he said, oh, a stroke. just like my father had. and then it slurred his voice at the end of the sentence, closed his eyes, and he died the following evening. >> reporter: sylvia jukes morris has left her husband's desk largely untouched. the books he was using at the time, his famous glasses, hanging on the wall, a portrait f theodore roosevelt. morris's first biography, "the rise of theodore roosevelt" won
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him the pulitzer prize. it was a first on a series that stretched a thousand pages longer than war and peace. a remarkable accomplishment for a man who up until his early 30s was working as an advertising executive. morris went on to write about ronald reagan's life with unprecedented access to the 40th president. this serves to introduce edmund morris, who's been authorized to write the president's biography. my husband and i have full confidence in mr. morris as historian and scholar and ask that you give him every assistance in his research. it's from nancy reagan. but that book, "dutch," was heavily criticized after morris invented a fictional character to move alongside reagan and tell his story. in an interview, on 60 minutes in 1999, morris talked about his opinion of reagan. >> i do not hide the fact that reagan was frequently an old spaced out man, inattentive to details. i do not disguise the fact that he was boring in private. >> that book was to controversial. how does all that sit with you?
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>> he'd probably tell you it was his favorite book because he wanted to do something different, you see? he said biography was so stick in the mud in a way, it was sort of birth to death and that, of course, got the critics very exercised. >> reporter: what did you think of that idea when he first said to the you? >> i was horrified, of course. >> reporter: as his new book was published, it will become clear edmund morris was not done shaking up the world of biographies. this time, he starts the book at the back and finishes with edison as a child, a sort of benjamin button tale. >> that's another thing we had words about. i said, you don't think you had enough trouble over "dutch," i said? >> reporter: and now you're going to do this. >> now you're going to write a book backwards. i said, oh, that's great. but he just liked challenges. he liked to be different. he was a little bit of a maverick in that way. >> reporter: it doesn't paint a very flattering picture of edison as a person. >> as a person. no. because those people who are going to achieve anything have got to sacrifice a lot of their personal life.
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>> reporter: do you think that's sad or do you think edison didn't care? >> i think it's inevitable. >> reporter: this is all edison here. >> this is all edison, yes. >> reporter: it really is incredible. edmund morris spent seven years researching and wrestling with every detail of thomas edison's life. it is illuminating, extensive, and a memorable final contribution from an author who will one day have books written about him. what is edmund's legacy? >> i think his legacy will be, a, he was a great biographer, but also, he was willing to do something original, hadn't been done before. i think that would be his greatest pride in his work. >> and i want to thank sylvia jukes morris for spending time with us. she was just so wonderful and open talking about edmund. obviously it's been a very difficult year for her but as this book is released now there's a lot to talk about and reflect on. >> i have to tell you, edison has been -- i've admired him for two things, one, he was a great
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scientist, open-minded, hired an african-american man because he bested him in his invention of the lightbulb, he made it even better. and so louis latimer is a known patentor and is now known to all of mankind. >> he was all about the team with edison, and that's the approach that we have today. team-based approach. >> yeah. . well, he's known for using carefully sourced seafood and sustainable ingredients but it's what chef anthony wells does with them that's earned him acclaim as one of san diego's finest chefs. we'll meet him and taste his seafood specialties next on "the dish." you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." (vo) imagine a visibly healthier pet in 28 days. purina one. natural ingredients in powerful combinations. for radiant coats, sparkling eyes. purina one. one visibly healthy pet. try new digestive health with probiotics for dogs. ( ♪ )
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restaurants, including thomas keller's per se here in new york before becoming executive chef at san diego's juniper and ivy. >> with an emphasis on fresh caught local seafood and seasonal ingredients, it's also known for plated dishes that are works of art and was just recognized with a bib gormand award from the famed michelin guide and chef anthony wells, good morning to you, welcome to "the dish." >> thank you, it's good to be here. >> describe all this business here. >> we have a few dishes that we serve at the restaurant. we have barbecued carrots, we make a little chimichurri with the tops of the carrots. >> that's cool. >> pickled apricots and toasted peanuts. there's a roasted potatoes with a cheddar cheese sauce. >> yum. >> pickled onions and some fried potatoes that kind of remind you of the bottom of the lay's potato chip bag. >> nice. >> a little version ofli lingui with clams and cream corn, some
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smoked pork belly and shrimp. we he a whole roast chicken with smokedond salsa verde. >> dessert? >> and dessert, of course. sticky toffee pudding cake. >> what is this? >> a passion fruit gin and tonic. >> oh, cheers to that. >> cheers. >> i got to cheers. >> so, anthony, is it true that it was a tv commercial that set you on this path in the culinary world? >> we missed here. >> sort of, yeah. it was a tv show, chef richard blaze, when he was on top chef, he was a pretty big inspiration to me and when he won, i just really wanted to work with him. and so i sent him an email and sure enough, he replied within a couple hours, and i moved to atlanta and the rest was history. >> what did that email say? >> it basically was just, congratulations on winning the show, i've kind of followed the whole season, i loved all of
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your little quirkiness and your thoughtfulness of food. >> you grew up in west virginia, right? >> correct. >> so this -- i mean, you've brought this left coast cooking into your life and into your business now because this certainly looks more like san diego cooking, i think. >> well, we just have wonderful product, 365 days a year, and we, at the restaurant, we've just made a lot of wonderful relationships and they just bring us top of the line product every day so it's -- the menu just writes itself. >> but you've been credited with changing or recreating modern southern californian cuisine or establishing it. >> i think establishing it, yeah, helping it out. yes. >> and how did you do it? i mean, what is it that's different? >> just persistence, you know? it's a lot of hard work and you got to know the right people and you got to be able to get ahold of the right people and you need
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to be willing to use their product, whether they have ton of product that day or a little bit of product that day. but we, through the good times and the bad times, we're always very supportive of all of the local fishermen, farmers. >> sustainability has been a really big thing for you now. >> absolutely. >> why is that so important to you? >> if not, the food's going to run out so we need to make sure that we're utilizing every little bit of whether it's the carrot or the fish or the pig, so we just try and utilize those odds and ends that normally most restaurants don't use and we're pretty -- we got pretty good at creating beautiful dishes out of them. >> what is it that you love about cooking? >> probably just the camaraderie of working with all of the men and women in the kitchen. it's -- we really created a family atmosphere at juniper and ivy and just i get excited to see the guys and girls every day and it's just -- it's special when it all comes together.
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>> i'm going to have you sign the dish and ask you if you could have this meal with anyone past or present, who would it be? >> the owner of the restaurant wanted me to come on this so much so i want to give a shoutout to mic rosen and if i could sit down and have this meal with anybody, it would be you, mike. i wish you were here. >> mike and anthony. coming to a restaurant near you. >> that's right. chef anthony wells, thank you very much, and if you want more on chef wells or the dish, you can head our website at cbsthismorning.com. >> speaking of drinks, lovers of wine may soon see some of their favorite types dry up. next, we go deep into the heart of california wine country, napa valley, for a visit to the largest family-owned vineyard there to show us what's being done to save the grapes. next week on "cbs this morning: saturday," another amazing true life tale, harriet tubman led scores of slaves to
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freedom. she was also a civil war scout, a spy, and a fighter for women's rights. now a much-anticipated film about her life is about to be released and we'll talk to the filmmaker. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." they're both really good. >> they are both really good. what's it like playing opposite yourself? >> it's just a nightmare. i'm such a diva. >> how do you do that? >> it was a dance in a way. >> like choreography. >> in a way, it is. it was a challenge and i was excited to try it. and i -- you know, normally, when you're acting opposite somebody, you don't know where a scene's going to go because what you do is dependent on what the other person is doing. and so, this was the first time i ever got to kind of think of a scene and really construct it from the ground up. >> how, like, how, like, literally, practically, how did
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you do it? a green screen, a dummy? >> it's not an unfamiliar convention but there are many ways you can do it and for me, the way that it was best, the way it worked best, was to record the audio for both characters, whatever character was driving the scene was the one that i would film first, but i would act -- i wouldn't act with a double or an acting partner. i would put a little ear wig in my ear, i would listen to the opposite line so if i'm playing the new version of the character, i can hear the old version replying because there is somebody off screen hitting the cue and then i would study that take once we settled on the proper master take that we would use, i would switch over to the other guy and i would see where i was moving and what gestures i was doing on what words and then i would hear it when i did the reverse and that's where it felt like choreography because i thought, on that line, i walked that way so i will turn my head and it became a little easier as it went along but it was -- >> i would think it could get pretty confusing. >> at times, but like anything,
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harvest season has begun in california's napa valley but the $160 billion wine industry could dry up if something isn't done to combat a changing climate. jamie yuccas traveled there to find out what options are available. jamie, what can you tell us? >> michelle, as a grape ripens, the compounds within it perform a delicate shifting balancing act for the right taste, texture, and color so any shift in climate conditions can be detrimental to the vines. while a red wine should be aged in barrels, these cabernet
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grapes are dying on the vine. andy has been growing grapes some of the biggest names since the early 1970s. >> how much cab do you drink a day in. >> breakfast, lunch, or dinner? >> reporter: but he's concerned about his future harvest. >> the big deal is the erratic nature that we have with climate here. we have bugs we never heard of. we have diseases we never heard of before. we have -- we've changed the way we farm because of it. >> reporter: you're fighting against climate change. >> yes. >> reporter: here in napa valley, cab is king. it's also where researchers are trying to save it with 11 different projects happening all over the area. you want to keep the wine quality. >> that's right. we want to keep it delicious and cost worthy of that $300 bottle. >> reporter: beck stofr vineyards is investing tens of millions of dollars, partnering with uc davis for the world's most ambitious cabernet caber t
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sauvignon root stock and trial. they say the area has heated up by nearly 2 degrees a year. it may not sound like much, but culturists say it's enough to make cabernet grapes extinct. >> we cannot just say, oh, well, we'll start think about 20 or 30 years from now. you know, you have to take action now. >> reporter: what does it mean to this area that you're doing this research? >> we don't look at this as just a northern california trial or experiment. we look at this as an industrywide trial. >> reporter: uc davis is using shade nets, switching from horizontal to vertical planning, and various technology to grow a better, stronger grape. you have naysayers. >> they might think we're going too far, spending too much money doing it, chasing things that won't turn up. >> reporter: researchers are testing 100 combinations, but it will take at least 6 years to yield results. like any fine wine, he says it will take time. but the fate of one of america's most famous valleys may hang in
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the balance. >> we'll use that data not only to fight climate change but in the best spot, hope floe to ful improve the wine quality. that's the big deal. >> reporter: and this is a really big deal for napa. 65% of the grapes that are grown there are cabernet sauvignon. >> this is an impact as far as climate change. we were working on a story with coffee, same thing and uc davis in on the research with that as well. >> rough assignment. >> yeah. it was a tough one. here's a look at the weather for your weekend. up next in our saturday session, bon iver, the grammy-winning band is an on
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arena tour that's rewriting the rules of a live performance. we will sit down with the band and take you to a special live performance in our saturday session. that is next. e lost, in a vast desert completely devoid of basset hounds. [ back in baby's arms by patsy cline ] then, it appeared a beacon of hope. ♪ i'm back in baby's arms more glorious than a billion sunsets. we were found. ♪ i'm back where i belong found by the hounds. ♪ back in baby's arms [it's funny what happens when people get together.
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holiday inn. holiday inn express. we're there. so you can be too. i'long before i had moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis. i've always been the ringleader. a zestor life. flash forward: tn ra kept me from the important things. and what my doctor said surprised me. she said my joint pain could mean permanent joint damage. and enbrel helps relieve joint pain and helps stop that joint damage. ask about enbrel, so you can get back to being your true self.
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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 some place 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 fever, bruising, bleeding, or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. visit enbrel.com to see how yor joint damage could progress. enbrel. fda approved for over 20 years. this morning on our saturday session, bon iver, founded by singer songwriter justin vernon, they broke out in 2012, winning two grammy awards. first, anthony mason spoke with the band just before a
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soldout concert. ♪ >> reporter: bon iver began as a little indie band out of wisconsin. it's become something much bigger. this is an arena band now. does that feel weird? >> yeah, sure. >> yeah, it does. >> yeah. >> it sure feels weird for me. i skipped a lot of steps. i just got plopped right down in here. >> reporter: jen is the newest member of a band that started with just justin vernon. and now includes multiinstrumentalist matt mccann, sean carey, mark lewis and andrew fitzpatrick. i think of your music as very intimate and when you're in a place like this, you always wonder, can you create intimacy? >> i think it works and i think because it's so big, you end up kind of feeling really small and part of something bigger.
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>> reporter: do you feel like people have learned how to pronounce your name finally after all these years? >> no, no. it's okay, though. >> reporter: you're okay with that. >> it's like, what are you doing to do? no, that's not right. you know, some people call me mr. iver. >> bon and the ivers. >> that's a good one. >> reporter: bon iver was born when vernon went off into the wisconsin woods to write music. when you started in the beginning, what were you envisioning? >> a group. like a little town. like where you can live your best life. >> reporter: he took the group's name from a greeting used in an episode of the old tv show, "northern exposure." >> in an tticipation of this upcoming season, let me wish each and every one of you a bon iver, good winter. >> reporter: bon iver's debut album released in 2007 "for emma forever ago" would go platinum.
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the band's second and third albums soared to number two on the charts and bon iver won two grammys but success scared vernon. in 2017, he cancelled a tour. justin, you went through a tour where you were not very happy with the music business. >> nope. you're right. >> that's weird. when you're uncomfortable, you have discomfort, you get angry. >> reporter: what were you uncomfortable with? >> attention. this is an example of something i couldn't have done five years ago. i just, like, didn't have it within me or the strength to sit here and talk with you. >> reporter: friendship and therapy, he says, helped heal him. was part of the process for you sort of opening yourself up more? >> yeah, man. vulnerability seems to be the word. >> reporter: have you guys notice a noticed a change in him? >> definitely. >> reporter: the band recorded its new album, "i, i" over six
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weeks in west texas. >> and a lot can happen really organically when we're in the same space. there's a lot of language you develop that is not in the english language. >> what language is it? >> it is the musical language that you can only develop between people that you actually play with every day. >> reporter: that new collaborative spirit was what convinced jen wasner to join. >> it's a lot of confidence but it's also a sign of a lot of generosity and i felt welcome instantly and it really has felt like i've been doing this forever. >> justin, you're smiling big here. >> yeah. >> reporter: feels good? >> yeah, man. we just -- this is great. i wish we could do it forever. >> and now in a special performance from brooklyn's barclay's center with music from that latest album, here is bon iver with "salem. kwlts ♪
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♪ don't go away. we'll be right back with more music from bon iver. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> announcer: saturday sessions are sponsored by blue buffalo. you love your pets like family, so feed them like family with blue. ge... all dogs descend from wolves and for thousands of years they've shared a love for meat. grain-free blue wilderness is made to satisfy that desire. feed the wolf that lives inside your dog with blue wilderness.
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♪ and i stood a little while within it ♪ ♪ man, you have to know, know the way it goes ♪ ♪ goes, goes ♪ goes, goes ♪ if forgiveness is a chore, what you waiting for, we been here before and i can't ignore it anymore ♪ ♪ you know the way it goes, how much longer then ♪ ♪ i'll tell you why ♪ i am, i am, i am
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