tv CBS This Morning CBS November 16, 2019 4:00am-6:01am PST
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. good morning. it is saturday, november 16th, 2019. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday". intimidating testimony. president trump is accused of witness tampering as he attacks the former ukraine ambassador while she's testifying. why it may add to the president's troubles. >> cbs obtains the new book claimed to be written by a white house insider. hear how the horse details a presidency based on schemes, cruelty and abuses of power. royal regrets. in a rare confrontational
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interview prince andrew talks about his relationship with jeffrey epstein. >> agents of change. the fbi marks a century since hiring their first african-american special at as we get rare access to the bureau's archives. see how lessons from the past are impacting today. >> street smarts for 50 years "sesame street" has been a trail blazer in television. we'll talk with the creators and characters to make us smarter, stronger and kinder. we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. we have more testimony, more testimony, witness to nothing. >> this has to be the worst day of the presidency for donald trump. >> president trump's tweets hang over impeachment testimony. >> i think it's considered a joke. >> never before has a president publicly attacked a impeachment witness at the moment they were testifying. >> it's very intimidating.
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>> do you think you'll get impeached? >> i shouldn't be. >> prince andrew has answered questions for the first time about his relationship with jeffrey epstein. >> it was not something that was becoming well-known. >> miles garrett won't play again after clubs rudolph with his helmet on thursday night. a bizarre collison that left two planes tangled up at a texas airport. no one was hurt. >> all that -- >> "jeopardy" james has done it again. >> in a return of champions. >> lebron james brings down the house. >> meet a dog who is still trying to master fetch. >> -- and all that matters.
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>> one of the sexiest man alive. >> i got sexiest man alive when i had full mustache and a 40-inch waist. so thank you, america. on "cbs this morning: saturday". >> here's t.j. -- final seconds falling away. off the boards! b byu wins it. a heart stopping finish here in houston! >> announcer: this morning's "eye opener" is presented by toyota. let's go places. now that is a celebration. >> good morning. >> welcome to the weekend, everyone. i'm michele miller along with jeff gore.
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>> we are so excited about that. also excited about to have you here. this morning we're going to take you to what is the most awe inspiring places on this earth. zion national park is celebrating a century as a national park. we'll take a look at the history of this beloved place and check out some of the harder to find spots with one of the world's best free classes. then we'll go to europe where a home can be for yours around a $1. just a buck. part avenue program to revive run down parts of remote towns. hundreds have already gone up for sale. you'll meet some americans who have bought one and find out the one little catch. >> she won an academy award for her first movie ever. julie andrews made some most beloved films of all time. we'll talk to her about the early years of hollywood as she releases a new book.
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but we begin this morning with a fresh fight for the white house. president trump added new tension to the public impeachment hearings on friday which the white house dismissed as useless and inconsequential. former u.s. ambassador to ukraine marie yovanovitch talked about a smear campaign orchestrated by the president's associates that led to her removal. minutes after her testimony began the president attacked her in real-time. a development most republicans were not expecting. >> reporter: good morning. the white house plan was to insist that president trump is too busy being president to dignify even watching these impeachment hearings which he calls a sham. but the president himself dropped a bomb on that strategy shortly after friday's hearing began. former ukraine ambassador marie yovanovitch testified that she felt threatened after reading an account of president trump's july 25th phone call with ukrainian president zelensky where he called yovanovitch bad
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news and said she was going to go through some things. >> what was the reaction when you heard the president of the united states refer to you as bad news? >> shocked. appalled. devastated. that the the president of the united states would talk about any ambassador like that to a foreign head of state. >> reporter: yovanovitch detailed a smear campaign against her, led by rudy giuliani, the president's personal attorney, who was running a shadow foreign policy in ukraine. >> i've been watching today. >> reporter: the white house had claimed president trump was too busy to watch the hearing, but about an hour into yovanovitch's testimony, mr. trump launched a twitter attack on her. every where marie yovanovitch went turned bad, the president tweeted with no evidence. it is a u.s. president's absolute right to appoint ambassadors. >> now the president in real-time is attacking you. >> reporter: in an extraordinary
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moment adam schiff read the tweet and asked for yovanovitch's response. >> i mean i can't speak to what the president is trying to do but i think the effect is to be intimidating. >> i want to let you know, ambassador, that some of us here, take witness intimidation very, very seriously. >> reporter: democrats are now considering adding witness intimidation to their articles of impeachment and even some of the president's allies admit mr. trump hurt himself with the tweet. >> i don't think so at all. >> reporter: the president says he was just speaking his mind. >> i have the right to speak. i have freedom of speech just as other people do. >> reporter: republicans argue that yovanovitch's testimony was irrelevant because she was removed two months before mr. trump suddenly withheld military aid from ukraine the focus of the impeachment inquiry. >> not exactly sure what the ambassador is doing here today. >> reporter: democrats say her removal opened the door for someone else. >> hi i'm gordon sondland. >> reporter: a trump donor and
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eu ambassador that urged ukrainians to look into joe biden and the 2016 election. in closed door testimony late friday, state department official david holmes testified that he heard sondland talking to president trump on the phone. he heard mr. trump ask sondland if ukrainian president zelensky could do the investigation. sondland replied he'll do it and do anything you ask him to do. gordon sondland will be testifying publicly next week. >> thank you. "new york" magazine national correspondent gabe joins us. a lot happened this week. but the republicans insist there was no bomb shell. irrelevant testimony. just a big sham. what impact especially with david holmes coming out did this testimony in these hearings give? >> i think that's obviously the republican line from the start that this will be a sham, this was all hearsay.
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what we saw this week a number of credible witnesses who have some personal knowledge of the various policy changes that were happening in ukraine and in some cases were the subject of intimidation from the president. one of the thing that we're going to see in the next few days is people who did have firsthand knowledge of the various calls we're discussing, speaking out in public and that will have to change a little bit. >> david holmes in particular, talk about him and what we'll see in his testimony. >> david holmes was one of the people who was directly privy to the call we learned about this week from ambassador bill taylor between the president and gordon sondland the ambassador to the european union about trying to pressure ukraine. holmes is essentially corroborating the idea that president trump was directly involved in directing this investigation. >> he said he heard the conversation because the president was so loud. >> that's right. we'll also be hearing from sondland and alexander vindman, who was also on the line with
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the other phone call. >> possibly a few others. >> that's right. >> what about this remarkable moment where the president tweeted and then adam schiff was reading and asking a response from ambassador yovanovitch. have any republicans spoken out yet to defend the president's tweeting? >> what you've seen from a lot of republicans is essentially saying let's not talk about the process here, let's talk about the substance of what's happening. in many ways a deflection. you saw an interesting thing from democrats they are talking about this, the president's tweets in real-time as a potential new line of inquiry in the impeachment process, potential new article of impeachment just because of that tweet. obviously we've never seen anything like that before. >> does gordon sondland have to turn on the president? >> that's what everyone in washington is asking. he's been a staunch ally of the president but he's changed his testimony in the last two weeks. it does sound incriminating towards president trump. >> on the heels of this hearing,
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roger stone being convicted. >> another one of the president's close associate going to prison for a long time. not something that the white house is looking forward to talk about. >> banking on a pardon. >> that's right. >> the impeachment inquiry continues next week. cbs news will have special coverage of the hearings on tuesday, wednesday and thursday. and this morning we're getting our first look at the new book written by an anonymous trump administration insider. it's not out until tuesday but what book already has laeeapt t pre-sales chart and cbs news obtained an advance warning. it's written by a self-described senior trump administration official who wrote an op-ed about an internal resistance against president trump. steve, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the book describes the president as a complete amateur while dealing with foreign leaders who
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thrives on schemes and is prone to abuses of power. it also suggests he's mentally unstable. the book portrays the president as recognize laekless and irres like shipping migrants to guantanamo bay and doing away with federal judges. the writer said the president's own staff once considered resigning in protest. they even entertained maneuvering his cabinet to use the 25th amendment to remove him. vice president mike pence responded to the allegation while in new hampshire earlier this month. >> when those rumors came out a few years ago i dismissed them then. i never heard any discussion in my entire tenure as vice president about the 25th amendment. why would i? >> reporter: the author makes it clear the president was not happy with his former attorney general. >> if i had one do over it would be i would not have appointed jeff sessions to be attorney general.
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>> reporter: anonymous said president said sessions was the stupidest creature ever created. after flags were lowered following senator john mccain's death anonymous writes the president wanted all government buildings to hoist their flags back up. >> i was not a big fan of john mccain in any way, shape or form. >> reporter: anonymous briefly mentions the ukraine call whistle-blower saying the president shouldn't seek revenge like tin pot dictators. the anonymous author calls himself or herself a senior trump official but cbs news has not independently confirmed the writer's identity or the claims made in the book. it is not clear whether the author still works in the administration. the person first caught the president's attention with this scathing "new york times" column last year. >> the latest active resistance is the op-ed published in the failing "new york times" by an
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anonymo anonymous, gutless, coward. >> reporter: the white house called the anonymous author a coward in the book "nothing but lies." planning to donate a substantial portion of any royalties to nonprofits that support government accountability including the white house correspondent's association. >> president trump's long time friend and confidant roger stone remains free this morning after a reckoning with justice. stone said nothing after leaving federal court in washington on friday. a jury found him. guilty of lying to congress, witness tampering and other charges. seven counts in all, dealing with his attempts to get dirt on hillary clinton. stone can face up to 50 years in prison when sentenced in february. he's now the sixth trump associate to have either pled guilty or been convicted of federal crimes in connection
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with robert mueller's russia investigation. a friend and associate of the president is drawing new legal scrutiny. according to the "wall street journal," rudy giuliani is being investigated by federal authorities for possible financial crimes. they are looking at how the president's personal attorney may have profited from ukrainian natural gas business. two russians were arrested last month facing charges of illegally funneling foreign money into u.s. election campaigns. a major coastal storm is threatening to bring heavy rain and potential flooding to the southeast and mid-atlantic states today. our meteorologist has details and a look at the nation's weather. jeff, good morning. >> good morning to all of you at home. we have a doozy of a storm shaping up for the southeast coast. high pressure from canada building south kind of battling against a strong low pressure
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developing along the coast. that pressure gradient funneling in the wind. i think we'll see wind gusts close to hurricane force tonight and tomorrow morning along the north carolina coast. today those gusts are in the range of 50, 55 miles per hour. get worse tonight. hatteras over 60 miles per hour tonight and tomorrow we could touch around 70 mile-per-hour wind gusts. at the same time it will be pouring sideways in the eastern part of north carolina. three to six inches of flooding rain possible. speaking of flooding, coastal flooding also a concern because as this storm starts to power up, we're going to see the waves build to flow es feet offshore. dangerous surf. coastal inundation along the coast. coast of north carolina could have two to four feet of in inundati inundation. after that the storm turns into a nor'easter. shine up the skis, snow for ski
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resorts. >> double whammy. yikes. the city of santa clarita, california just north of los angeles continues to grieve this morning following this week's deadly shooting at saugus high school. the alleged shooter a 16-year-old died friday while being treated for a self-inflicted gunshot to his head. the two deans he's accused of murdering have now been identified. carter evans report they leave behind a community struggling to make sense of this tragedy. >> reporter: this was the scene thursday morning at saugus high school when a student opened fire on his 16th birthday. he shot five classmates killing two. >> we did not find the any manifesto, any diary that spelled it out, any suicide note or writings which will clearly identify his motive behind this assault.
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>> reporter: mia is recovering from a gunshot wound. all victims were chosen at random but the attack was deliberate. they say when the 16-year-old took out his .45 caliber handgun it initially jammed. >> in. 16 seconds he cleared a malfunction and was able to shoot five people and himself. he seemed very familiar with firing the weapon. >> reporter: an entire community is now trying to heal as they face a disturbing reality. here was a 16-year-old, with a girlfriend, a member of his school's cross country team, now the country's latest mass shooter. >> what was his mother's reaction? >> she was cooperative in the interview and as shocked as everybody else. >> i was in shock. i was like that could not be him. >> he didn't fit the profile of what you hear of as a typical school shooter. >> yeah. that scares me even more because you realize how easy it is for
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it to happen again. >> reporter: investigators say they found several gun inside the shooter's home. some were registered to his late father. others were not registered at all. the atf is still trying to determine where he got the .45 caliber handgun used in the attack. there was a development this morning in the investigation into the death of jeffrey epstein. federal prosecutors offered plea deals to two correctional officers who were guarding the sex offender here in a jail last summer. the men delined the deal. the guards refused to check on epstein on the night he hanged himself. >> for the first time britain's prince andrew is breaking his silence with epstein and accusations of sex with a minor. the prince spoke the to our partner the b b c. we have more on that. >> reporter: good morning.
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as you can imagine, this is the lead story here in the uk. splashed across the front pages of all the papers. it's extremely rare that a member of the royal family would go on camera to confront allegations against them. this is the most damning photograph of prince andrew, next to him is virginia roberts, just 17 at the time and under age. she says the prince had sex with her three times at jeffrey epstein's properties. >> he knows what he's done, and i hope he comes clean about it. >> reporter: buckingham palace denies the allegations. prince andrew is on royal damage control speaking for the first time about the allegations with the bbc. >> i have no recollection of meeting this lady. >> were you surprised he didn't give a clear denial. >> the prince confronted every single question we asked. i think viewers will decide for themselves from what they hear,
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see, what they choose to believe of his account and where they have further questions of their own. >> reporter: the prince's friendship to epstein dates back to the late '90s. here they are in central park in 2010. >> you were staying at the house with a convicted sex offender? >> it was a convenient place to stay. i've gone through this in my mind so many times. at the end of the day, with the benefit of all the hindsight that one could have, it was definitely the wrong thing to do. >> reporter: i think a lot of people will be baffled by some of his response. he stayed at a convicted pedophile's house because it was a convenient place to stay. >> it was an odd choice of word that interview certainly not word perfect, quite uncomfortabl in places. it is raw.
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i think he is speaking in the way that he's accustomed to and that is not to engage with the bbc interviews. >> reporter: it will remain to be seen what the court of public opinion makes of prince andrew's account. will itsy lens his critics or fuel further speculation. so rare to see a member of the royal family speak this way. >> want to know why he did it. wonder? >> what their reaction must be from the royal family. >> it's about 22 minutes after the hour. here's a look at the weather for your weekend.
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after his side lined protest, former nfl quarterback colin kaepernick getting another shot? still ahead we'll preview his scheduled work out today before as many two dozen pro teams. >> the classic image of an fbi agent may be serious, square jaw and white. many african-americans have had distinguished careers with the agency. we'll hear about these agents of change including the very first. >> later a national treasure. one of america's best loved national parks turns 100 next week. we'll take you there and find out why it is so cherished by visitors. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday".
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>> the proceeds for this song will go to a service dog foundation. it's a beautiful thing. i have some stories. i was i wanted in the documentary to learn that the department much veterans affairs supports veterans with ptsd but does not actually support funding of service dogs for those with ptsd. do you think the government is doing enough? >> they are doing their surveys to make sure the training is done properly. my education is on the first page of the book. the process is again going through congress to get a bill passed. so the government will support this. >> the dogs are better than
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medication, therapy, than a prosthetic. i found it overwhelming the difference the dogs make. what did this dog mean personally? >> my mom and dad were in the marine corps which is pretty neat. my mom wasn't afraid of boot camp. >> how did that influence your upbringing. >> service was always important. my parents taught us that. and although i didn't serve, my three best buddy, four of us in high school, we all got the call. i had a belief i would what i'm doing. >> you have a foundation. it helps fund something the new walter reed veterans apartment. >> 77 units thus far of affordable housing for vets with services all under roof. we help usa. not the first time i partnered
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>> there's a flag as -- >> no telling when miles garrett's football career will resume. the nfl swepd suspended him hou after he struck mason rudolph in the head a helmet. garrett was the number one pick in the draft two years ago will miss the rest of this season and could face further discipline next season. he apologized to rudolph in a statement friday. two other players were suspended for the ruckus in thursday night's game. a player who has been out of the nfl will have his closest encounter with the league since he caused a storm of controversy
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three years ago. the nfl organized a work out for colin kaepernick today in atlanta. the information san francisco 49ers quarterback polarized the public in 2016 when he began protesting police brutality and injustice by not standing for the national anthem. kenneth craig is here with more. kenneth, how is it looking? >> at least 11 teams so far have rsvp'd for the work out. it's unusual for the nfl to do something like this for a single player and especially for somebody as controversial as colin kaepernick. >> 5 a.m., five days a week for three years, still ready. >> colin kaepernick is finally getting the shot he's been waiting for. a chance to make an nfl roster. >> i have no idea why the nfl has done this. >> the question on everyone's mind is, why now? >> it will be nearly three years since colin kaepernick's last
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game. >> kaepernick hasn't played in the nfl since january 2017. his pre-game protests over police brutality during the national anthem first by sitting then kneeling igniteed a firestorm. kaepernick sudden the nfl for colluding to keep him out of the league. the two sides settled in february. >> i think the nfl has had enough blow back from the media, from fans, from people around kaepernick, from players, why isn't this guy getting a chance. >> former green bay packers vice president andrew brandt says the nfl felt like it had to do something. >> this is telling kaepernick and the world -- >> we let in all these teams to see him. it's not our fault if they don't sign him. >> more than a dozen teams are expected to attend today's work out in atlanta. brandt calls the mid-season try out unprecedented. >> no head coaches at this work out and no general manager at this work out.
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the likelihood that kaepernick is signed this year is slim to none. i think the best case result for colin kaepernick out of this work out is signing what is called a futures contract for 2020 and beyond. >> video of kaepernick's work out and interview will be made available to all 32 nfl teams. unclear whether we'll see any of the work out today. he's been preparing for this for a long time. >> i'm interested in what the court of public opinion has to say about this after the work out. >> looks like he's ready to play. yellowstone and yosemite may get more press but there's few spots more cherished than this park. we'll take you there ahead. but first, here's a look at the weather.
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>> he was the son of former slaefrs and a member of the famed buffalo soldiers of the first world war but it's what james wormley jones accomplished 100 years ago this month that blazed the trail for many of today's fbi agents the. that story is next. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". ♪ whoa whoa ♪ life is better with you ♪ ♪ i know just one thing is true... ♪ ♪ life is better with you ♪
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this month the fbi is marking 100th anniversary of the hiring of the first african-american special agent. it's a chapter of the bureau's history not well-known but relevant to what is happening inside the fbi today. cbs news chief justice and homeland security correspondent jeff was given rare access to archives. good morning, jeff. >> reporter: good morning. there are no known photographs of the first african-american special agent but a record of his hiring a century ago. as we look through the fbi archives bureau officials tell us there are lessons from the past that is relevant today as to what's happening inside fbi. inside fbi headquarters in washington is an archive room filled with hundreds of thousands of documents. in this lone application for the job of special agent, it was
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handwritten in 1919 by james wormley jones. until now the then 35-year-old has been a footnote in the bureau's history. andy vale is an assistant director of the fbi. >> most people don't know who he is. >> that's true. 100 years ago. december of 1919. son of a slave. washington metropolitan police officer. world war i veteran. >> reporter: according to the fbi jones was employed exclusively in an under cover capacity working directly under j. edgar hoover. more black agents would follow jones' foot steps into the bureau and too would work undercover in the black community. hoover would go on to become the longest tenured fbi director and targeting influential black americans would become a pattern. in the '50s and '60s hoover targeted martin luther king jr. for extensive surveillance. >> we're going to walk nonviolently and peacefully.
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>> it was actually the career of a lifetime. >> reporter: but that history did not stop john glover. in 1966 he became the second african-american graduate from the fbi's training academy in quantico, virginia. >> i had a class of new agents training class of 32 individuals. i was the only african-american. >> reporter: glover would rise through the ranks. in late 1970s when the city of atlanta was being haunted bay series of child murders, he led the fbi response. >> i think for the black community it was kind of satisfying to see an african-american man up in front, in charge. >> reporter: in 1982, glover would become the bureau's first black assistant director. still glover sympathized with other black agents who sued the fbi alleging systemic discrimination. >> they would see themselves in
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an undercover role or see themselves doing something that only an african-american agent could do, not something that any agent could do. and there was some resentment about that. >> was that valid? >> i think so. >> reporter: today less than 5% of fbi special agents are black. >> a diverse fbi will be a more effective fbi. >> reporter: voviette morgan is the only female african-american special agent in charge. >> i don't think in the african-american commune you think about oh, i want to be an fbi agent. i hope that changes. i do want little girls the that look like me to have this as a very viable option to desire it, to want it. >> reporter: andy vale says current fbi director christopher wray made recruiting people of color a top priority. >> in order for us to be
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successful we have to be reflective of the communities we're sworn to serve and protect. >> reporter: this month the fbi recognized james wormley jones and other african-american special agents. the bureau is looking ahead to the future and acknowledging its past. >> we have to own it. we have to ensure that it doesn't repeat itself. we have to have everyone in like mind on that as we move forward. >> reporter: now fbi agents visit the martin luther king memorial in d.c. and study hoover's policies towards king. fbi agents say it's a lesson on what happens when power is abused. >> fascinating piece. thanks for coming in. really eye-opening. less than 5% of fbi agents are african-american. >> be interesting to hear how many beyond the african-american community are now a part of the bureau. how many asian-americans,
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muslim-americans. the net should be wide. >> chris wray is focusing on that right now. >> biblically speaking zion is a sanctuary or a heavenly place. that's how visitors describe the national park of the same name now celebrating its centennial year. we'll take you there next. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". e are real p, not actors, who've got their eczema under control. with less eczema, you can show more skin. so roll up those sleeves. and help heal your skin from within with dupixent. dupixent is the first treatment of its kind that continuously treats moderate-to-severe eczema, or atopic dermatitis, even between flare ups. dupixent is a biologic, and not a cream or steroid. many people taking dupixent saw clear or almost clear skin. and, had significantly less itch. that's a difference you can feel.
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this coming week is the 100th anniversary of an american treasure. zion national park was established on november 19th, 1919. today zion is more popular than ever and a new film will be released this tuesday to celebrate the park's epic trails, climbs and river walks. it is hard to find a more stunning place on earth than zion. we were lucky enough to find two perfect guides. >> we are headed out here to canyon overlyrica okanoing down pine creek canyon. >> our trip to zion began at the park's awe inspiring canyon overlook.
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>> you got nine layers of geology. >> you're looking at more than 250 the million years of history from top to bottom. >> when you come through the entrance of the canyon what planet are we on here? >> these rocks have given jeremy collins both his obsession and his profession. he's among the world's most recognized at free climbing and landscape sketching. >> i started drawing sometime when i was in kindergarten and just never stopped. and it's gone on to define my whole career. that's how i do my story telling. >> collins has traveled the world to climb mountains from china to venezuela and the arctic circle. but always returns to zion. >> you spend enough time in a place and it becomes home and that's zion for me. >> enough stars in a new documentary celebrating the park's centennial. >> like layers of rock here there's layers of story about
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zion. >> you get lost sometimes. >> yeah. you go into the zone and the world disappears for a minute. anyone wants that experience. >> these days more than 4 million visitors come to zion every year looking for some version of the same experience. they follow zion's scenic drive. hike to angel's landing. and walk the narrows. >> i spent time working in the visitor center. >> park ranger starting walking us to her favorite spot the emerald pools. along the way we found the snack. >> all you got to do is -- >> prickly pear. >> cut it. split it open. once you get the skin peeled off you got this beautiful fruit on the inside there. >> reminds me of pomegranate and strawberry. >> this is it, my favorite spot. right up here.
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sometimes you'll be walking through here because it's green year round. deer can always find food. it's sanctuary for everything here. >> that's the thing about zion you have waterfalls and desert. >> two eco smgs meystems meetin. you can look up and see more of the desert. light you're in that oasis of water you don't always find in a desert landscape. >> that water from the virgin river carved zion's epic canyon. this area was not well-known until 1904 when this painting was featured at the world's fair in st. louis. it was so stunning many didn't believe it was real. in 1920s the union pacific railroad launched a very successful campaign to market the park featuring coeds dressed in hiking gear. a tunnel that allowed far more to access the park was completed
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in 1930. a shuttle and tram system was introduced in 2001. there is no tram that goes to the places jeremy collins prefers. we'll follow your route. >> this can get pretty mean in the spring. >> i would imagine. >> doing this when it's rushing -- oh, yeah. >> still cold. >> yes, it is. >> reporter: he took us to the climbing wall called "moonlight" buttress. >> watch out for this here. it looks mean. it can create a particular challenge. i can free climb. i'm a free climber. i like to use my hand and feept not my gear. >> reporter: when climbing is your passion an opportunity like this can't be passed up although this one wasn't necessarily park approved. >> be careful. you can't resist. >> if i'm hoping to climb while
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i'm out here i can stress you guys out. ♪ i've had experience climbing in the park when i was alone even though i felt i was on fire it was a special experience just having the place to myself. >> do you like punishing yourself? >> i think everybody who climbs has a little bit of a masochist bent. >> reporter: zion national park may be turning 100. but collins is happy to tell you it never gets old. >> i would say if you find a place you love, keep going back. wait five years and come back. develop a relationship with that place because when you have a relationship with a place or a person, you want to take care of that thing. it's interesting to hear collins talk about that. you don't have to visit every
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single national park but find one you love go back again and again because there's so much to explore. >> i like you jeff glor to inspire me. there's something about being in places like that. there's a trust. we picked up five hikers that tram left behind. it was dead of night. my daughter said you can't leave them out there. okay, if you say so. >> i love that watching your piece there i felt calm watching the first part of it. then watching jeremy go up -- >> free climbing. wasn't park sanctioned. >> jeff went up too. if you're heading out the door don't forget to set your vcr to record "cbs this morning: saturda saturday". they taught the nation their a b cs and plenty of life lessons. we'll celebrate 50th anniversary of "sesame street". >> julie andrews has been entertaining us for longer than
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for fast pain relief. but shouldn't somebody this is be listening?pression. so. let's talk. we're built for hearing what's important to you, one to one. edward jones. it's time for investing to feel individual. [it's funny what happens when people get together. holiday inn. holiday inn express. we're there. so you can be too. o♪ ozempic®! ♪ oh! oh! (announcer) people with type 2 diabetes are excited about the potential of once-weekly ozempic®. in a study with ozempic®, a majority of adults lowered their blood sugar and reached an a1c of less than 7 and maintained it.
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some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. i discovered the potential with ozempic®. ♪ oh! oh! oh! ozempic®! ♪ (announcer) if eligible, you may pay as little as $25 per prescription. ask your health care provider today about once-weekly ozempic®. james hightower congratulations you won a quarter of a million dollars. enjoy the moment. >> a familiar face was crowned the tournament of champions winner on "jeopardy" last night. james took home the $250,000 prize. he bested emma in the final. she's the contestant who ended his historic 32 game winning streak back in june. he has now won more than $2.7 million on the show. >> i would say he answered that question. >> he sure did. well, still ahead this morning, we'll talk to the
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legendary julie andrews about her start and then sudden success in 1960 hollywood. for some of you local news is next. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". it's not venice but it will do. >> ian and helen took their first gondola ride in central park. it's not the only first for these two veteran actors who sat down in the central park boat house for tea and biscuits. >> it's a chocolate. oh, my god that's like heroin. >> how would you know heroin? >> the 80-year-old sir ian and 74-year-old dame helen are finally in their first film together >> you're the only person on this planet who makes me feel
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like i'm not alone. >> in "the good liar" he's an elegant con man. she a widow prey. >> the whole point of the movie is not to see it coming. >> they meet on an internet dating service but nothing is quite as it seems. >> there's a scene in this movie where the two of you end up on the floor wrestling with each other. >> yes. >> i have the scars to prove it. >> i'm down now. i'm not quite sure 0-i'll get up. >> the two of you have only worked together only once before. >> what an occasion that was. >> back in 2001 they co-starred in "dance of death" on broadway, but opening night almost didn't happen. >> the morning of 9/11 you were in rehearsal. >> we were doing our last run through. >> new yorkers kept on.
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♪ welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday". i'm jeff glor with michelle miller. >> any kid can tell you how to get there and we've been going there for generations. dana will go for a walk down "sesame street" as the 50th season of the beloved children's show is about to appear. >> julie andrews had doubts about taking on that role. find out when she talks to than mason about her hollywood
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memoir. >> they may like curb appeal. you can't beat the price. we'll take you to a place where houses sell for just a dollar. but first our top story this hour, the impeachment inquiry. president trump is rejecting criticism that he's guilty of witness tampering. criticism came when former u.s. ambassador to ukraine marie yovanovitch testified before impeachment investigators on friday. as she answered questions, president trump tweeted insults at her. congressman adam schiff asked the ambassador about them. >> what effect do you think that has on other witnesses willingness to come forward and expose wrongdoing? >> well, it's very intimidating. >> the president's attack came as yovanovitch said she was removed from her post by what she described as a smear campaign. republicans dismissed her testimony as irrelevant. >> for his part president trump
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said he was only exercising his freedom of speech. speaking to reporters yesterday the president dismissed accusations that he tried to intimidate marie yovanovitch and flipped the script on intelligence committee chairman adam schiff. >> when a guy like schiff, shifty schiff. tampering is when schiff doesn't let us have witnesses. >> yesterday david holmes a u.s. embassy staffer in ukraine confirmed to investigators that he overheard a phone call in which president trump asked gordon sondland, the u.s. ambassador to the european union about investigations in ukraine. holmes says sondland told the president they were going to happen. the impeachment inquiry resumes next week with testimony from eight more witnesses. intensify manhunt is under way this morning for a gunman who opened fire at a high school football in pleasantville, new jersey last night. players ran off the field and
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spectators raced out of the stands when gun shots rang out. two people suffered serious injuries. not clear what set off that shooting. >> and there's been a dramatic development in the case of a death row inmate in texas whose case has gained national attention. late friday the state's highest court blocked the execution of rodney reed. he was scheduled to die next week by injection for the rain and murder of stacy in 1996. new evidence has cast doubt on the case and his conviction. >> it is about three minutes after the hour. here's a look at the weather for your weekend. ♪ from a small town in england
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to fame and fortune in hollywood that was the journey that young julie andrews detailed in her new memoir. first another journey. >> coming up on cbs thr"cbs thi morning" saturday for 50 years "sesame street" has been helping kids to become kindser. don't go away because i'll take you to "sesame street". ♪ alka-seltzer plus. part with now with 25% more concentrated power. nothing works faster for powerful cold relief. oh, what a relief it is! so fast!
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tomorrow. of course pbs is where the groundbreaking children's show made its debut in 1969. since then it's estimated 86 million americans watched the series as children and through the years it's won 193 emmy awards and 11 grammys, more than any other children's program. dana jacobson took a stroll down the street to celebrate this golden anniversary. ♪ sunny day >> reporter: it began as an experiment. >> it's a very atieducational place. >> 50 years later "sesame street" is still around.
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>> 50th anniversary. yeah. >> how are you guys celebrating? >> celebrating by learning how to downtown 50. >> i was going to say. >> i'm up to 47. >> so close. >> one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight. >> over the last half century "sesame street" had the same goal to make kids smarter, stronger and kinder. >> i'm sorry i made you angry and we got in a fight. i won't do it again. can we still be friends? >> that's not all. "sesame street" from the very beginning has adopted playful learning as its approach to teach. >> rosemarie truglio is in charge of content at the "sesame street". >> why do children learn more easily from an elmo or cookie monster? >> because elmo and cookie are their friends so there's this word we use in developmental
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psychologiy called this power relationship. when children watch "sesame street" and see elmo and big bird and julia and abby, they are friends. they are real. they talk th. they eat. they cry. they sleep. they are real. when you develop that connection you're going to learn more from a character you care about. >> take cookie monster. >> are we done? >> yes. >> most impulsive muppet on "sesame street". by kids watching cookie fail they are learning hey he messed up, he ate the cookie. ♪ good things come to those who wait ♪ >> the next time you use that strategy it worked. so it's important for us to show that trial and error. >> those same muppets are the
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best choice to explain of difficult realities. >> my dad is in jail. >> like incarceration. >> we don't have our own apartment any more. >> homelessness. >> what's the matter, julia? sirens are bothering you >> and autism. >> she does things just a little bit differently. in a julia sort of way. >> the magic is they take difficult topics and put them through the lens of a child so that it's very easy-to-understand. >> teresa fitzgerald heads up branding. she and her team spent years creating julia who is on the autism level. >> it was so well received so they decided to build the puppet. we took those drawings and. went to henson and he created a
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puppet. then she appeared on the show. >> julia, can big bird see your painting? >> see your painting? yes. >> then this year add her family. ♪ i love my family >> when was the response when she first appeared. >> amazing. it was a positive response. >> but it's more than feedback. research shows that "sesame street" has a positive impact on kids. this paper on early childhood education found access to the show was associated with better elementary school performance. >> they compared the sesame viewers to nonviewers. on average they perform 16% higher than nonviewers but they also had these positive dispositions towards learning. ♪ get a book and you'll see
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. >> it wasn't academic had a social impact. >> "sesame street" continues to strive for that impact by using everything from apps -- >> there's so much in elmo's room. >> to books including rosemarie truglio's new book ""sesame street" ready for school." >> children are learning from their adults around them. you're teaching children and parents. i often say i wish parents would watch "sesame street" as a parenting show because we have a human cast who is really representing you as a parent. ♪ feelings past and feelings change ♪ >> so when our characters are struggling for an emotion or dealing with a problem the human cast is basically telling and showing us as parents how we could possibly address this with our child. >> learning for all ages and lessons for everyone.
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is it any wonder 50 years after "sesame street" was created people are still asking -- ♪ can you tell me how to get, how to get to "sesame street" ♪ >> we like the different colors. we even have a grouch. i can speak another language. we all live happy together. >> great lesson for all of us. >> true. >> what do you say we go get cookies. >> i'm going to go this way. >> they had a great time. i have to tell you i remember the first time i was told that this show was made for inner-city children, and in the hopes to level the playing field. that made me feel so good. >> the way they tell the story to make it understandable. >> everyone wanted to be a part of it. the >> there's an intention behind it. they thought about the cast, they thought about the actual
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characters of these, you know, from big bird to all the characters that dana pointed out there. those children are able to identify with someone they see on that screen. let's get some cookies. >> i'm told i'm a cookie monster. >> she projected an image of perfection. >> i did not say that. >> but julie andrews and julie would never have said that. with all the insecurities of any struggling actress. we'll hear about her early years in hollywood detailed in her new memoir. that's coming up next. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". >> cookies! >> announcer: this portion sponsored by jeep. get a great deal at the jeep black friday event. i'm jimmy dean and thank you very much for lettin'
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oscar-winning role as mary pop opinions in the 1964 movie classic. very next year she won a second nomination for her iconic performance in "the sound of music." andrews early success in the movie industry is detailed in a brand-new memoir about her hollywood years. "cbs this morning's" anthony mason sat down with andrews to hear all about it. >> take a look. >> reporter: it was one of the movie's most memorable entrances. you landed a pretty good first gig. >> die ever. how lucky could a girl get. >> and snap. the job is a game. and every time -- >> reporter: in 1964 julie andrews made her screen debut as mary poppins. >> and you win an oscar. >> i do.
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>> julie andrews. >> how do you live up to that? >> you don't believe it. i think in my speech i said something like -- >> i know you americans are famous for hospitality but this is ridiculous. >> i thought it was a welcome to this wonderful business than an accolade for the role. i kept that oscar tucked away for quite a while in my attic. >> why? >> i wasn't sure why i received it. >> how long did it take for that to happen? >> quite a while. >> reporter: in the "homework" julie andrew's memoir of her hollywood years she writes. was i scared? you bet. did i feel inadequate? all the time. hollywood was far from the small british town where julie had been raised the child of divorced parents and an alcoholic stepfather. she started performing in
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vaudeville at age 12. made her debut before her 19th birthday in "the boyfriend" then starred in "my fair lady." she was passed over for the part in the film version, the producers preferred an established movie star, audrey hepburn. ♪ i could have danced all night ♪ >> i did understand the choice. >> you did? >> absolutely. the warner brothers studio wanted big stars and big box office names. >> there was any ounce of disappointment? >> yes, of course there was. i mean i was sad. >> now then the qualification. >> it meant she was free to play marry poppins which was filmed at the same time. and when andrews beat out hepburn to win the golden globe she playfully nodded to the studio they'd had not cast her in "my fair lady." >> my thanks to a man who made a
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wonderful movie, mr. jack warner. ♪ when you know the notes to sting ♪ >> you weren't a big fan of "the sound of music." >> i was worried when i asked to do "the sound of music." that it could be very saccharin. ♪ the hills are alive with the sound of music ♪ >> i love how you describe the opening scene. the stunning scene took multiple takes and andrews could barely hear the music playback over the helicopter noise. >> knowing the helicopter was coming over the tree tops with a very brave cameraman chancing out the side of it and i was walking down towards the fields the down draft kept putting me in the grass. what i go from the cameraman
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thumbs up let's do it again. ♪. >> the next year she made a film equally epic. in "hawaii" she standard as the wife of an american missionary. >> there's a scene that's pretty terrifying. you did get lit on fire. >> i do. yes. it was a very terrifying moment. i was wired at the hem with a fuse and about to explode and i had an asbestos skirt underneath. the skirt was phillipsy and my hair so long and i thought all good catch fire. damn near did. >> you meet blake edwards. at an intersection -- >> on sunset boulevard. how corny can you get? >> both were on their way to their therapists. >> not the same therapist. i mean it is hokey. >> the acclaimed screen writer
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yes. same group therapy together. the whole family was in therapy for a while as me. listen it helped. it sorted out my demons, and what i call the garbage that clu cluters your head. >> what would you say was the biggest obstacle that you had to sort out? >> helped me very much understand and put in perspective my childhood, of course. that was probably the biggest work i did. and it makes for a lot of compassion and understanding. and you realize that everybody else is in the same boat. >> a woman pretend took be a man pretending to a man. >> ridiculous. >> the director of the star would soon have another smash with "victor victoria." but julie andrews book ends just as she and blake edwards edwards to broadway to adapt it into a musical. >> you prefer film over the
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stage? >> yes. although the reward from stage is so enjoyable. i mean giving to an audience and sensing an audience every night is lovely. but i think i like the quietness of a sound stage, and the detail and discipline of getting it really right. >> then it lives forever. >> if you're very, very fortunate. >> and she is very, very fortunate. >> we can all agree we can listen to julie andrews talk all day, right? >> it's moving to hear her talk about her vulnerability going to a therapist to sort through her childhood. that's the kind of thing people can relate to. through all her success she's a human being at the core. >> 84 years old. how young she is. >> for anyone who has felt priced out of the housing market have we got a deal for you. up next we'll take you to a place where houses cost next to
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nothing but you have to put in some sweat equity. a lot of it. >> next week on "cbs this morning: saturday" apollo theater has been launching careers of african-american for 80 years. now it's being looked at in a new light in a brand-new hbo documentary. we'll take you inside. >> been over a decade since her last u.s. tour. and she's back on the road like she never left. >> ♪ when i hear you >> younger, older, male, female, black, white. >> how do you know how it makes me feel? >> i don't. >> i'm so proud. >> you're 70 years old. i turn around those people are 60 years old. i'm like wow what's happening in
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my career. and that is the greatest gift. they look at me, as i said, beyond the songs. celine, are you okay? we got you girl. we're here. we love you so much. >> i could feel that in the room. first time they are seeing you after renee's death and they want to make sure you're okay. did you feel that from them? >> so much. >> her new album and tour are both called "courage" and that's what dion said she needed to move forward after the death of rene. he was not only her husband of 22 years, but also managed her career from the very beginning. "courage" is her first english album since his passing. >> i've been so much involved, not only in my album, but in the production of this show.
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the price of buying a home can be daunting for many americans but in parts of italy they are practically giving houses away. seth jones traveled to sicily where some home buyers are finding a deal with catch. >> reporter: house hunting for the brave. >> condition is like you can see not the best one. >> reporter: but she came hoping to find a hidden gem. >> there's a lot of original elements like flooring. >> flooring is beautiful here. >> reporter: while some of the decorations or details may not be ideal, at least here the
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price is right. this hill top town in the heart are of sicily houses are selling for one euro even with an unfavorable exchange rate that's about $1.20. so far the city has sold 100 houses. >> i don't want to go to this house. >> a castle. >> they have a hundred more to sell. the goal is to revive the run down center of this remote town. >> this is a house. >> 22 is. >> another one there. >> reporter: he manages the program. >> the house becomes your. you can do anything you want with your house. you can sell your house. you can make it a shop. make it an airbnb. >> reporter: fine print you have to fix it up within three years. >> if someone owns this house
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why would this person sell it for a euro? >> because in italy if you have more than one house, you have to pay a lot of taxes, so they prefer to sell houses. and not pay taxes. >> reporter: the houses need a lot of work, more than many existing homeowners want or can afford to do but it's a different calculation for foreigners. the woman who bought this house lives in the san francisco area and has become an ambassador to this place. now a number of her friends and family are buying here too. we reached some of them by video chat in san francisco. did you all think that you would be homeowners in sicily? >> never. >> reporter: in all ruby daniels convinced friends and family to buy 13 homes. what was the pitch? >> good food, good wine, good coffee, good gelato. it wasn't very hard to convince everybody. >> reporter: they explained even
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with about $3,000 in closing costs and tens of thousands in renovation work it's still a deal. >> thwe live in the bay area whe buying a home is out of the question for most people. >> reporter: this town is about one of dozen towns across italy to test this out. >> nice house. can we have a look. >> of course. >> reporter: early adopters have become role models. nina smith and b erert read abo the program in belgium and found this house. >> i clean them. i use them. >> reporter: how different does it took now from when you first bought it? >> impossible. unreal. >> reporter: they wound up paying a bit more for this place which has a stunning view and did almost all of the work themselves. nightmares of trying to figure things out, buying something, fixing stuff?
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>> no. you got everything here. everybody helps you. >> reporter: they say what's important here is the b on joro they hear from neighbors, slower pace and sense of community. >> how do you feel here? >> happy. happy and relaxed. yes. this is life. >> reporter: it's a richer life at a much lower cost. for "cbs this morning: saturday" seth doan, italy. >> jeff is skeptical. >> no i'm not. where do you find the time to renovate it. but i'm looking at the pictures who wouldn't want to live there. >> gorgeous. >> you want to renovate? >> i do. let's do it. >> here's a look at the weather for your weekend.
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♪ this morning on "the dish" a chef who grew up and put it in a bolt. geoff rhyne was raised in georgia. during a break from college he got a restaurant job in south carolina and made cooking his career with stops at top venues there and the midwest. >> he noticed bottles of hot sauce kept disappearing from restaurant tables. he decided to help customers acquire them legitimately. he manufactured red clay hot sauce line now available nationwide. chef geoff rhyne. good stuff. what do we have? >> we got brunch. starting on our right we got some steel cut oats with caramelized pearce. candy bacon. put it in your bloody mary we'll get to in a second.
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coastal crab cakes over okra. grits in how i like my hash browns smothered chopped and diced. caramelized onions. a winter salad with citrus, radishes. this is my mama's pound cake. some chantilly cream. >> with the love of hot sauce i'll grab these. >> one of my favorite dish presentations. awesome. >> did you grow up loving food? >> i did. i spent a lot of time in south georgia in a little town with my grandparents and they were very good cooks. anything from going out to the yard and picking up pecans or farm fresh eggs. my great-grandfather was a
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watermelon farmer. >> what's the story behind red clay. >> this was organic. charleston is a great food community. i was making hot sauce in several restaurants. took it to the next level because people were stealing it off the table. to the point of legitimatizing it i don't want people to get arrested for hot sauce. i started to make it in my garage. slowly we've grown in the past five years to making it more a legitimate process, making it with proper manufacturers but holding true to our values. >> i'm heading to charleston this afternoon. fantastic food. >> right on. >> when you developed the hot sauce, what are you trying to create? what are your sensing? >> that's a fair point. the market is very saturated. not saturated by things that are focused on being delicious. markets try to be hot. we approach it from a chef's mentality we're trying to create
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nuance, accentuate the foods you eat not overpower it. >> it's all about the tang. the red sauce is my favorite. i would imagine you were in the kitchen and you were successful making the transition. you had to think twice didn't you >> it takes a leap of faith. fortunately for me i had a driver and family that took me out of the kitchen. the chef life is difficult. my wife is a teacher. trying the to balance that work-life balance being a chef was difficult. i have three little kids. they are my primary focus so i want to step away from the kitchen, take a leap of faith on red clay and see where we can take it. >> if there's anyone you would love to share this meal with who would it be. >> somebody pretty contemporary, joe rogan. i think he would enjoy it. i feel the dialogue he's having right now is super cool. i would love to have a meal for him. i think he would go over for
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that bacon. >> chef geoff rhyne thank you. thank you for signing our dish. for more head to our website at "cbs this morning".com. >> did you steal the hot sauce? her new album is floor shake. what's all the commotion about. hear when grace potter for "saturday session" next. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". january 21st is national hugging day. but you do more than just give hugs, you care for everyone. and a-a-r-p is here to help. with tools to navigate the realities of caregiving. think of it as one big hug. take on today with a-a-r-p. and take an extra 15% off! save on cuddl duds sheets - starting at $25.49...
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> in our "saturday session" this morning singer-songwriter grace potter. last three years have been anything but uneventful with the break up by her band and marriage followed by another marriage and real life motherhood. her new solo album "daylight," now here is grace potter with "love is love." ♪ i don't care about calling
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you ♪ ♪ i'm crazy for you ♪ well i promised him i would never stray ♪ ♪ but i'm thinking about you every day ♪ ♪ now i'm standing here outside your door ♪ ♪ i just can't fight this any more ♪ ♪ love is love ♪ it changes a home it well change your life ♪ ♪ make you lose control ♪ can't explain the things it does ♪ ♪ and there is love ♪ i never said i was a saint ♪ said never said i would be
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your savior ♪ ♪ i never said i would try to fight against my human nature ♪ ♪ but the past and future are far away ♪ ♪ i'll worship these one day ♪ because i learn from my mistakes ♪ ♪ couldn't keep from giving my heart away ♪ ♪ love is love ♪ it will change your life ♪ make your lose control ♪ can't explain the things it does ♪ ♪ love is love ♪ or yeah love is love ♪
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[ applause ] don't go away. we'll be right back with more music from grace potter. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". >> announcer: "saturday session"s are sponsored by blue buffalo. you love your pets like family so feed them like family with blue. so this holiday season treat him the best. show them love this holiday with tasty blue buffalo treats. available wherever you buy pet food. plaque psoriasis uncoverth clearer skin that can last. in fact, tremfya® was proven superior to humira® in providing significantly clearer skin. tremfya® may increase your risk of infections
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heart ♪ ♪ after being where it's been ♪ mmmm ♪ and i ♪ i release you ♪ though it's hard to ♪ say the words ♪ and i ♪ i release you ♪ from holding on to the bridge i burned ♪ ♪ i release you ♪ from the darkness ♪ from the have that was true ♪ i hope that some day ♪ the sun will shine again ♪ and you'll release me too
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♪ there's no more left to say ♪ always got your way ♪ tired of holding on ♪ oh your expectations for me ♪ were so heavy baby ♪ maybe i'm just too close ♪ too close to see ♪ yeah ♪ that i really don't know ♪ it's me ♪ you never can tell where love leads ♪ ♪ it don't get back to me ♪ it don't get back to me ♪ i said it don't get back to me ♪ ♪ you said give you space and time ♪
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