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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  December 7, 2019 4:00am-5:59am PST

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good morning, it is december 7th, 2019. welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." deadly naval base attack. three people were killed and eight more hurt after a saudi air force trainee opens fire. investigators are looking into whether it was terrorism. impeachment defiance. the white house signals the president will not mounts a defense in the house impeachment, telling democrats to end it or get it over with quickly. fast flu. the cdc reports a season of misery has hit early with millions already battling the bug. why we got hit so early. and cannonball run. three men drive across the country in just 27 hours
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shattering a controversial speed record. see how the drivers pulled it off and why nays they -- why naysay no one was ever in danger. first, today's "eye opener", your world in 90 seconds. >> we are not prepared to confirm what may have motivated the shooter. there are many reports circulating, but the fbi deals only in facts. a deadly shooting at a florida naval base. >> reporter: the shooter, a pilot in saudi arabia's air force, stormed a classroom building and opened fire. >> i don't see this undermining the deeper relationship we've had with the kingdom of saudi arabia for decades. where was the sniper? where was the hostage negotiator? they came in full force. >> reporter: the family of the u.p.s. driver killed in a shoot-out blame police for his death. >> the way the police handled the situation, it was -- it was a nightmare. >> reporter: president trump looking to permanently flush water-saving regulations for toilets, sinks, and showers. >> people are flushing toilets ten times, opposed
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to once. they end up using more water. >> reporter: firefighters battling a historic wildfire in australia. video shows the explosive risks. >> reporter: a delaware homeowner made a delivery driver's day by leaving a sweet treat at the door. all that -- >> so adams launches it to -- scores! >> reporter: check out what happened during a panel when they mentioned the late carrie fisher. >> that was amazing. hi, carrie. and all that matters -- >> what's a time travel song that you hear and go "i'm there"? >> earth, wind, and fire, "can't hide love." i mean, it's so good. [ applause ] >> john is so good. ♪ on "cbs this morning saturday." >> one small school in indiana has a unique tradition. this is called "silent night" at taylor university. the tradition has students dressing in wild costumes and
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pajamas, and they remain silent until the home team scores their t10th point of the game. >> robinson to break the silence. [ cheers ] >> to be a college student again. right? >> yeah, right. >> a few times, you -- >> no. >> you never rushed the court? >> you got to act like you've been there before, jech. that's why we didn't rush the court. welcome to the weekend, everyone. i'm dana jacobson with jeff glor and michelle miller. this morning we're going to head to colorado and visit a spectacular ranch that may hold the key to preventing a growing problem out west -- mass forest fires. we'll show you how it works and how it actually pays for itself. we will go to las vegas with
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director tim burton. we'll talk to the academy award-nominated filmmaker about how city shasis catworld d checo eart nosplay. h aatin the foods we see on tv and film that make our mouths water. we will go behind the scenes of cooking series that has millions of fans hungry for more. that is all ahead. but we begin this morning with the qionsstt over a florida navy base on friday morning. four people including the gunman were killed and eight others were injured during the attack at a naval air station in pensacola. cbs news has learned the gunman was mohammed saeed alshamrani, and he was a saudi arabia national and a pilot in training for the saudi air force. he had been training in the united states since 2017. the fbi is investigating his social media posts and whether he acted alone.
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investigators have not said what his possible motive might have been. this morning we're learning more about one of the victims. david begnaud is in pensacola. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. you know, the military usually waits about 24 hours to notify the next of kin in a situation where someone has died. we were able to overnight confirm the identity of one of the victims. cbs news has learned that joshu by mohammed a killed saeed alshamrani on friday. the 23-year-old watson graduated this year from the naval academy. he was from alabama. as a student, he made the dean's list. he was also captain of the rifle team. in a facebook post, his brother said that watson's final act saved countless lives writing, "after being shot multiple times, he made it outside, and he told the first response team where the shooter was, and those
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details were invaluable. he died a hero." this sprawling naval base was locked down after mohammed saeed alshamrani stormed a classroom and opened fire with a handgun. within minutes, authorities charged into the building. two sheriff's deputies shot and killed alshamrani but were wounded in the process. both deputies are expected to survive. >> they ran to the fight, not from the fight. and even though they knew there was an active shooter and, again, the chances of putting your life in danger are great, guess where they went -- they went inside. >> reporter: this morning the fbi is trying to determine how a foreign national obtained a handgun which is prohibited by law and brought it on to the base. according to the middle east media research institute, someone matching mohammed saeed alshamrani's identity had an extensive online footprint. in a twitter post, the writer says, "oh, american people, i hate you because every day you
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supporting funding and kmiting crimes not only against muslims but humanity." as of this morning, officials have not saying what happened here was an act of terror. >> we are not prepared at this hour to confirm what may haveth loing for any signs of radicalization, going back to alshamrani's upbringing in saudi arabia. sing salman called president trump after the shooting. >> the king said that the saudi people are greatly angered by the barbaric actions of the shoorkts and this person -- shooter, and this person no way represents the feelings of the saudi people who love the american people. >> reporter: alslamrani was one of a few hundred foreign nationals who trained here. mark esper said he's going to look at the vetting procedures that go into accepting foreign nationals to be able to train here. you know, the fbi called a news
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conference last night at about 8:00. we weren't sure if we were going to get some important details. we really didn't at all. you got the sense that this is a very fluid situation. they said a lot of resources are being flown in. jeff, i would expect that later today based on what we were told last night we should find out the identity of the other two victims killed. >> all right. thank you very much. now to concerns over the flu. the first day of winter is still a few weeks away, but the start of flu season appears to be here with between1.7 million a million flu-related ill continueses already reported. -- illnesses already reported. the cdc suggests the flu activity will continue to rise. there's a l peakce notes would be considered early compared to previous years. we are joined at the table by cbs news medical contributor d david agus. doctor, good morning. do we know why it seems to be hitting early this year and what that means for the rest of flu season? >> we tonight know why flu season happens when or where,
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but it's happening early, it's clear. it's happening in the southern united states. you know, new orleans particularly hit. and you know, 1.7 to 2.5 million people, that's a big number early. >> yeah. >> is it too late to get the vaccine now for people that haven't? >> that's a leading question. >> i know. i -- >> you're getting it today. >> that's what i meant. >> we don't know whether this is an tellery peak, say it will -- an early peak, say tell peak in december, or whether it will be drawn out like last year. on an average year, 125 to 200 people a day die of the flu. this is preventable, most of these deaths with the vaccine, even though the vaccine hasn't been great the last couple of years. this year the early strain that we're seeing is type b called victoria. and that classically happens in february and march, this year it's happening early. we doneall know the trends and predictions what's going to happen. what we know is it's here. what we know is it's early. what we know is we have a preventive shot. >> i will get it.
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i promise. >> no, because you -- >> i happen to have one. >> if you do -- yes. if you do, i really -- >> in the green room after the show. >> we're clear. we're clear. >> you're making everybody sick. i know. come on. >> i knew i liked you. >> real quick, though, you have all these strains. i'm wondering does one vaccine sort of like nip it in the bud? >> the answer is no. we don't have a universal flu vaccine. the past couple of years we haven't -- science hasn't been great at predicting it, the hope is this year it's a little bit better. either way, when you get it, even if the strain wasn't there, your immune response is going to be last -- get the vaccine, please. >> we'll see you in a little bit for "morning rounds." the holiday shopping season got a vote of confidence on friday with a better-than-expected november jobs report. u.s. employers added 266,000 jobs last month. that's the most since january. and that reduced the nation's unemployment rate to 3.5%, its
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lowest level in 50 years. the job growth squashed fears of a potential recession and triggered rallies across the board with the dow, nasdaq, s&p 500 finishing the day with gains. the white house has declined the invitation from democrats to participate in the next public impeachment hearing come is set for monday. the president and his legal team's decision to sit out the next round of questioning comes as democrats on the house judiciary committee are set to spend the weekend drafting articles of impeachment. natalie brand is at the white house. natalie, good morning. really no surprise here. >> reporter: good morning, michelle. no surprise, and the white house already preparing for a possible trial in the senate as house democrats have set the stage for a possible full vote before christmas. now the president on camera friday avoided talking impeachment, instead taking advantage of that good economic news. >> a record 158 million americans are now working. that's the largest number in the
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history of our country. >> reporter: president trump touted the latest jobs numbers while letting his white house counsel address the next steps toward impeachment. the president's legal counsel rejected house judiciary chairman jerry nadler's invitation to participate in monday's hearing. in an angry letter, he wrote, "adopting articles of impeachment would be a reckless abuse of power by house democrats and would constitute the most unjust highly partisan attempted house impeachment." house speaker nancy pelosi argues it's the president who abused his office for his own personal political benefit. >> our democracy is what is at stake. the president leaves us no choice but to act because he is trying to corrupt once again the election for his own benefit. >> reporter: the house judiciary committee will work through the weekend on track to draft articles of impeachment as soon as next week. but there's debate among democrats about whether to keep charges limited to the president's dealings with ukraine or to broaden them to
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include conduct investigated in the mueller report. >> at least 10 or 11 instance s where the president crossed the line with obstruction to justice. to ignore that is to allow a precedent that is unpublic. >> my advice, keep it focused, keep it simple. >> reporter: the top republican on house judiciary sent this letter to chair nadler friday night detailing the witnesses he'd like to hear from, including intelligence chair adam schiff, the whistle-blower, hunter biden, ultimately democrats on that committee have the final say over who testifies control the process. in response to the white house not participating on monday, chair nadler says having declined the opportunity, the president cannot claim the process is unfair. jeff? >> okay. thank you very much. the supreme court is giving president trump and his legal team more time before possibly having to reveal some of mr. trump's banking records.
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justice ginsburg drafted it requiring documents be handed over to democratic congressional panels until next friday. they're seeking account records, transactions, and investments linked to the president, his three oldest children, their immediate family members, and several divisions of the trump organization. in southern florida, loved ones of the victims who were shot and killed by police in a wild robbery-turned-kidnapping and charging north of miami are demanding answershis tmo ordon 70-year-old richard decutshall were killed in the violence. some wondering why police did not appear to follow their protocol before firing hundreds of bullets at the stolen truck in the middle of rush hour traffic. >> where was the s.w.a.t. team that normally handles h-ostage ? where was the sniper?
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where was the hodge negotiator? they -- hostage negotiator? they were came in full force. >> another man at the crowded intersection was also killed. police officers faced a up to situation, and they say their actions likely saved lives. much of the west could be pounded by heavy rain, flash flooding, and snow from a large and slow-moving storm coming in from california. meteorologist jeff berardelli has that and the rest of the nation's weather. jeff, good morning. >> hey, good morning. good morning to all of you. the big weather is out west. it is going to be a nasty day, especially in northern california today. you can see all that heavy rain moving on shore in waves. it's not only rainy, it is windy. and in the mountains over here, tons of heavy snow, powder for the skiers. winter storm warnings out there. wind advisories near the coast. that's the flood watch up there. we could see as much as three, maybe a little bit more inches of rain. that's a lot of rain for northern california.
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you can see those waves of rain coming on shore today. that is the worst of it. then overnight and tomorrow, all that slides to the east and to the intermountain west. it kind of breaks apart. today is the worst day, a little bit of improvement in california during the day tomorrow. everywhere you see the yellow, that's about three inches of rain. every once in a while you get up to four inches, as well. that's a lot of rain. in the mountains, some of these areas in white around truckee, down to mammoth mountain, that's as much as three to four feet of snow. that extends all the way into the rockies. the question, guys, is can we do a news team ski trip out to the west next week for saturday's show? >> great idea. >> so many trips planned. >> we do. so little time. >> a busy 2020. >> have we actually planned them is the question. >> we've conceived of the idea. >> i think this is a good idea. >> half the battle. apparently no leaders in this group to get if going. >> we're going to bungee jump on a snowy mountain -- >> then skydive -- >> that's a little too far.
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>> thank you so much. >> you guys go on your own. breaking overnight now, the u.s. and iran have agreed to a prisoner swap. a princeton university graduate student who was detained in iran in 2016 and charged with spying will be released. in exchange the u.s. will release an iranian researcher. both countries credit the swiss government for brokering this deal. >> wang's return is actually giving hope to another american family this morning. former fbi agent bob levenson was last seen more than a decade ago. he is the longest held hostage in american history. the u.s. government believes he's being held in iran. this week, his family stepped up pressure on the iranian government. just peg ace spoke with the -- jeff pegues spoke with the family. >> reporter: you referred to this as a fight. why do you call it a fight? >> it is a fight. we have been fighting for 12 1/2 years to get my father home to us. we know the iranian regime is
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responsible for kidnapping him. >> reporter: you have no doubt -- >> we have no doubt whatsoever. >> reporter: sarah levenson moriarty believes iran still has not revealed all that it knows about her father. robert levenson, a former fbi eigh agent, vanished in 2007. the fbi believes he was captured on kisch island while on a mission for the cia. this april, 2011, photo of levenson in an orange jumpsuit still gives his family hopes that eight years later he is fighting and staying strong. last month when the iranian government admitted in a united nations filing that levenson's case was ongoing, the family saw that as a ray of hope. >> we believe it's very significant. >> reporter: what do you think it shows? >> it shows exactly what we've believed all along which is to the iranians took him back in march of 2007, and that they have the ability to send hem home to us. >> reporter: the reward for information leading to the
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71-year-old's return has been increased to $25 million. sarah believes the reward and president trump's twitter messages demonstrate that the u.s. government is engaged on the issue. >> people want to bring bob levenson home. we're so thankful for that. we believe that if anyone's going to be age to be able to - be able to do it's president trump. >> reporter: bob has a large family pressing for his return. a wife, seven children, and nine grandchildren. who's that in the picture? >> grandpa bob. >> reporter: including 6-year-old sean who is looking forward to a reuseyon -- reunion. what do you think he's going to think of you? >> i think he can think i'm a little awesome. >> i think so, too. i think so, too. you're pretty awesome. >> reporter: in october, robert o'brien became the president's national security adviser. when he worked in the state department, he led diplomatic
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efforts on hostage-related matters and worked closely with the levenson family. further evidence sarah moriarty hopes the white house is working to bring her father home. for "cbs this morning saturday," jeff pegues in washington. time now to show you some of the other stories we go news this morning. alabama.com reports a veteran police officer was shot and killed during a drug bust in huntsville. he is the sixth officer killed in the line of duty in the state this year. the police department says the suspect showed up to the drug transaction on friday and immediately began shooting. officials say the officer was wearing a bulletproof vest, but the bullet went through the top of his vest and into his heart. his name has not been released. the suspect was arrested. the "los angeles times" reports power company pacific gas and electric has reached a $13.5 billion settlement with victims of northern california wildfires. state investigations concluded that the electric company's
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poorly maintained transmission equipment played a role in several fires in the state. one of the most devastating was the camp fire last year, killing 86 people and destroying nearly 14,000 homes. the "washington post" reports a judge has ordered several students from harvard, yale, and other colleges to perform community service after they were arrested during a climate change protest. about 50 students were arraigned on disorderly in w haven, connecticut, friday. the judge said he'll drop the charge once they complete five hours of community service. last month the students stormed the field during the annual harborview-yale football game. >> they'll do their part. "usa today" reports a pearl harbor veteran will be the 44th and last crew member interred on the sunken "uss arizona." lauren bruner was the second to last man to escape the battleship during the japanese attack 78 years ago today. he died in september at the age
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of 98. divers will place his ashes inside the ship's wreckage during a ceremony in pearl harbor today. the last living survivors plan to be laid to rest with their families. 2,403 americans died in the attack on pearl harbor, of course, leading the u.s. to enter the war. >> when you hear stories with this generation and dying and those stories go away and it's why you're slow glad you have the on -- you're so glad you have the oral histories left. about 22 minutes after the hour. here's a look at the weather for your weekend. ♪ it may have been a last lost opportunity to save her daughter's life, but it's a phone call that never came. still ahead, why a woman is
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suing her local school system for allegedly failing to act. plus, in the clear, fire is one way america's forests are cleared of excess growth. we'll show you why a new way that it's being done, a self-sustaining enterprise that reduces the risk for disaster. and later, you can drive coast to coast in less than a week, but how about doing it in a little over a day? we'll meet a team of car enthusiasts who claim they just broke the cannonball run record. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday."
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from pasta sauce to white castle burgers, our favorite movies and tv shows reference foods. one man's specialty is bringing them to life. we'll see how he re-creates the recipes and shares them with fans. for decades the bright lights of sin city were meant to draw in gamblers. they were also an early inspiration for director tim burton. we'll join him in las vegas for his own -- where his own works of art are on display. we'll be right back. this is bssaturday."
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i found in guy, grabbed him basically out of a hat during the last shutdown because he had been deemed -- people deemed inessential. who's inessential? what had this guy done? he spent 35 years in the coast guard devoted to essentially one problem. that was trying to figure out how objects drifted on the sea. if you can't figure out how they drift, you can't figure out where they are. >> yeah. >> and americans have like this amazing ability to get lost at sea. like -- >> there's a lot of people that are -- >> 13 people a day. ten get rescued, three die. and before art allen started doing what he did, many more died. and -- and he spent, you know, on his own initiative, one guy, the lone oceanographer in the coast guard, spent years
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dropping stuff in the long island sound and figuring out how a sailboat floated versus a man overboard versus a liferaft. it enabled the coast guard to predict where things were. you see the rescue operations -- >> you think the rescuer, the people that come flying in -- >> that's right -- >> say thank you. it's because of people like art allen who can tell you where to go look to find them. >> they wouldn't know where to jump in the water. it's a model for the government. what you don't see -- >> in the broader sense, what does this mean about the government? >> there are functions that we should be unbelievably proud of. you are so much better being an american lost on a sailboat than any other nationality because of the work this guy has done. >> yeah. >> and that it's been degraded. first he's told he's inessential, he doesn't have to be in his job. >> yeah. >> then he was never given anybody to train. and it isn't just that like we lost the ability to figure out how things drift. we now know that. sort of lost something bigger. it's the sign of progress.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning saturday." we begin this half hour with a heartbreaking story for a california family. the parents of a 12-year-old girl who died by suicide are now suing the school district for what it did not do to prevent it. jamie yuccas spoke to the mother about the call she felt could have saved her daughter's life. i wish i knew she felt that alone. i wish i knew -- i wish i knew a lot. >> reporter: madison ogletree was 12 years old when she was bullied and was contemplating suicide. did you see anything like this coming? >> no. absolutely not. she was a happy kid. she had the biggest heart in the
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world. ryooy.s so >> reporter: i ui mother, morgan ogletree, alleges madison's friend alerted a teacher who shared the suicide threat with the principal and vice principal. a counselor met with madison and promised to follow up. >> my husband and i weren't contacted. we didn't even know that she saw the counselor. >> reporter: that according to the lawsuit violates the yuba school district policy on suicide prevention which constituents whenever a -- which states whenever a staff member has knowledge of a stop's suicidal intentions the principal or counselor shall then notify the parents or guardians as soon as possible. >> i am an involved parent, and my husband is an involved parent, and we had no idea. we could have talked to her. i mean, at the very least, we could have made sure that she understood that she had someone in her corner. >> reporter: seven weeks after the initial text, the lawsuit
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claims that one or more of the persons who bullied madison urged her to commit suicide as late as may 23rd, 2019. that very next day, madison ogletree turned in her homework assignment and hanged herself. do you think the school blew this off and didn't think it was a real threat? >> i honestly do. it's a blatant disregard for rules that were put in place. i mean, their very own rules that were put in place to prevent something like this from happening. >> reporter: is that why you felt like you had to file a lawsuit? >> absolutely. this can't -- it can't be just displaced. it can't. something -- dismissed. it can't. something has to change. maybe they didn't think it was a valid threat, but that wasn't their choice to make. she explicitly said that she wanted to commit suicide. all it takes is a phone call. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning saturday," jamie yuccas,
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yuba city, california. >> it's heartbreaking, and it's infuriating. you have got to alert parents -- i have know parents in a situation, they're involved, and they weren't aware because you see signs and you just don't realize. you need that wake-up call sometimes to pay attention. >> you saw the signs in that last picture, that last image of her. there were tears in her eyes beneath that smile. your children at 12 and 13 are going through adolescence. they don't talk to you as much as they once did. they don't share. and they're -- the school is often, is where they do with their friends. and soldier fiea counselor -- >> the guidelines are in place for a reason. if someone says, this you tell the counselor, then you tell the parents. the parents were never told. >> protocol. much more ahead this morning. first, here is a look at the weather for your weekend. ♪
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diabetes remains a growing health problem, but one type often gives people ample warning. up next on "morning rounds," dr. david agus comes back to talk to us about prediabetes. what to watch out for and how you can reverse it. plus, new information about time-restricted dieting. a lot of folks want to watch this one. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." ♪
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♪ time now for "morning rounds," the medical nudes of the week. an estimated 30 million americans are living with diabetes. that's over 9% of the nation. there are warning signs. one is the condition known as prediabetes where blood sugar levels are higher than normal, but below the range for type-two diabetes. and the condition is incredibly widespread. >> the centers for disease control looked at data from 2005 to 2016, they found nearly one in five american children ages 12 to 18 were prediabetic and nearly win in four young adults ages 19 to 24 are living with prediabetes. cbs news medical contributor dr. david agus is here to discuss this. double dose from the doctor this morning. welcome back. a lot of people don't even realize that prediabetes is a condition. why is it so concerning? >> you know, there's a blood test called hemoglobin a1c, a
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90-day ainge of your sugar. when it's elevated we call it prediabetes. when it's significantly elevated it's diabetes. prediabetes leads to diabetes and leads to lots of other medical problems. if we're seeing 20% to 25% of kids with this, that means we're doing something wrong as a society. and we have to start to change behavior. >> the good news is, you can reverse it. >> oh, no question about it. the good news is, we know what causes this. the kids are sedentary, they're eating too much, they're eating the wrong foods, and that can be changed. but behavior modification is tough. we have to stand up and do it. >> when you do it, do it young, speaking from experience, not later in life. it's tougher. you sort of get there with our next story. you may have heard about a diet trend where people limit eating to a certain number of hours during the day. now there's evidence it may have health benefits for people suffering from metabolic syndrome. a study this week in the journal "cell metabolism" tested time-restricted eating on a
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syndrome. metabolic syndrome is a collection of conditions like high blood pressure, high cholesterol, excess body fat, where weight control is important. about 12 weeks of research, what have we >> it's pretty amazing. in this study, they took people who normally just ate whenever they wanted to, and they said, hey, we want you to eat within a ten-hour window. the other 14 hours a day, don't eat. what they saw in these people -- and again, even if they ate the same amount, weight went down, they felt better. all the markers of the metabolic syndrome started to go in the right direction. >> i've done this and i've used the eight-hour window. do we know why? do we get why? >> yes! we -- >> okay. >> we get why, right? >> i love these leading questions. happens to know that i do know the answer. yes. we were made basically to make that kill in the wild and then have, you know, a -- the leftovers in the morning. we were made to have large periods without eating. and insulin and cortisol, our stress hormones, go down. when they go does and lose
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ighto better we exercise better and think better. the key is put your meals in that window, in that ten-hour window, have them the same time every day. nothing -- nada, zero in between meals. it's the best way to lose weight, be healthy, think better, and perform better. >> they emphasize the benefits of that diet were add-ons to the medications. >> yes. >> the participants are on. without metabolic syndrome, what are some of the things to keep in mind before starting -- potentially starting a new diet? >> they talked about blood pressure medicines and statins that lower cholesterol. this finding is true in everybody. so i think there's plenty of data out there that restricting when you eat, nothing in between meals, allowing your body's hormones to metabolize to go down. remember, what type-two diabetes is is insensitivity to insulin. when you eat all the tim t the science is rather simple. what we have to do is actually
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change to be able to benefit from that science and not have these syndromes. >> is there a boomerang effect? essentially if you stop doing that, do you gain the weight really quickly? gain it back quickly? >> yes. >> that's what i thought. >> we can ask a non-leading question. a complicated legal question right now -- which you don't know the answer to -- >> 17 milligrams twice a day. >> dr. david agus, thank you. we've seen the devastation that wildfires can cause. barry petersen on new methods to reduce the risks. this beautiful stand of colorado aspen is really a potentially bad forest fire. but there are ways to keep that from happening. that story coming up on "cbs this morning saturday." i'm your mother in law.
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intentionally setting them has often been considered good forest management. that policy has become problematic as more and more people build homes in forested areas. now some innovators have come up with a new way to clear and renew our woodlands. it's a plan that pays for itself. barry petersen has the story. >> reporter: this massive tree-eating machine has a funny name -- the filler buncher -- but a serious job. doing what nature once did -- thinning out trees on the trinchera blanca ranch. the goal is creating a sustainable forest. >> so we moved here in 1969. >> reporter: when you have a sustainable forest, what does that mean in terms of fires? >> it means we're more fire resilient. >> reporter: forest fires are nature's game plan for managing a forest. >> a forest fire isn't always bad, as long as it's a cool burning fire. you know, we do prescribed burning and will do more prescribed burning in the future as under story --
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>> reporter: the small stuff underneath -- >> yes. when we get these big devastating crown fires that we've seen from california all the way through the west into colorado, those are extremely devastating. and we're trying to prevent from those big, catastrophic fires. >> reporter: the fires are bigger for s the are bef destroy the growing number of houses built in forested areas. but that undercuts nature's way of burning off undergrowth, and that is making forests dangerously dense. jonas feinstein is colorado's state conservation forester. he along with boilgs ty packwood ward brought us to colorado's ranch owned by the audubon socie society. this looks like it has for centuries. trees, widely spaced, where the worst threat is a gas fire. for that the ponderosa pines have a nature-made defense. >> what's great about these
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ponderosa pine is they're fire adapted. they develop a thick bark at the base that is fire resistant. >> reporter: so the little fires, the grass fires, they've got a bark that is insulated to them? >> absolutely. >> reporter: woodward sees danger in the dense forest nearby. when you see that, do you say, i got to get rid of that stuff, or it's going to come and get me one day? >>olel then you have no forest left and you have a dead zone of black trees. >> reporter: at trinchera blanca ranch, thinning creates its own problem. what t acres kille by mountainin there, and to invest in the infrastructure and put the infrastructure in to do it is quite expensive. >> reporter: by infrastructure, you really mean the lumber mill -- >> the sawmill. >> reporter: the stuff you're cutting. >> yes. the sawmill. >> reporter: blanca forestry products was born. a sprawling lumber mill that
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produces about 20 million board feet of lumber a year sold across two dozen states. and what helps manage the forest comes with about 70 jobs, and that helps people up and down this rural valley. john medina is a night watchman. >> a great boost for the economy. helps everybody. helps the people working here, helps us the small businesses, you know, there's a lot of money that's staying here and people staying here. >> reporter: jose ontiveros stacks wood for the kiln. a job that makes possible and enviable colorado lifestyle. >> i love fishing, yeah. >> reporter: why do you like to fish? >> sometimes to eat and just previously out in nature and just enjoying the elements. i'll even go fishing when it's raining and -- it's just -- just great. >> reporter: and it's a family affair. the mill also employs his sister, stepdaughters, and wife antwanet who works in the front officers. the logical question, if it works here, why not everywhere?
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the answer -- money. >> it's not so much a money-making enterprise. we're trying to break even. like i said, the ownership is dedicated to make this happen. so you know, it is an investment. >> reporter: this is really an emotional investment. it's not really a capitalist investment. >> absolutely. it's an emotional investment. >> reporter: the investor is billionaire financeer and philanthropist lewis bacon. this is one of several areas he's working to preserve. preserve things like this -- a once-overgrown aspen grove that was cut down and is now regrowing. >> it's going to be denser than what you see in the parts that we don't harvest. but that density will start to reduce. there will be some that die out. the animals will have some effect on some of them. so it will thin itself as we go on. >> reporter: a remarkably simple prescription for how humans can save a forest. do it nature's way. for "cbs this morning saturday," barry petersen at the trinchera
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blanca ranch, colorado. >> truly is a public service what they're doing there. >> very complicated managing forests. if somebody can figure it out -- there's a lot of ideas whether it's private or the federal government. if somebody can figure out some sustainable plan long term for everyone -- >> right. >> it would be helpful. >> i love the learning from nature, though. do it nature's way. >> listen to nature. >> absolutely. if you're heading out the door, don't forget to set your dvr to record "cbs this morning saturday." coming up in our next hour, food from fiction. tv shows and movies are full of references to special dishes. we'll meet a chef who re-creates them. plus, lighting las vegas. director tim burton's latest work doesn't appear on screen. it's part of a unique museum exhibit in the city where he finds some of his earliest inspiration. and we'll have music from "y session." next, a presidential candidate and a woman in iowa have a lot to say to each other. it's not about politics. ♪
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and the power of 1, 2, 3. ♪ trelegy, 1,2,3 man: save at trelegy.com. by the way, marge is going to be 100 years old on sunday. [ applause ] i don't believe it. >> while campaigning in iowa yesterday, presidential candidate joe biden started the event by wishing an attendee, marjorie, a happy birthday. she turns 100 tomorrow. the former vice president asked her what she's been eating and drinking to keep herself looking so young and healthy. >> peanut butter in the morning and beer at night. >> oh! [ laughter ] >> all righty then. marjorie later told cbs news she enjoys killian's and fat tire or anything like it. fat tire. >> great beer. >> a new belgian where my brother works. >> you've had fat tire. >> i have not -- >> michelle miller!
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we're going to make that happen very soon. >> very soon. >> you like -- >> the peanut butter in the morning, i love this. if we can do that in the food-eating window that dr. david agus was talking about in ten hours, peanut butter, beer, fine. >> you can do fat tire first and -- >> beer after -- i think i've done that before. >> we all have. >> yeah. from "beetlejuice" to "edward scissor hands," director tim burton is known for and now an exhibit that showcases his art. for some of you local news is next much the rest, stick around, you're watching "cbs this morning saturday."
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photography, i started pursuing it two or three years ago. it wasn't until about a year ago that i really decided to turn the camera off of automatic and to learn how to shoot manually. >> yeah. >> and that completely changed everything for me. it's like going from the microwave to the wood fire. >> you have to really cook. >> yeah. >> what do you look for when you shoot? >> well, i just look for anything that catches my eye. and that's what i love about photography is it makes me pay so much more attention. you always have the antenna up, and you see the beauty in things
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differently. and you see beauty and simplicity. to me, that -- that's the way i look at cooking. >> you shoot on an analog camera. >> yeah. >> not a -- >> no. it looks like -- this is -- this thing is a beautiful piece of machinery. that would be something that would catch my eye. just the grading of color. >> the progression of color. >> yeah. and shooting film is really hard. >> the guy who's amaze me are the street photographers. >> that's my favorite thing. being on an 18, 19-city book tour i get up every morning at the golden hour, 6:00 a.m., and shot each city just to capture a place through photography. it's been so, so neat. >> reporter: is this with you most of the time? >> i -- i'm never without this thing. ever, ever, ever, ever, ever. it's always, always with me.
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welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." i'm jeff glor with michelle miller and dana jacobson. coming up this hour, the movie "cannonball run." we all remember -- >> yeah. >> i remember. >> yes. one and two. it was a coast-to-coast race much the route is real with new records set through the decades. now, three adventurers claim they're the new champions. we'll hear just how they say they did it. also, what do you get when you combine a love of tv and film with a passion for food? for andrew rea it means re-creating iconic dinners in our shows and movies and a fan base is eating it up. burton's brilliance is what
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we'll be talking about. director tim burton is lighting up las vegas with his own artwork on display at the city's neon museum. hear about the role the city played in his life both personal and creative. that's ahead. first, our top story this hour -- investigation is under way into what led to a deadly shooting on a florida navy base friday morning. cbs news has learned the gunman was mohammed saeed alshamrani. he was a saudi arabian national and a pilot in training for the saudi air force. he'd been in training in the u.s. for two years. the fbi is investigating his social media posts and whether he acted alone. investigators have not said what his motive might have been. this morning we are learning more about one of the victims. david begnaud is in pensacola with the latest. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the base is still on lockdown. we'll tell you about the victim who we have been able to identify overnight in a moment. but you know, a lot has been
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made of alshamrani, who he is, and a lot of questions that need to be asked. not a lot has been said about the two deputies being hailed as heroes. local deputies who responded to the 911 call who stopped the gunman, who killed him. we have tried to talk to them, asked the sheriff, as of now they are not talking. both are expected to survive. both were shot. but both actedheroically. cbs news learned that joshua kaleb watson was one of the three people killed by mohammed saeed alshamrani on friday. joshua was 23. he graduated this year from the naval academy. he was originally from alabama. he made the dean's list at college and was captain of the rifle team. in a facebook post his brother says watson's final act same saved countless lives. writing, "after being shot multiple times, he made it outside and told the first response team where the shooter was, and those details were invaluable. he died a hero."
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>> shelter in place -- >> reporter: the sprawling naval base was on lockdown after alslamrani stormed the classroom. he opened fire with a handgun. this morning the fbi is trying to determine how a foreign national obtained a handgun which is prohibited by law and brought it on to the base. the investigators are looking for any signs of radicalization going back to mohammed saeed alshamrani's upbringing in saudi arabia. as of now, federal investigators are not calling what happened here an act of terror. >> we are not prepared at this hour to confirm what may have motivated the shooter to commit this horrific act today. >> reporter: the king of saudi arabia, king salman, called president trump after the shooting. >> the king said that the saudi people are greatly angered by the william barric action -- the bar baric actions of the shooter and doesn't reflect the feeling of the saudi people who love the
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american people. >> reporter: all of the shootings happened in one specific classroom. again, we don't know the identities of the other people killed. we keep hearing that family members are starting to show up here in town. those who have been wounded are still in the hospital. their parents are starting to arrive. and we expect a news conference from the fbi later today. we'll have the very latest at cbsnews.com and of course tonight on our broadcast, as well. >> all right. thank you so much, david. security will be increased in and around pearl harbor for this afternoon's ceremony markimark ing 78 years since the japanese attack on that navy base. president franklin roosevelt called it a day that will live in infamy. the attack propelled the u.s. into world war ii. the heightened security comes just days after a u.s. navy sailor shot and killed two people at the navy yard before turning the gun on himself. the national guard is expected to release the names of the three soldiers who were killed in a helicopter crash in minnesota.
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the family that owns the property where the chopper crashed is honoring the soldiers by plating an american -- placing an american flag at the site. the black hawk left st. cloud thursday afternoon for a maintenance test flight. a mayday call went out just before the crash. the helicopter was later found tangled in trees on a farm. the cause is under investigation. a coast guard crew made a dramatic rescue this week several hundred feet off ft. myers, florida. the crew had just started a patrol when they were alerted to a dog in distress. they soon found the dog paddling and struggling to stay afloat. the guardsmen got hold of the pooch and pulled him to safety. they dried off the rescuee and reunited him with his family. what is a dog doing out there -- >> say woof, woof, they came calling. pow about that? an nba referee has just made some history. lauren holking sterling became the first mom to officiate a league game. fresh off maternity leave, she swapped the baby bottle for a
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whistle. she was back on the court for friday night's game between the golden state warriors and the chicago bulls. she gave birth to her daughter, stone, that's right, stone, earlier this year. >> it's her ticketth season in the league -- her sixth season in the league. i notice this year more female refs. four in total this season, six overall officiated. the nba is so far ahead of other leagues. you see women on the sidelines, officiating. it's interesting what they're doing. >> it's a new day. >> it is. it's about 8:06. here's your weather for the weekend. ♪ call it a vision feast. some of the most famous dishes
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♪ ♪ i'long before i had moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis. i've always been the ringleader. had a zest for life. flash forward: then ra kept me from the important things. and what my doctor said surprised me. she said my joint pain
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high water's -- >> i was going to say -- >> no, let's go. come on. come on. ♪ >> what is that? >> it's a secret recipe that they brought from their hometown. >> oh, no -- it's great stuff. that was a scene from the 1996 film "big night" where they served show-stopping timpano. if you ever wondered what that dish tastes like, you're in luck. youtube sensation andrew rea is bringing food from the big screen and tv to your table in his series "binging with
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babbish." jamie wax has the story. good morning. >> good morning. andrew rea started his series in 2016. three years later he's developed a huge cult will having on line and published two cookbooks including a "new york times" bestseller. i went into the kitchen with him to talk about his recipe for success. >> i named the show completely arbitrarily after an obscure character from "the west wing," and now it's my entire brand and identity. >> reporter: utiny series "binging with babish" officers recipes rich in pop culture. >> half a cup of rum. get your torch ready, and engage slow motion. >> reporter: he shows viewers how to replicate their favorite on-screen meals in their homes. >> i place before you the east meets west turkey burger -- ron and chris were having a burger cook-off. >> here's mine. a hamburger made out of meat on a bun with nothing. >> i was like, what would that taste like in real life? i could try it right here.
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>> reporter: with that, "binging with babbish" was born. >> i do not know how ron's burger could stand up to -- it's way better. it's not even a competition. just better. i only intended to make the one. people liked it. i made another one. people liked that. made another one, and here we are now. >> reporter: he has re-created some of the most iconic meals in film and television down to every detail. >> vinny was in charge of the tomato sauce. >> reporter: shaving garlic with a razorblade for "good fellas" prison sauce. >> everybody is going to gets to know each other in the pot. i'm serious about this stuff. >> reporter: serving kevin's chili from "the office" on a piece of carpet. >> tell me that is not the most delicious thing you've seen. >> this is ham soaked in rum! >> reporter: and even making the downright disgusting rum ham from "it's always sunny in philadelphia." >> we're going to take a bite of it and immediately spit it out because it's really sfwufting.
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>> reporter: ray -- disgusting. >> reporter: ray has two spin your series and two cookbooks. a common thread amongst youtubers is i had no idea it would take off. i didn't. i was deeply depressed. i was not happy in my marriage, and i needed a creative outlet. i wasn't happy in general. >> reporter: a creative outlet born of family memories. >> my mother taught me to cook when i was very young. she passed away when i was 11. she taught me how to make cookies. she would get scoops of snow and pour maple syrup over it and give it to us. i have very specific food memories from my childhood. it's one way that see that gets to live on in what i do and one way that i feel closer to her. >> reporter: she's not his only influence. it truck struck me -- it struck me, your mother loved to cook, your father dawg loss -- douglaa professor. now you are teaching cooking -- am i too analytical? >> you're honestly making me realize things i never thought
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of before. wow, i am my parents' kid. like therapy. we don't need the cameras. >> reporter: when it comes to youtube stardom, ray strives to separate from the pack. >> there's definitely an element of narcissism in establishing yourself soas an online personality. you need to be self-object sobered in some ways. that was something i was trying to combat with not showing my face. i wanted to show it was purely about the food. >> reporter: we re-created sliders from "harold and will kumar." >> i want the same except make mine diet cokes. >> for scientific comparison because accuracy is paramount to the show, i have frozen sliders here. so we have a nice square little patty. >> reporter: very thin. >> very, very thin. that's why i want to weigh it. i want to see exactly what kind of target we're trying to hit. the idea with the burgers when you cook them is that they steam on a bed of onions. >> reporter: really? will. >> yeah. white castle burgers never hit
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the grill. >> reporter: i love how well thought all of this stuff is. it's important to you to get this right. >> yeah. i mean, we want to make something that resembles the foods from their favorite fiction. and then one of the hallmarks of white castleburgers is they have five holes punched in. >> reporter: this is your first time. you're shooting, and we are, too. you're good with that. >> yeah. if i screw it up, i'm going to show where i went wrong so people don't do the same thing at home -- if they're crazy enough to do this. >> reporter: i have my buddy jamie wax here helping, and we'll do this. an hour later we did an official taste test. let's see -- >> see how we did here. you you hauh-huh. d burger. same flavor profile as white castle. can i have a few for 3:00 a.m. so they make sure they match white castle? >> reporter: nearly six million
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people tune in to ray's channel. and he asks justice o one thing- you don't want them to call you chef? >> didn't earn the title. a lot of people went through the ringer and cut their teeth under chefs that yelled and threw things at them. and i didn't -- i'm a home cook that knows how to film and edit things well. my constant feeling with the success of the show is i am going to continue to try and earn what you've given me. >> the cookbook is aavailable now. and "being with babbish" and "basics with babbish" are available on youtube any time for your binging pleasure. >> i could do anything but the chili on the carpet thing. sorry. >> the white castle had to taste better than regular white castle. i know some people love them -- sorry -- you said it tafd sted - >> the beef was good. the flavor profile was right, but it was definitely elevated. >> i have to start watching. >> he has bigger following on
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line than many chefs. >> and no face -- >> he doesn't need it. >> authentic. well, it's not foods but wild fantasy that marked the phip films of tim burton. some that has come off the screen and into a museum exhibit. it's not the first time. we'll meet the artist next. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." seventh generation gets the ingredients in their laundry detergent from plants, not petroleum. and this stuff beets stains. its kind of a big dill. it squashes sixty of your toughest stains. seventh generation. powered by plants it looks like this. for heart failure look like? ♪ the beat goes on ♪ entresto is a heart failure pill that helps improve your hearts ability to pump blood to the body. don't take entresto if pregnant; it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. ♪la-di-la-di-dah don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren, or if you've had angioedema with an ace or arb. the most serious side effects are angioedema,
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♪ the 1990 fantasy film "edward scissorhands" was a breakthrogh role for actor johnny depp. for tim burton it was one in a series of highly creative production that's have marked his long career. now some of burton's most imaginative work isn't on screen. it can be seen in real life on objects of art and o dn displayt a museum in las vegas. >> kind of almost grew up here. been coming to vegas since i was born. >> reporter: southern california native and hollywood heavyweight tim burton has a love affair with the desert city of light. not new vegas but the old one.
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>> i loved the neon, you know, the old signs and the -- the beauty of them. sort of artistry of them were very important to me. and part of my sort of artistic development. >> reporter: and so the brains behind such films as "batman," -- >> "beetlejuice." >> it's showtime. >> reporter: and "the nightmare before christmas" -- ♪ through his artistic expression into the one place he says that still represents it. the boneyard of the city's abandoned landscape. >> what you do on the inside, great -- >> reporter: in october, the only museum in the nation dedicated to neon, burton deb debuted his own artwork, an assortment of sculptures, holographic drawings and signs of all sizes are mixed in with the permanent collection. if any of this looks familiar -- >> you want my watch? >> reporter: -- think back to
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danny devito's demise in the cult classic "mars attacks." ♪ he directly nods to nostalgia by using the actual footage of the 1995 demolition of the landmark tower. you said that had a very distinct impression on you. >> yeah. it was like watching an ancient dinosaur being killed or something. it's like after it happened, it's just -- it was silent. everybody couldn't speak. it was so kind of strangely powerful, sad, beautiful. ♪ >> reporter: for more than three decades, burton's films have ranged from delightfully dark -- >> you're alive! you made it -- >> reporter: to weirdly whimsical, grossing more than $4 billion worldwide. you have "edward scissorhands," "the nightmare before christmas," ""franken weenie," alice in wonders land."
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should it surprise anybody there's this side of you? >> no. i always like to draw and make things. >> now we are robin meade eady - >> reporter: his short stalk of the celery monster helped lapd him a job. >> i had a room when i was animator, and i saw from my room where i felt trapped like rapunzel, i could see where i was born and forest lawn where may family was buried and felt i was in the bermuda triangle. the weird place of life and death. >> reporter: perfect essence. fired after a few years, he found his footing directing "pee wee's big adventure." >> thanks for stopping. >> reporter: that began a string of hits that made burton a household name. >> this exhibition is an immersive experience into the mind of tim burton. >> reporter: perhaps no one knows better than ginney hi, his
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curator. >> what he puts on a page or sculpture is identifiable for all of his fans. so there's really no disconnect between tim and his viewer or tim and his visitor because of that intense emotional connection in his work. >> reporter: his art has traveled the world including a 700-piece collection that was viewed at new york's museum of modern art where it drew the third-largest crowd in moma's history -- just behind picasso and matisse. >> he drew more than 800,000 at moma. that is new york city with a very sophisticated art audience. at the same time, las vegas draws 43 million tourists a year -- >> reporter: hello. neon museum ceo rob mccoy hopes burton's appeal will draw more people here. what is your favorite tim burton piece? >> it would have to be the signature sign, "lost vegas," and here's the reason why -- we lost the dunes sign.
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as an homage to the dunes, he created that wonderful outline of the old dunes sign. and then just the icing on the cake, he put stardust stars from the stardust sign up through the middle of it. so in one fell swoop he captured probably two of the most famous signs in the history of las vegas. >> reporter: ginne hie said each was sanded and painted to look old. >> visitors are supposed to come in and think this has been here for decades. >> reporter: what does your artwork do for you? >> it's like therapy. >> reporter: we asked burton specifically what some of those pieces mean. from the blue girl with wine -- she's hot. >> it's been a long time with not having a givrlfriend. >> reporter: to the blueprint of his creation -- >> that's edward him.k on many f a was >> reporte of keeping lasvegas'
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past present. >> we used to sneak in to where they kept the signs, like in the '90s. it was on the other side of art. >> reporter: what are you hoping people will feel? >> vegas is dreamlike in a weird way. memories are like snippets of dreams. you do things and it's personal, no matter what you do. if you do connect with somebody, it's -- it's quite special. >> reporter: interesting trip into his mind there a little bit. >> yeah. absolutely. he has a fascinating mind. and it all comes out through his art. >> yeah. >> interesting he talks about it being therapy for him. >> it is therapy. and if you -- if you listen to him and you watch his movies, you -- you view his artwork, you see he's dealing with a lot. i wasn't able to break it all down. >> a decent amount there. i mean, there's nobody else like tim burton. >> nobody. >> true. very unique. michelle, good stuff. coast to coast by car in a
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little over a day. if it sounds impossible? it is not. one teen claims to have done it beating a ledgendary record. we'll hear about it next. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." linda ronstadt sold more than 70 million records leaping between genres and even languages. ♪ you won't get far trying to explain all that success to her toughest critic. first name linda. you go back now and you listen to some of your old stuff to remember. >> and i go, what was i thinking? >> reporter: if you go back and listen to one of your records today, you'll be thinking of all the things you should have done differently. >> i'll think i'm a terrible singer, i never could sing. it will ruin my week. maybe my month. ♪ i'm goingay
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come what may to blue bayou ♪ >> reporter: even worse, ronstadt says, is the thought of her music living forever on line. >> it's terrifying. it all -- all those bad performances are frozen in time. not -- not plastic, not elastic, not growing, not building, not maturing, not learning, not improving. >> reporter: you remind me of authors who write manuscripts and make their family members project is to burn them when they die. >> yeah. >> reporter: and then -- >> i burned them already. my manuscripts and letters and everything like that. i never keep anything. >> reporter: what? >> nobody's business. ♪ just one look >> reporter: all the money and magazine covers were just a byproduct, she says, of songs she simply had to perform for her own two in the lyricshat i he to sing t i'm going to die. >> reporter: you have to or you're going to die? >> have to or die, share the
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feeling.
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you can go faster! come on! >> the movie "cannonball run" was slapstick, but it was based on real-life efforts to race from coast to coast. last month, a seemingly unbeatable record was broken. three car enthusiasts made it from a garage here in new york city to a hotel in redondo beach, california, at a heart-pounding speed. with a top speed of 193 miles per hour and an average of 103 for more than a day, drivers are the new "cannonball run" record holders. as first reported by "road and track," the team made the 2,800-mile journey from new york to los angeles in 27 hours, 25
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minutes, shaving more than an hour off the old mark set in 2013. while in the movie, burt reynolds and dom delouise crossed the country in an ambulance, the team rode in a mercedes modified over the course of two years -- specifically with setting the record in mind. >> we've got a couple radar detectors, a cb radio, a police scanner. we use gyro stable i'ded binocular -- gyrostabilized bin actionlors, and something we've never done, a thermal scope on the roof so we're able to see anything warm on the side of the road before us. >> reporter: they were aided by a network of spotspotters, driv ahead and reporting road conditions along with the placement of speed traps. >> we knew we had a shot pretty much the whole time. thankfully nothing bad happened, there were no altercations with the police or anything to slow
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association says speeding is widely deemed culturally acceptable by the motoring public. we need to change that narrative and make speeding as socially unacceptable as drunk driving. toman maintains the team never put any other drivers at risk. >> there was no close calls. we don't pass people at a high rate of speed. simply because it's dangerous, and if we were to do that to drive recklessly, they're justice going to call the police. and then we're just going to have police waiting for us. >> you may have seen it in the picture, the gps screen. they stopped for a total of 22 minutes. obviously do not try this, do not try this. that is a very serious concern. >> dangerous. yes. it's a look now at the weather for your weekend. ♪
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what happens when an american opens up a ramen shop in the middle of tokyo? we'll find out when we meet our ef "e dish" next. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." in one week... a lot will happen in your life. wrinkles just won't. neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair's derm-proven retinol works so fast, it takes only one week to reveal younger looking skin. making wrinkles look so last week. rapid wrinkle repair® pair with retinol oil for 2x the wrinkle fighting power. neutrogena®
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the roomba i7+ with cleanng base automatic dirt disposal and allergenlock™ bags that trap 99% of allergens, so they don't escape back into the air. if it's not from irobot, it's not a roomba™ ♪ ♪ there are rising reports of a zombie outbreak across the area. the national guard- sometimes you just want to stay in. enjoy the great taste of dunkin' at home. sometimes you just want to stay in. you may be at increased risk for pneumococcal pneumonia - a potentially serious bacterial lung disease that can disrupt your life for weeks. in severe cases, pneumococcal pneumonia can put you in the hospital.
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it can hit quickly, without warning, making you miss out on what matters most. just one dose of the prevnar 13® vaccine can help protect you from pneumococcal pneumonia. it's not a yearly shot. prevnar 13® is approved for adults to help prevent infections from 13 strains of the bacteria that cause pneumococcal pneumonia. don't get prevnar 13® if you have had a severe allergic reaction to the vaccine or its ingredients. adults with weakened immune systems may have a lower response to the vaccine. the most common side effects were pain, redness and swelling at the injection site, limited arm movement, fatigue, headache, muscle pain, joint pain, less appetite, vomiting, fever, chills, and rash. ask about prevention. ask your doctor or pharmacist about prevnar 13®. this morning on "the dish," the improbable journey of chef
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ivan orkin. orkin's first exposure to japan was a lonely one -- washing dishes in a long island sushi bar when he was just 15. he fell in love with the cuisine and the culture. after restaurant work in this country, he moved to tokyo and took his wife's bold suggestion to open a ramen shop. the unlikely gamble paid off. his ivan ramen became a hit and spawned two locations, now open here in new york. >> now he's the co-author of "japanese recipes from a chef, father, eater, and lifelong outsider." chef ivan orkin, good morning, welcome to "the dish." >> thanks for having plea. >> so good to have you here. first of all, let's talk about what we have in front of us because it looks amazing. >> yeah. so it's really fun to go through the process of choosing some grate dishes for today -- great dishes for today's show. all the way out in the big bowl is tempura, lightly battered and fried mostly vegetables but also we have a shrimp version, as well. some roasted peppers with a shio
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cade, shio manes salt, a salty -- means salt, so it makes it delicious. the odon, in the book the odon party. fish cakes and eggs and sausages in a broth. here we have an okinawan-style soba which is pork belly, and it's delicious. and thiss a rice toast in the toaster oven, and there are sweet beans and there's toasted soy flour. >> last but not least -- >> last but not least. my beer -- the ivan ramen beer. as we say in japan, we say -- [ speaking foreign language ] >> in new york i say -- >> so the flishl questiinitial t brings a kid to here from an obsession with japan and japanese cuisine? >> i got my first job ever at a japanese restaurant in 1978 when the whole country was not eating japanese food.
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and i fell in love with . it -- love with it. when i got the job they were so nice the chefs would feed me all the time. i remember a story, my first day at work, i was so hungry -- i was 15, ngry. udy the , "i'm really hungry." he whipped up a raw egg, poured it over with rice and seaweed and says, "here, ivan son." >> was that your epiphany? >> yes. i was raised to be polite. and i had asked. so i got this kind of gooey bowl of -- of rice and egg, and i started eating. i was like, wow, it's kind of gooey and weird, but it's delicious. >> i know, right? >> i was hooked. it was a part-time job so i was there whatever it was, a year or something. but it stayed with me. when i went to college, i studied japanese. then i thought, well, i guess i better live in japan. and then just sort of steamrolled this love of japan.
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it's my second home. >> wow. >> tv dinners i hear also play aid role -- >> yes, oh, my god -- >> your desire to be a chef. >> my mother was never that interested in food. she would go to the ballet with my dad and leave us with the hungry man dinners. if you know these -- they never cook evenly. they're always like raw on one side and molten on the other side. >> do i -- >> when i was 13 or 14, i put my foot down and said, "i'm never eating this stuff again." i started to cook. >> there it is. >> yeah. >> ramen's your specialty. but i mean, you -- you call it the maverick cuisine of japan. it couldn't have been easy to figure that out. >> you know, i used the term the maverick cuisine because in japan everything is very kind of rigid and thought out, and there's rules for everything. but ramen was the only thing that didn't have rules. the -- there's no rulebook. all the ramen shop owners have secrets. they'll -- i'll say how do you
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make your soup, everything in the room is dead silent. you had to figure everything out on your own. a lot of the popular shops were popular not just because the food was good but because the guy was quirky or the atmosphere was fun. and so i thought to myself, you know, of all the types of cuisine or things i might try to do in japan as a business, ramen is the most forgiving. it would allow me, if i make the food good and have a fun sphere, i might get a shot at opening in a place that doesn't necessarily welcome foreigners to cook their cuisine. you know. >> that's the amazing thing. >> yeah. i called them maverick cuisine because the ramen shop owners are always a rag-tag bunch. >> if you could have this meal with anyone poverty pour present, who would it be? >> my first choice would probably be groucho marx. i might ask jerry garcia -- >> goodness. >> billie holiday and charlie parker to join. >> wow. >> wow -- >> enjoy that one. >> chef ivan orkin, as i put my chopsticks down and show everybody one of your fabulous
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signature, if you want to know more about him and "the dish," go to cbsthismorning.com. they've captivated fans for over a decade. the latest album is the most successful yet. next in our "saturday sessions," mandolin orange. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." ♪ only roomba i7+ uses two multi-surface rubber brushes. and picks up more pet hair than other robot vacuums. and the filter captures 99% of dog and cat allergens. if it's not from irobot, it's not a roomba™.
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mucinex cold & flu all-in-one. fights... oh no. no-no-no. did you really need the caps lock? mucinex cold and flu all-in-one. thanks, stef! no more driving that old hand-me-down. surprise! no, i'm not gonna get a date in this. we had a lot of great dates in this car. ugh, no. no, ew. we had a lot of great dates in this car. my body is truly powerful. i have the power to lower my blood sugar and a1c. because i can still make my own insulin. and trulicity activates
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this morning in our "saturday session," mandolin orange, it's been a decade since andrew marle and emily franz formed the duo in north carolina. they've toured the world and appeared at top festival stages including newport folks and south by southwest. their latest collection is "tides of a teardrop." now, here is mandolin orange with "the wolves."
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at my gate i'll always greet you at my door you're welcome in ♪ ♪ there can be no transgression as a means to an end ♪ ♪ on the wind the wolves are howling open arms are closed in fear ♪ ♪ helping hands are clenched in anger broken hearts beyond repair ♪ ♪ ever's so great can't get better. makes me wanna cry ♪ ♪ but i'll go out howling at the moon tonight ♪ ♪ there she stands so tall and mighty with her keen and watchful eye ♪
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♪ and the heart of a mother holding out her guiding light ♪ ♪ it's a hard road to travel. solid rock from end to end ♪ ♪ the sun it rises on her brow and sets upon the great expanse ♪ ♪ everything's so great can't get better makes me wanna cry ♪ ♪ that i'll go out howling at the moon tonight ♪ ♪ there she stands so tall and
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mighty with her gaze facing the east ♪ ♪ at her back our doors are closing as we grin and bare our teeth ♪ ♪ on the wind the wolves are howling she cries to draw near ♪ ♪ turn around oh wolves are here ♪ ♪ everything's so great can't get better makes me wanna cry ♪ ♪ that i'll go out howling at the moon tonight yeah i'll go out howling at the moon tonight ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪ yeah i'll go out howling at the moon tonight ♪ [ applause ] >> don't go away. we'll be back with more music from mandolin orange. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." she's driven by a primal desire for meat. a lynx in the wild and your cat. for a lynx this need is satisfied by what the wild provides. for your cat it's meat rich blue wilderness.
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because your cat is wild inside. laso you can enjoy it even ifst you're sensitive. se. yet some say it isn't real milk. i guess those cows must actually be big dogs. sit! i said sit! ♪ who will you make happy today? le vie est belle. the iconic fragrance. lancôme. the must have gift of the season. at macy's.
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of oh no,...n. ...a cougher. welcome to flu season, karen. is a regular flu shot strong enough... ...to help prevent flu in someone your age? there are standard-dose flu shots. and then there's the superior flu protection... ...of fluzone high-dose. it's the only 65 plus flu shot... ...with 4 times the standard dose. and it's free with medicare part b. fluzone high-dose is not for those who've had a severe allergic reaction... ...to any vaccine component, including... ...eggs, egg products,... or after a previous dose of flu vaccine. tell your healthcare professional if you've ever experienced severe muscle weakness... ...after receiving a flu shot. if you notice ...other problems or symptoms following vaccination,...
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...contact your healthcare professional immediately. side effects include pain, swelling... ...and redness where the shot was given. other side effects may occur. vaccination may not protect everyone. if you're 65 plus, don't settle for a standard-dose flu shot. influenza...going down. move up to fluzone high-dose. see your doctor or pharmacist and ask for it by name. have a great weekend. >> we leave you with more music from mandolin orange. >> there >> this is "wild fire."
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♪ brave men fall with a battle cry and tears fill the eyes of their loved ones and their brothers in arms ♪ ♪ so it went for joseph warren ♪ ♪ and it should have been different. it could have been easy his rank could have saved him but a country unborn needs bravery ♪ ♪ and it spread like wildfire ♪ wildfire from the ashes grew sweet liberty like the seeds of the pines when the forest burns ♪ ♪ they open up to grow and burn again ♪
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♪ it should have been different it could have been easy but too much money rolled in to ever end slavery ♪ ♪ the cry for war spread like wildfire wildfire ♪ ♪ wildfire ♪ ♪
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♪ well civil war came and civil war went brother fought brother to the south was spent ♪ ♪ but its true demise was hatred passed down through the years ♪ ♪ it should have been different it could have been easy but pride has a way of holding too firm to history ♪ ♪ and then it burns like wildfire
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wildfire ♪ ♪ wildfire ♪
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♪ i was born a southern son in a small southern town where the rebels run wild ♪ ♪ to beat their chest and they expire they're gonna rise again ♪ ♪ well it should have been different it could have been easy the day that old warren died ♪ ♪ hate should have gone with it but here we are caught in the wildfire ♪ ♪ wildfire wildfire ♪ ♪ wildfire
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wildfire ♪ [ applause ] >> for those of you still with us, we have more music from mandolin orange. >> this is "paper mountain." ♪ got no business crying living out beyond the blue ♪ ♪ high on paper mountain where you live the lie you choose ♪ ♪ you turn to face your neighbors and you never meet an eye ♪ ♪ the currents overtake you
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the ink's not even dry ♪ ♪ high on paper mountain where the black river flows ♪ ♪ where peace is just a legend no one knows ♪ ♪ but the old gods have fallen people watched them go ♪ ♪ so will paper mountain ♪ you're reading that old story it's a dire circumstance ♪ ♪ you comment on the image a little face behind the fence ♪
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