tv CBS This Morning CBS October 21, 2017 7:00am-9:01am EDT
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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it's october 21st, 2017. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." looking for answers from president trump. the conflicting accounts and new controversy over the deaths of four u.s. soldiers. plus on the hunt for a possible serial killer. why police think finding this person of interest may help save lives. danger on board. the faa tries to ban laptop computers from checked baggage. and triumph over tragedy. comedian patton oswalt returns to the stage after the loss of his wife.
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we speak with him about his journey from loss to laughter and now love. but first we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> as we say in the south, all hat, no cattle. >> that's a lie. >> he refutes the comments by a florida congresswoman. >> if you want to go after general kelly, that's up to you. if you want to go after him, i think that's something highly inappropriate. >> families of four soldiers killed in niger are demanding answers. >> a manhunt is under way for a possible serial killer linked to three murders in a tampa neighborhood. >> this is our street, this is our neighborhood, and you're not going to drive us out of it. >> thousands gather over an
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officer killed earlier this month. he received full department honors. >> the "uss constitution" marked its 0th anniversary of a voyage. a 21-gun salute. >> i don't think you're going believe this, but you just went over puerto rico. >> get out of here. >> all that -- ♪ and bright stars >> not skipping a beat, they finished the "national anthem" for her. >> -- and all that matters -- >> game seven tomorrow night. astros win it, 7-1. >> you want drama? baseball is never better than game seven. >> -- on "cbs this morning: saturday". >> the dodgers are in the world series. [ cheers and applause ] >> the dodgers are such a
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favorite to win, they've already declined their invitation to the white house. nothing more exciting than game seven, right? >> nothing more exciting. >> welcome to the weekend, everyone. i'm anthony mason along with alex wagner and we begin this morning with the growing pressure on the trump administration for answers about the deaths of four u.s. army soldiers in niger. >> the death of sergeant la david johnson around three other soldiers has people asking the pentagon for answers. president trump's response to howl he deals with grieving military families has touched off a feud with a democratic congresswoman and the white house. errol barnett, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the fbi is now assisting in the military's investigation of that
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deadly ambush in niger which killed sergeant johnson and his fellow soldiers, but the white house remained tight-lipped. president trump refused to answer a pointed question over his role. even as new information on the u.s. operation in which four soldiers were killed came to light. the body of sergeant la david johnson was found nearly a mile away from the ambush fight. officialals say there was a bean light tracked for several hopes hoping he was alive. the biggest mystery is why the patrol had not expected enemy contact when a map shows attacks had taken place over the last 20 months. >> we're clearing a lot of that up. >> reporter: a day after senator john mccain said it may be necessary to issue a subpoena to the pentagon, the secretary of defense was summoned to the capitol. >> we can always improve on
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communication, and that's what we'll do. >> reporter: he said the war is shifting from south africa. >> reporter: plus president trump's remarks in a condolence call to a grieving widow of one of the soldiers killed in the attacks caused concerned. >> he said, quote, he knew what he signed up for. >> you don't call up a young, young woman, a grieving mother of two who is with child and say your husband -- no -- your guy knew when he signed up what he was getting himself into. >> reporter: but in an interview airing sunday the president doubles down. >> the call was a very nice
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call. >> reporter: the president claimed earlier in the week he had contacted virtually every gold star family whose family member was killed. but they show they don't even have an up-to-date list of americans killed in action. this week the white house chief of staff retired marine general john kelly defended president trump's treatment of sergeant johnson's widow and criticized congresswoman wilson. he said she boasted about a building. video of her speech shows she never took that credit the building which is named after two fbi agents killed in the line of duty was funded before wilson was elected to congress. the discrepancy in kelly's remarks led to a contentious exchange on friday between cbs news correspondent chip reid and white house press secretary
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sarah sanders. >> in fact, have you seen the speech? >> i have. >> then you know most of it was her infusively praising these fbi agents, and when she talked about what she did in congress, she was not talking about getting security of $20 million. she was talking about naming the building. >> she was always talking about -- >> which she then went on to infusively praise and that was the bulk of the speech. >> she also mention that and had quite a few comments that weren't part of that speech and video that were always witnessed by other people. >> like what? >> what general kelly referenced yesterday. >> tell us specifically. >> exactly what he said. there was a lot of grandstanding. he was stunned she had taken the opportunity to make it about herself. >> can he come out here and talk to us about that at some point? >> i think he spoke about it pretty thoroughly yesterday. >> he was wrong. >> if you want to go after general kelly, that's up to you. >> shouldn't he come out and get the facts straight. >> if you wajtd to attack a
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four-star marine general, i think that's something highly inappropriate. >> wilson upped the ante against the trump administration on friday saying, quotes the white house itself is full of white supremacists. >> for some perspective on this, we turn to amber philips. she writes a blog called "the figure." good morning. >> good morning. >> it looks like the white house had a number of opportunities to put a period on this whole authentic and elected not to. >> exactly. i think this started -- this whole thing started monday when a reporter asked president trump why haven't you spoken out publicly about these four men who died in niger almost two weeks ago at that date. president trump reacted the way he always does when he feels like he's in a box, which is to get defensive right away and attack politically. in that attack he falsely accuses president obama and former presidents ott nof making
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calls and all of this set the stage or really primed it for like a political battle to just blow up over this incident. that's what we saw tuesday in a totally separate incident. now we're ending the week with democratic lawmakers calling the white house full of white supremacists and the white house reacting by saying how dare you question a general and it kind of has all degraded so quickly. >> amber, how much of an issue is this for general kelly who thus far has been an untouched member of the trump administration, the fact that he did get the story wrong about congresswoman wilson? >> i think his reputation has been dinged this week. you're absolutely right, alex. he was someone who was perceived as coming in to help the white house, to help keep the president out of this exact type of political feuds we're talking about, and here he is injecteding himself in the middle of it and, as you said,
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making false claims in the process and doing a very trumpian thing, quite frankly, in refusing to back down when he gets facts wrong. it's a remarkable thing for this general. >> who gave moving an eck doetds and testimony of what it's like to lose a son in battle. >> he did. meanwhile thursday night senate republicans passed the fiscal year 2018 resolution which allows them to move forward on tax reform without democratic support or filibuster, correct? >> correct. it failed and it is a very real possibility this exact same thing could happen with tax reform and here's why. they're trying to do it without democratic votes, and so they're kind of locked into this procedural box where they can only spend a certain amount of money. in this case, it's a lot of money for conservative republicans. $1.5 trillion they can spend on
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these tax cuts. that cuts out a lot of potential votes they might need from house conservatives, perhaps moderates are going to say, you know what, i want to spend that money, but i don't want to cut taxes here and there, and i think we have a long way to go before any kind of tax bill is a reality, right? we haven't've seen a bill let alone tax legislation passing congress just along republican votes and getting to the desk. >> but, amber, the republican party has publicly said we're going to get this done before the end of the year. what is the political fallout if, in fact, dhiemt get it done before the end of the year? it's impossible to imagine a major piece of legislation happening in an election year. >> exactly. fw op analysts who i've been talking to who are behind the scenes trying to keep republicans in control of congress are really, really worried. they say the best thing you can do politically is pass legislation that gets more money into people's pockets, and for republicans gets government, you
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know, kind of out of people's lives on taxes especially. the worst thing you can do is make a promise and not deliver on it, and you're absolutely right, alex, that the clock is ticking. because by next year, whatever kind of, you know, beliefs that all these republicans have, they're going to be more entrenched, right? they're not going to want to back down and take tough votes in an election year. >> meanwhile, amber, this bill is taking votes behind closed doors. we don't know what's in it. >> i feel like we're deja vu'ing all over again. >> to quote yogi berra. >> we don't know what it says because budget experts estimate it's upwards of $3 trillion to $5 trillion of tax cuts. it's really hard for the republican party to say, ohhing we're going to blow a hole in the deficit. it's a tough decision they're
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going to have to face to pay for that. >> thank you. tomorrow morning on "face the nation" john dickerson's guests will include nick mullaney and gold star father khan. there are fears a serial killer is on the loose in tampa, florida. police are warning you not to walk alone in seminole nights. a third person was shot on wednesday night. while the victims did not appear to know one another, police seem certain that the murders are all connected. >> reporter: frightened residents did what they could to reclaim the streets of seminoe night, day after 20-year-old anthony man had gotten shot on the sidewalk. the autistic man had gotten off the bus and got shot. his family knew something was wrong when he didn't come home.
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>> that's an awful feeling when you another your child is dead and you have a family coming to let you know and confirm it. >> reporter: police heard the shots that killed him. there were extra patrols in the area after two other murders in ten days. naboa was shot just about 100 yards away from where benjamin mitchell was killed on october 9th. on october 13th, a woman's body was found vacant in a lot. she was killed two days earlier. tampa police say they have no leads and can't determine a motive. on friday they released surveillance video of a person walking in the area when the first murder happened. the only thing they seem certain of is that the murders are not a coincidence. >> they're the proximity and the time frame. you know, they are related. there's no doubt in our mind about that. >> police are hoping the public can help, something anthony naboa's stepmother says needs to happen.
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>> i hope someone in the community can speak out. do not be afraid. because like my husband said, it could be your daughter, your granddaughter, your son, your wife, your husband. it could be someone in your family. speak up. just speak up. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning: saturday," manuel bojorquez. there have been even more new accusations against harvey weinstein. more than 60 women are accusing the disgraced hollywood producer of sexual misconduct, this as the television academy overwhelmingly decided to purr sues disciplinary proceedings against harvey weinstein which could mean the termination . >> reporter: attorney dave ring represents the 38-year-old italian actor who claims harvey
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weinstein raped her in a los angeles hotel room in 2013. >> her greatest regret was opening that doorks but she had no idea what was going. >> reporter: ring said his client who has chosen to remain anonymous was in town for a loss angeles festival. >> she never reported it. she was scared to death, felt horrible, did not know what to do. she did not live here. >> reporter: the lapd's homicide investigation is investigating the incident. >> he was sitting so close to me on this couch i started to get a sick feeling in my stomach. >> reporter: she was in her 20s and an aspiring actress when she met the producer. she claims during a business meeting in 1989 weinstein unzipped his panted and said
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touch me. >> he said name anyone. he said he would have sex with me and take me to parties and show me who i would have to sleep with after that. >> reporter: shortly after that she quit acting as a career. >> i felt so powerless because he is, after all, very powerful and very well known. i didn't think anyone would believe me. i was nobody. why would they. >> the attorney representing heather kerr say numerous other women who say they were sexually victimized by harvey weinstein have asked her to represent them. police in london are also looking into incidents of any nonconsensual sex. >> do we have any sense of where harvey weinstein is at this point? >> not a clear sense other than therapy to try to get better. he's lot his career,s he job, his family. his flee dom may be next. >> thanks tony.
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the federal aviation administration is recommends laptops be banned from checked luggage on international flights. the concern centers near atteries where when near toiletries could explode. kris van cleave has more. >> reporter: the faa has long been worried about the danger of lithium-ion bat res in the cargo hold of a plane as this video shows. but new video shows there's more of a concern. turns out the if that kind of a battery overheats next to an air hole or nail polish remover or rubbing alcohol, it can spark an uncontrollable catastrophic fire that could burn so hot some airliners couldn't put it out. in one case a bot ofl shampoo was strapped to a laptop. it exploded in 40 seconds.
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>> reporter: ross aimer is a former airline captain. >> having seen the devastation that these batteries could cause, i think every airline pilot is thinking about it and they would welcome this decision by faa. >> reporter: earlier this year the us and uk temporarily banned laptops. the recommendation to ban laptops in checked bags went to the international group that acts as aviation's governing body. large electronic devices will still be allowed as carry-ons. for "cbs this morning: saturd " saturday," kris van cleave, washington. they're using powers to retake control of its catalonia region. they say they will push forward
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with a unilateral declaration of independence if the government takes back control. >> time to show you some of this morning's headlines. bloomberg reports a california judge has tossed out a $417 million jury award against johnson & johnson. that found a company liable for a woman developing ovarian cancer for using its baby powder. they say they cannot be held responsible. johnson & johnson says there is no increased cancer risk from using its talc. the plaintiff's attorney is planning an appeal. the "atlanta journal-constitution" announced betty price, former wife of tom price inquired about the possibility of quarantining hiv patients. >> i don't want to say the quarantine word, but i guess i just said it. we have a public interest in
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curtailing the spread. >> price asked the question to a state health official during a legislative meeting this week. her comments have been denounced by some lgbtq rights groups. "the new york times" reports a new study finds body cameras have had no significant impact on police officer behavior. research observed officers for a year and a half in washington. they say their use of force rate neared that of colleagues not wearing cameras. this is following a high series of police shootings. >> "usa today" reports the air force is recalling as many as 1,000 retired pilots to fill a shortage within its ranks, but that could hurt small low paying regional airlines to hire trained crews to fly their planes. the regional carriers could fix the problem by offering better pay and benefits comparable to the major carriers. and the "new york daily news" reports on a "national
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anthem" protest at an nba game. ♪ and the home of the brave >> singer justine sky went down to one knee at the end of her rendition of "the star-spangled banner" before last night's brooklyn netsz game. she explained i had to take a knee for an opening game in my city and let my voice be heard. we will not be silenced. black lives matter. the "national anthem" has become a very
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it is a revolutionary report on the perils of pollution. still ahead this morning, a first of its kind study says contaminated air and water claim more lives each year than war, smoking, or natural disasters. and later, diffusing confrontations between the police and public before they get out of hand. we'll hear about an innovative program meant to better train officers. you're watching "cbs this morning" sarld.
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there's been plenty of focus os american jobs being lost to other countriesing but the bigger threat may be losing jobs to machines, computers, and automation. we'll look at the rising fears in the nation's work force. plus a powerful voice is silenced. we'll talk about a musician whose passing ignited an entire country.
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when you're a double-dipping like steve sweeney, it's important to maintain a certain... lifestyle. that's why sweeney spent over a hundred grand of his campaign funds on high-priced meals and other gifts. we're talking fine cigars, fancy watches, pricey restaurants, and expensive wines - all to charm the type of folks who helped him raise your taxes 145 times. too many in south jersey are struggling. but steve sweeney's looking out for himself, not for us.
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>> this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news". >> good morning, everyone, i'm jan carabeo. philadelphia police are investigating after a teenager is gun down in east mt. airy. now, this shooting happened along the 7700 block of cedarbrook avenue, just after 10:00 last night. authority tell us a 16 year old boy was shot once in the neck. he was transported to the hospital in critical condition no word yet on what sparked that gunfire. now, to the eyewitness weather forecast, with meteorologist, chelsey ingram. hi, kelly. >> good morning, everyone, we start you off with a look at beautiful sunrise this morning , in rehoboth beach, delaware. take a look at at that view. simply stunning. weigh start out your saturday morning, headed out in the afternoon temperatures climb to the upper 70s, believe it or not, well above average for
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this time of year. forecasting high of 77 degrees it is going to be warm one, abundant sunshine, beautiful blue skies, your eyewitness weather seven day forecast, 77 t today, basically, increasing clouds on monday, rain moves in monday night into tuesday, and then we cool down by the middle of the upcoming week. jan? >> thank, chelsey. our next update is at 7:57. we will see you then, have a great day. after 8 years of chris christie,
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is kim guadagno the change new jersey really needs? guadagno is christie's hand-picked successor. says she's "proud to be part of the christie administration." guadagno was chris christie's right hand as our schools came under attack, critical services were underfunded, and our credit rating was downgraded...11 times. from the bridge to the beach, we've seen it all, and we've had enough. kim guadagno isn't the change we need.
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what a pitch. three in a row. the american league pennant will be decided tonight. >> aye-yi-yi. >> in houston last night the astros got seven shutout innings from pitcher justin verlander to avoid elimination at the hands of the new york yankees. the astros won game six, 7-1, setting up tonight's winner take all game seven. >> grab the popcorn. whoever survives will face the los angeles dodgers in the world series. game one of the fall classic is tuesday night. what it's l.a./new york. >> don't get ahead of yourself.
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>> i know. >> i love game sevens. >> we all love game sevens. >> somebody's got to go home. hopefully it's not your team. welcome back to "cbs this morning: saturday." highly charged confrontations between the police and public have all too often ended in tragedy. we'll see how one police department is training officers to keep such encounters from escalating. plus painting a picture -- a motion picture. we'll take you behind the scenes of a new film about artist vincent van gogh where every frame has been hand painted in the troubled master's own dissting active file. from standup to sit-downs and more than 20 films, comedian patton oswalt has done it all but no one has put something together turning tragedy into laughs. but we begin this half hour with the devastating effects of environmental pollution. it contributed to the premature deaths of 9 million people in
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2015. that's nearly 15 times as many deaths from war and violence. >> that figure comes from a study published this week from the medical journal, the lanset. here's anna werner. >> reporter: she's wearing a special vest on her commute, measuring her exposure to air pollution. it's part of a multi-year study looking at pollution hot spots and the impacts on sigh clifts' health. >> it's smoky and thick and you get trapped. sometimes if you're in the tapepipe sucking eight all. >> despite recent efforts to curb pollution, a new report from ta lancet shows more needs to be done. more people died from exposure to dirty air than health factors including obesity, alcohol, and a high sodium diet. >> it was caused by heart
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disease, stroke, lung cancer, chronic obstructive lung disease. >> reporter: nearly 92% of the deaths occur in developing countries with china andnd ya most affected and children are at the highest risk. but each year pollution also kills an estimated 155,000 people in the u.s. yet the report says pollution can be addressed. in the 4r5 years since the u.s. passed the clean air act, air pollution here has dropped 70%. >> the control of pollution actually saves money because it prevents illness, it extends life, it helps the productivity of economies in the united states and in countries around the world. >> the doctor points out that the gross domestic product in the u.s. has increased 250% since the clean air act was put in place in 1970. he says that's proof that countries can have wealth and prosperity and clean air.
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alex and anthony? >> boy, the drop in pollution in this country is pretty impressive, but i have to say i was pretty stunned by the impact of pollution on people's health. >> deadly stuff. a pet project by the state of california is drawing both praise and criticism. at issue, protecting the lives of puppies and kittens. we'll tell you who's against the don't look now, but a robot may be coming for your job. at least that is the fear many americans are living with as automation spreads throughout the american economy. we'll examine the issue coming up next.
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it once seemed like a far off future, a world where robots and computers take away our jobs, but from automated customer service reps to self-driving cars, that future appears to be gaining on us and american workers are growing increasingly concern. that is a fining of recent polls according to "wired magazine." good morning. >> good morning. >> the future is now. >> isn't it always. >> where are we collectively in terms of our acceptance of apprehension about automation? >> we have a lot of mixed feelings about it. if you look at the polls. there was one by ipsos and by pew, generally speaking in a jen val sense people are anxious.
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when it gets to specifically how it works in their lives, people feel okay. it's kind of like how people hate congress but love their congressman. >> right, exactly. >> they feel pretty good about things like e retail and e banking. but they're more an she shus about stuff that sjts here yet. people generally feel more anxious with stuff they're familiar with, which kind of makes sense. >> one of the most looming changes is self-driving cars. they're going to be tested in new york very soon. are we ready for that? >> judging by the polls, we have a lot of anxiety about it, which kind of makes sense. it was a little bit surprising to me. we talk about it all the time. they make a convincing case that they're going to be much safer than humans, but just as flying in planes is a lot safer in driving, people still get
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anxious about getting in planes unlike cars because it's out of their control. >> we've defined freedom for so long by getting in a car and going wherever you want ant driving yourself. i'm not sure we're ready for the psychological change. >> we're starting to see a lot of autonomous features rolling out in cars. we don't call them that. adaptive cruise control, automatic breaking syst ibrakin. they may be tempted to make a grand statement of welcome to the age of autonomous driving. maybe that's not the way to do it. maybe more of a frog warming up in the water. >> that's a disturbing metaphor. automation is going to have an effect on the american job market. is there any sector that is impervious to automation?
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? >> that's a very good question. there are two questions in silicon valley. it's not like people stop working. they find other jobs to do. but the other school of thought is, no, you know what? a.i. is actually a completely different kind of thing and we have to think about how society is dpoik to rearrange itself when we don't need something like employment, then you get into ideas of universal basic income. there's a big conversation happening within silicon valley. >> that's a very prevalent concern among the people i talk to that the jobs aren't going to be there. >> yeah. you're looking at when machines can do things so much more efficiently than humans or even when you look at the economics of the industry where you can do so much more. when you look at the wealthiest companies, they employ so few people.
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>> sure. what about the industries that need the human touch, doctors, caregivers, that does not -- those seem like places where you'd want an actual homosamian and not a robot. >> i ultimately agree. perhaps it actually makes us better at our jobs and, you know, allows us to to thinks we weren't able to do before. you know, a doctor who doesn't have to read every single medical journal. >> i want a doctor to read every single medical journal. >> a.i. could do it better because they have access to all the information but the doctor does do the patient interface stuff. >> jason, thanks for being with us this morning. it's all going to be different. we just don't know. the two frequent confrontations between police and minorities that have ended in violence. up next, we'll visit one didn't's training program meant to prevent such incidents from happening. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." bob starts his day with a delicious
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legalzoom. legal help is here. the unpredictability of a flaree may weigh on your mind. thinking about what to avoid, where to go, and how to work around your uc. that's how i thought it had to be. but then i talked to my doctor about humira, and learned humira can help get and keep uc under control... when certain medications haven't worked well enough.
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humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. raise your expectations and ask your gastroenterologist if humira may be right for you. with humira, control is possible. confrontations between police
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by its very nature, police work can put officers in the middle of highly charged situations that sometimes run the risk of escalating into violence. >> now one department is looking to better train its officers to keep such confrontations from getting out of control. from milwaukee dean reynolds has the story. >> put me in handcuffs. the same [ bleep ] goes on all the time, all the [ bleep ] time. >> reporter: this is what police trainees in milwaukee go through to prepare for fighting for their lives. >> you cuff the victim? >> yes. >> why? >> for safety. >> reporter: they're always sensitive to it. it's a consequence of many highly charged confrontations that have forced officers into court. >> be careful not to get sucked into what they're calling about. >> reporter: listen to the approach of police trainer
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rondon powell. >> if a person lived in a neighborhood calling in saying a black person is sitting outside of my house. are you going to be sucked into this person's bias? >> yes. >> black people can live in a neighborhood where a white person lives. >> be aware but also be aware that part of the employment here is to investigate things that are out of the normal. >> i grew up in a neighborhood in the inner the of milwaukee where police and community relation was not good at all, and i found out that there are certain things that i viewed when i was a kid that really wasn't true, and as i became more of an experienced police officer, i began to obtain a desire to come to the academy and teach recruits. >> biased-based impacts affect the community and the department. >> what i've seen is a great deal more attention being paid
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to what's called de-escalation skills. >> police chief flynn. >> we do our very, very best not to fight with people. we don't want to go hands on. >> reporter: stacy seen has been instructing recruits for five years. >> ideally we wants a police officers to gain your cooperation through words. >> milwaukee police. >> these recruits have to pass state tests covering more than 1,000 hours of training. >> there's no other occupation in government, none, including the military, that puts so much responsibility on the shoulders of the lowest ranking member of the organization. >> let go of my gun! >> reporter: angela clinker and lorenzo holmes are two of the recruits. >> why are you doing this now sth. >> because i live here.
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i plan on being here. why wouldn't i want to do something good for my city. >> if you come into contact with someone and give them respect, that can go a long way toward building trust. >> as they cross the stage to becoming officers, one final reminder from their chief. >> no matter how many scenario-based training you do, no matter how many skill sets you're doing, sooner or later they're aplaeg it in a dynamic stressful ambiguous set of circumstances, and that's the true test. >> reporter: and that's when character takes over. for "cbs this morning: saturday," dean reynolds, milwaukee. >> so interesting what they're doing there. that first moment when you come in contact, those are really critical moments. >> that's when a lot happens that can set it on one course or another. >> precisely. coming up, the musician
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whose death left the prime minister of canada in tears. detail on the first state to order pet stores to sell only rescues. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." i am totally blind. and non-24 can throw my days and nights out of sync, keeping me from the things i love to do. talk to your doctor, and call 844-214-2424. this i can do, easily. i try hard to get a great shape. benefiber® healthy shape is a clear, taste-free, 100% natural daily fiber... that's clinically proven to help me feel fuller longer. benefiber® healthy shape. this i can do! are you totally ready? to catch an eye for sparks to fly
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burglars broke into her shoe. they stole her kids' mountain bikes and tablets along with her new juice press. luckily the geico insurance agency had helped her with homeowners insurance. she got full replacement on the stolen goods and started a mountain bike juice delivery service. call geico and see how affordable homeowners insurance can be. ♪ he was the rock and roll poet law yet of khan. they're still experiencing the heartbreaking loss of gord downie. downie was one the tragically hip, a predominant rock band for
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30 years. >> it's my honor to untroy deuce to america my friend the tragically hip. ♪ >> reporter: while the band enjoyed some success in the u.s., the hip as they were known reeged legendary status in their home country. in part due to their enigmatic front man and their songs which focused the history and spirit of canada. ♪ >> reporter: the hip won canada's grammy, the juneau award, 16 times, the most in any band's history. they also received the order of canada and even had their own postage stamp. >> i thought i was going the make it through this, but i'm not. it hurts. >> reporter: canada's prime minister justin trudeau wept in parliament this week while speaking about downie's death.
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>> he loved every hidden corner, every story, every aspect of this country that he celebrated his whole life. he wanted to make it better. he knew as great as we were, we needed to be better than we are. we are less as a country without gord downie in it. >> reporter: downie was diagnosed with terminal brain cancer in late 2015, but he led the band out on a farewell tour of the country the following summer, culminating in one final show in their hometown, kingston, ontario. ♪ >> reporter: while the venue held only a few thousand people, the hip's last show was broadcast nationwide. nearly 12 million canadians, about a third of the country's population, gathered from halifax to vancouver to say good-bye. ♪
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>> reporter: in gord's final months, he continues to make music and to push for change, a fierce advocate for uniting canada's native population. he was honored at an assembly of first nations gathering alo alongside trudeau in what he would call the greatest day of his life. ♪ >> it's been said it was like losing bob dylan and springsteen in one for canada, it meant that much. at least they got to say farewell. >> they did. he was a national treasure. >> sure was. from sunflowers to starry nights he's one of the country's most beloved artists. now he eason spired a remarkable new film where every frame has been hand-painted in his dissting active style. for some of you, your local news is next. for the rest of you, stick around.
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you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news". good morning, everyone, i'm jan carabeo, police believe they've nabbed the suspect behind a string of arm robberies in philadelphia's fairmount section. authorities say they caught up to that suspect around 9:00 last night, shortly after he committed an armed robbery near beechwood street. they're now linking him to four other armed robberies in that very same area. that happened since sunday. >> now, to the eyewitness weather forecast, with meteorologist, chelsey ingram. hi, kelly. >> good morning, jan, good morning to you at home. we start you off with beautiful view at ocean city. oh, look at the sunrise, this is your zen moment for the day , plenty of sunshine, blue skies expected throughout the afternoon. here's a look at what you can expected to, it will be a warm one, with abundant sunshine, high temperature, right around
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77 degrees, even though we are starting off the day little bit on the cool note. what you can expect over the next seven days, well, more of the same, as we head into sunday, high of 77 degrees. still, unseasonably warm, as we kick off the week, then rain moves in, monday night, into tuesday. >> chelsey, thank you. 7:58. now, and our next update is at 8:27. we'll see you then, have a great day.
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welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm anthony mason. >> and i'm alex wagner. coming up this how, good news for rescues. banning laws on puppy mills that could help increase the number of pet adoptions. then comedian patton oswalt turns his loss into humor. we'll talk about his remarkable new standup special. and for decades he fronted the smashing pumpkins but he changes hid name and perhaps his outlook. we'll talk with him and he'll perform in our "saturday sessions." that's ahead. first or top story this half hour. fallen soldiers. a funeral is being held today in
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florida for one of the soldiers killed earlier this month in niger. sergeant la david johnson and three others were killed in an ambush on october 4th. their deaths have raised questions about what led to the fire fight. the fbi and the pentagon are investigating. the incident has also touched off a feud between the white house and congresswoman frederica wilson. after slamming the condolence call president trump made to the widow of sergeant la david johnson, chief of kelly john kelly spoke. in an interview with "the new york times" she called kelly a liar. former white house chief of staff steve bannon spoke. this week mr. bush seemingly blamed the president's policies for, quote, emboldening bigotry. mr. president never mentioned the president by name in his
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speem but ban noncalled the bush presidency the most destructive in history. >> president bush to me embarrassed himself. the speech writer wrote a highfalutin speech. it's clear he didn't understand what he was talking about. he has no earthly idea if he was coming or going, just like it was when he was president of the united states. >> bannon also renewed his attack on rchs. republicans. he spoke on republicans who he considers disloyal to the presume p. police in tampa, florida, say three killings are connected and they're asking the public for help finding whoever is response. since last month three people have been shot to death in seminole heights faith. two people were shot within several feet of the same bus stop but they appear to have no connection of one another. police released surveillance video of a person walking near
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the murder scene last week but they have no solid leads. they're warning people in the neighborhood not to walk alone at night. california is aiming to put a stop to the often inhumane conditions of puppy mills. 's now the first state in the nation to require pet stores to sell rescue animals. carter evans has the story. >> reporter: the human society estimates more than 2 million dogs sold in the u.s. each year come from so-called puppy mills like this one in florida, this unlicensed breeding population has overcrowd and unsanitary condition. many dogs had no access to clean drinking water and were suffering from various medical conditions. >> the only way to shut this cruel industry down is to take away the demand. >> reporter: animal advocate judy mancuso helped pass the california law which requires pet stores to only sell dogs, cats, and rabbits that are rescues. >> in the state of california we
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bring in over 800,000 dogs and cats into our shelters and we kill over half. why on earth are we allowing this cruel industry to be feeding our state with yet more animals. >> reporter: but the new law will still allow californians to buy animals directly from reputable breeders. boris jang sells purebreds in his store. >> if it was only shelter dogs, would you still be in business? >> oh, no. to sell the puppies allows us to do the adoptions. >> the reality is it takes the sale of a $1,500 dog to fund the sale of a rescue dog. >> exactly. >> reporter: he has a different business approach. the only animals here are rescues. >> we've saved over 500 dogs and cats and hopefully we've built some customers along the way as well. >> reporter: kim believes it's
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not only the humane choice but a savvy one. >> reporter: where does the bulk of your income come if it doesn't come from animal sales? >> healthy services. >> reporter: his business is % growing. kim now owns 11 stores around the state. >> when you open your home and heart to a loving animal, right, like this dog here, why would. you want to support the store where you made that first connection. how could you resist faces like this, right? >> reporter: the puppies hope you can't. for "cbs this morning: saturday," carter evans, los angeles. >> they are pretty ir resistible. >> we adopted a rescue and rooster is a blessing every day. i encourage everyone to do it. >> great advice
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cbs presented by target.... urban agriculture and community greening are helping cities become more sustainable for the future. and that's why target has partnered with the nonprofit greensgrow in philadelphia. the novel idea was... can we put a farm in the heart of the city and really put food directly accessible to the people that were eating it. i think it's very important for us to come outside of target and really be inside of peoples' communities, as well. cbs eye on the community is sponsored by target. vincent van gogh's art and life captivated the world for more than 120 years. every month there are over 2.5 million google searches for his name. now a team of movie mackers has turned that fascination into a first of its kind film just
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released with the help of more than 100 artists from around the globe. jonathan vigliotti has the story. >> reporter: one of cinema's most ambitious new films was produced in a small studio in poland. here with the stroke of a brush, a team of parents brought to life the work of vincent van gogh. the final result, the first hand-painted film ever made. >> we have definitely without a doubt invented the slowest form of filmmaking ever devised in 120 years. >> reporter: hue welchman is the film's director. using letter written by van gogh, welch man and his wife tell the story of van gogh's creative genius and sudden death. vincent van gogh was born in the netherlands in 1853.
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over the course of his career, he paint oefrd 800 canvases. famous themes included sunflowers and wheat fields. at 37 years old after being released from a mental institution he took his own life without any explanation. >> how does a man go from being absolutely calm to suicidal in six weeks? >> that pivotal question is explored through fictional interviews with the real-life characters and locations depicted in 150 of van gogh's famous paintings. >> he was an interesting man. >> he was a genius. >> reporter: like a traditional film, "loving vincent" began with a set and actors. >> an important man like theo van gogh -- >> he filmed with live actors on green screen. we composited into the back of those shots van gogh's painting. we cut it together like a live
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action fill but put it together on each canvas. >> reporter: as the producer explains, a total of 120 artists recruited from all over the world turned those projections into oil paintings. >> you're not filling in or overpainting a scene as you see it. you're actually having to interpret a moving scene in the stul of an artist who died 126 years ago. >> reporter: to be clear every single frame of "loving vincent" was painted by hand, all 64,000 of them, the equivalent of 64,000 canvases. >> how long is this shot? >> 4 seconds. 98 frame. so he does a quarter or a third of a second each day. so something like 20 days just for that one shot of the cart going through with the woman. >> reporter: the entire film took four years to make and while there's computer software that can create the illusion of a painting with the click of a
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mouse, welchman said computers could never replicate this kind of authenticity. "loving vincent" is a painstaking turin bubt to van gogh, a moving exhibit unlike any before. for "cbs this morning: saturday," jonathan vigliotti, london. every single frame. >> it's hard to get a movie made generally. now, to make this movie, that is herculean effort. >> i love in this computer graphics aid -- >> -- the hand crafting. hat's off to you. comedians are known for pulling laughs out of tough situations and sometimes even tragedies. up next, we'll talk with patton os wallet. he's opening up about an unimaginable loss in a way only he knows how. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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you're in such a good mood especially what what i'm sure you saw go down on twitter five minutes ago. you didn't see? i'm kidding. nothing happened. but that's the world we're living in right now basically. >> that was actor and comedian patton oswalt in a clip from his new netflix special, "annihilation." he may be best known for his role on "king of queens" and voice on "ratatouille." jamie wax had a chance to meet up with him. good morning. >> good morning, alex. he is a funny man. in april of 2016 his wife of 11 years suddenly passed away
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leaving him and their 7-year-old daughter deeply grieving. from the start he was open about his loss and the pain he was enduring, and now he's actually managed to extract humor from it all. i talked to him about those dark days, his new love, and the state of comedy today. >> i'm talking to the mom. i say, this is really nice, a nice party. the kids are having a good time. she says, yeah. i hired a clown, and he's an hour late. and just as she said that, way off in the distance -- >> his trademark 5'5"-inch frame -- >> -- at the edge of the woods. >> reporter: -- one-of-a-kind voice -- >> -- suddenly the clown appeared.
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>> reporter: -- and sharp sense of humor has made patton one of hollywood's most distinctive comedians. >> a clown in the distance in daylight at the edge of deep woods is terrifying. >> i had this panic of i had better figure out what to do with my life and then i said, oh, i eat just do an open mike. i did my first night of open mike and it was horrible. it was so bad, but i instantly understood what the life of a comedian was and that's what i wanted. >> do you remember the first time you played here? >> yeah. i think it was the mid-1990s. >> reporter: that meant many nights in small parts before landing being parts on shows. he played a store clerk on "seinfeld." >> i don't think so.
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iet doesn't work that way. >> reporter: and went on to become a familiar face on "king of queens." but his talent extends beyond comedy. >> i'm sorry. i think we went to high school together. >> the same time? >> yeah. >> reporter: since 1996 oswalt has appeared in more than 30 movies showing off his range. family-friendly. >> do you ever think how we walk on the same paws we handle food with. >> reporter: to dark and disturbing. >> i don't want it. i don't want it. i don't want it. i don't want it. >> of all the things you'ring down is there something that feeds you the most? >> standup is always going to be the first thing because that kind of brought me to the dance. standup is sort of like the last dictatorial post in show business where it's purely you. there's no notes, there's no -- no one steers you. it's just all you. >> anyone you vote for into the white house will eventually
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during their presidency do something that will make you as a supporter go -- >> reporter: that personal connection with his audience has spilled over into his social media presence which often includes his views on politics. >> since january 20th, 2017, no one has shied away from politic bass us you can't. i want so badly to shy away from politics but i don't think i ooh going to be able to any time soon because every day there ooh's some new horror. and i'm on the edge of hallucination at this point from grief and sleeplessness. >> reporter: but it was his personal horror that led to his most. last year his wife died in her sleep leaving him ands hion daughter alice deeply mourning. >> you mentioned to "the new york times" you don't think you'll ever fully recover from this or be the same person. >> it's weird.
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i remember talking to another father at the school my daughter goes to. he lost his wife. he had two daughters amnd he saiding you will go through stages of i cannot live and then, okay, i can function, but it won't ever feel like life, and then you'll experience joy again. so when they were doing that interview, i was in the stage of trying to take care of myself, but i'm okay just being totally not whole, you know, because that's where i was. now just like he called it, i'm 100% whole again, you know. i'm -- if anything, i'm even better, i think, because of being annihilated the way that i was. >> reporter: he took those feelings and turned it into a standup special called "annihilation." >> i'm surrounded by these faces of alice's friends who said,
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were you sad? ? yes, i was sad. >> that's the clothest i could think of to how i have been this past year. annihilated. not damage and repaired. annihilate thad the person i was doesn't exist anymore and now it ee been rebuilt. >> did it surprise you you were able to make some of these moments and experiences into comedy? >> yeah. i remember i went up four months after michelle passed away. i didn't even have jokes written. i thought i'm going to go on stage and talk about it and let it be uncomfortable just so i've been through the process of being on stage. i whammed to get that out of the way. i think anything can be funny, even despair, depending on how you approach it. >> reporter: approaching despair was an especially delicate process especially when it came to his daughter alice. >> we would do this at night where we'd sit down with a notebook and write down three things we remembered about michelle no matter how trivial they were.
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now we have this book of all these different lines so she's very, very much alive. >> loss doesn't end. >> no. loss has a way of adapting and mutating so you've got to, you know, make it inhospitable. and the way you make it inhospitable is you keep the joyful parts of the person that you lost alive. >> reporter: today oswalt has found another source of joy new love with his fiance meredith sallinger. their relationship developed unexpectedly through a series of online conversations. >> we talked back and forth every night at 9:00. okay, same time tomorrow night? it was one of the things i really missed about being with michelle is being in the dark talking with someone at the end of the day. we would do that for hours. by the time we met, even though it wasn't explicit, we were in love, you know, and it didn't take very long to be just i want to be with this person. >> reporter: but not everyone
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was supportive of their relationship. the couple received some pushback on social media. >> i remember saying this one time to a friend. nothing brings out hatred and outrage on the internet than saying you love something especially on the internet. they're just not comfortable with clumsy open joy in life. >> thank you so much. >> with everything you've done and everything you're doing, is there something you really want to do in your career that you haven't done? >> i haven't directed a film. i want with to make a film. >> do you have plans to direct something? >> yes. i don't want to jinx it, but i have plans. >> all right. we won't talk about it. his special "annihilation" is available now on netflix. alex and anthony? >> i'm so happy that he's happy again. >> you know, comedy has a way of processing grief. >> yeah. i loved his skprens about making loss inhoss pulpit snoobl yes. good luck to you, patton oswalt.
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this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news". good morning, everyone, i'm jan carabeo, happening today, chestnuts hill is open to wizards and witches. the harry potter festival starts right around 10:00 this morning, on germantown avenue. that's where you'll find 12 blocks of activities, and then , over at chestnut hill college, the eighth annual philadelphia brotherly love qu iddage tournament. yes, there is a thing. chelsey, how is the weather looking? >> great wet for the festival, for sure, cool starts in kutztown, but beautiful view. 43 degrees there right now. across the region we have temperatures in the 30's, 40's , 50's, 53 degrees in philadelphia, 42 allentown, upper 40's down the shore atlantic city, ooh degrees in wildwood. as we head into the afternoon,
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it will be a warm one, high temperature every 77 degrees, wall-to-wall sunshine, and we will repeat that as we head into sunday, pattern change, monday night into tuesday, rain arrives, and then turns a loot cooler by the middle of the upcoming week. sending it back to you. >> chelsey, thank you. our next update is at 8: 57. we will see you then, have a great day. he's a husband, father, veteran...
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but most of all, he's a fighter. chris brown has never been afraid to take on the big fights. that's why he stood up to republicans and democrats alike to fight the north jersey casinos and the takeover of atlantic city. chris brown is fighting to protect jobs in our region... a true champion for the working men and women of atlantic county. on november 7th, let's keep him fighting for us. chris brown for state senate, he's on our side.
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this morning on "the dish," renowned chicago chef paul kahan. born in the windy city food was a family business. his father owned a dell lu and a salmon smokehouse. aftercollege he became a line cook and a sous chef before joining with a business parter to own his first restaurant black bird. >> a string of successes followed. he's now a chef and owner of a number of restaurants. he's won three james beard awards including outstanding chef and best chef in the midwest, and also his first cookbook was just released.
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welcome to "the dish." >> thank you. >> congratulations on the book. >> with that introduction, e i'm almost embarrassed. >> we piled it almost as high as the waffle. >> it feels good, woijt lie. >> what did you bring us? >> cucumbers charred and grilled with zug. >> the arch enemy of flash gordon? >> exactly. >> next to that is our interpretation of mexican street corn which relies on a pepper. roasted pork shoulder on white grits with pistachios and endive and a dish made famous by our former executive chef at the publican, carrots with what we call ranchovie dressing and pecans. >> and a stack of waffles. >> yeah, from the beginning of a
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dessert that's most famous, airy waffles with big chunks of sugar in it. >> what are we going to sample? >> nothing fancy. a delicious old-fashioned. let's sample that. >> a good hour. >> oh, my god. nicely diluted. >> a little bit of water. chef, you came to cooking in a fairly circuitous fashion despite the family roots at the family smokehouse. i red at one point you were a pipe organ tuner apprentice. >> wow, you did your homework. >> i dug deep in the archives. tell us about it. >> i answered an ad in the paper. one of the interestinging things is the gentleman i tuned pipe organs with, we had about 20 in the city of chicago. we would creve often. either i would be up at the keyboard pushing the note or inside of the chest tapping these little things that you
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would use to adjust the pup of each individual pipe. the funny thing was the gentleman would say, okay, we're done, where do you want to go to lunch or dinner. we ate a lot of food. >> you studied applied mathematics in college. apparently that didn't go anywhere either. >> i use it every day. >> as you say, your father ran a jewish deli, so you essentially had this from the very beginning. >> yeah. i think what i had was the passion. they had a licking smokehouse where they would smoke chubbs. i don't know if you've had warm fish, chubbs are really oily. they're in the herring family. he held it out and said, eat, kid. that was, boom, in my brain. it was incredible. and years later, i garden. i love to discover new ingredients. i love to go to farmers markets.
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so all maltby it was the path that i chose. >> i have to admit, pub can in chicago is one of my favorite restaurants. >> you're not lying either that i'm not lying. but each one is different. how did you vice president-elect pence the concept? >> it's the same story. it all comes from passion. black bird is a guy who doesn't know what he's doing, mooiz and my business partners. we just indonesia it into. and it was from the time i went to europe and had this great experience of cooking at a hearth, sitting around, drinking wine, and be with people. ee veeck is a place where you sit around. >> so i've heard. >> you describe yourself as a cook with a wrester's mentality. >> you guys are great. >> what do you mean by that? >> i wrestled for a large part of my luf. okay, get your composure and
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start climbing back up the stairs and fight back. i teach that lesson to young cooks and managers that way. >> and those lessons are in that cookbook, which is not all easy. >> how excite ready you about this new restaurant at wrigley field? >> well, it's another -- we have a restaurant called beg star. i spent time working in rick bayless's kitchen. it's a ta carree la. it's zany. it's fun. i em a huge cubs fan and so i'm very. itted about it. they're a nug organization, great partners for us. >> another excuse to go to the game. >> chef, as i ask you to sign this dish, a custom on this part of the program, aisle ask you as i ask all chefs, if you could share this bounty with anything figure past or present, who would it be? >> they asked me in the back room. as always, keith richards. >> and that is the correct answer. people say there's not a correct answer. >> last week'sance was socrates. this week's answer, keith
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richards. >> one of his songs, "i'm going to walk before i run." >> bringing it all home. >> yes. >> chef paul kahan. up next in our saturday session, another cubs fan, williams core kin of smacking pumpkins has reinvented himself. he's out with a new solo album, his first in a decade. and he'll perform right here in studio 57. ies and cabbage roses. we wanted to make wallpaper cool again. one of the greatest challenges of running a small business is having to do a little bit of everything.
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trust #1 doctor recommended dulcolax. use dulcolax tablets for gentle dependable relief. suppositories for relief in minutes. and dulcoease for comfortable relief of hard stools. dulcolax. designed for dependable relief. session, william patrick corrigcorgan. he was with smashing pumpkins. >> he's released two solo albums. we'll hear if there him in a moment but first we spoke with william at the gibson guitar showroom in new york. ♪
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>> reporter: he was billy when we first came to know him. billy corgan, the first alt rock man in smashing pumpkins. in the early '90s he was with smashing pumpkins. >> i wanted out. >> what do you mean? >> i wanted out of the suburban life. >> >>. >> reporter: corgan saw it. >> they said, you can't do it. you don't have the talent or the voice. he didn't make it. my father. he was a musician. >> reporter: but he wasn't wrong. his brand broke through in if 1993 with the album "sigh a meese dream." the follow-up "melancholy" and
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"infinite sadness wts sold a million copies. >> were you surprised? >> no. i know that sounds terribly ungrateful. but i wasn't surprised. in fact, my mother told me she wasn't surprised 1%. >> where does her fact come from? >> you'd have to ask her. that's one thing i wish i would have asked her. >> corgan lost his mother to capser in 1996? when you lose somebody so young, you say i wish i would have known this one more thing. 's like shadows. i have to guess. >> reporter: to what degree is your music an attempt to fill in shadows? >> it's an interesting question. i think it's an attempt to reflect the inner world that i feel and i believe in but i see very little representation outw5rdly which is a bit strange. it's a bit like "the wizard of oz."
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>> reporter: corgan's new record is his first in a decade and billy las become william patrick corgan. >> you decided you didn't want to be billy anymore? >> i started to feel comfortable, a sign of my arrogance and once i saw it irritated people, i thought, i'm definitely going to do this. >> you like irritating people? >> i'm quite good at it. >> he's quite good at talking about free speech on talk shows. >> i'm a natural contrary yab. >> you like pushing back. >> i think the world is a little too comfortable for itself for its own good. we need clowns and we're does and freaks. they keep the system in check. >> reporter: corgan says he tried to walk away from music but discovered he couldn't. >> i ended up pulling out an acoustic guitar and starting
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over and thought if i can prove to myself i can write a good song, there's a reason to continue. >> working with rick rubin, the songs took shape. >> yeah. totally from the cosmos. >> did that feel pretty good? >> i'm suspicious. >> which means it felt good. you just didn't like the feeling? >> there you go. you're figuring it out now. >> performing a track off his new album, here's william patrick corgan with air naught. ♪ ♪ coming down the meadow the world survives look out son the air's alive ♪ ♪ call it either el mental eye
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ooh, dark nights ♪ one magic heart deceives one little mind to ease off one silver drum that beats oh ♪ ♪ this mountain was torn from us ♪ ♪ this mountain was torn from us ♪ ♪ if i'm leaving you without return a snare you can call it home can a poem fit through time and space ♪ ♪ you can call it home if you wish or if it's fair but it's mine to share and share as like ♪ ♪ won't you mourn with me lover won't you morn with me ♪ ♪ lovers won't you mourn with
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me ♪ ♪ fall across the middle the world survives ♪ look out son the air's alive ♪ ♪ call it either el mental eye ooh, dark nights ♪ ♪ one magic heart to fly one little life to light up one silver eye to eye, ooh ♪ ♪ this mountain was born of us this mountain was born of us ♪ ♪ if i'm leaving you without return a snare
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can a poem fit through time and space ♪ you can call it home if you wish or if it's fair ♪ ♪ but it's mine to share and share alike ♪ ♪ won't you mourn with me lover won't you mourn with me ♪ ♪ lovers won't you mourn with me ♪ ♪ lovers won't you mourn with me ♪ ♪ lovers won't you mourn with e me ♪ ♪ lovers won't you mourn with me ♪ ♪ lovers won't you mourn with me ♪ ♪ lovers won't you mourn with me ♪ ♪ lovers won't you mourn with me ♪ >> toenltd go away. william patrick corgan will
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return to perform a smashing pumpkins song. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> announcer: "saturday sessions" are sponsored by blue buffalo. you love your pets like family. so feed them like family with blue. listen up, heart disease. you too, unnecessary er visits. and hey, unmanaged depression, don't get too comfortable. we're talking to you, cost inefficiencies, and data without insights. and fragmented care, stop getting in the way of patient recovery and pay attention. every single one of you is on our list. at optum, we're partnering across the health system to tackle its biggest challenges. at optum, we're partnering across the health system
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nightengale intake eyes leave passing vapor trails ♪ ♪ with blushing brilliance alive because it's time to arrive ♪ ♪ you make me you make me real ♪ ♪ strong as i feel you make me real ♪ ♪ lately i just can't seem to believe december card my friends to change the scenery ♪ ♪ it meant the world to hold a bruising faith but now it's just a matter of
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>> live from the cbs broadcast center in philadelphia. this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news ". >> good morning, everyone, i'm jan carabeo. the philadelphia zoo is kicking off its annual boo at the zoo halloween extravaganza today. this is video from last year's event. children are encourage today come in their favorite costume and set out on attributing or treat safari and other activities there at the zoo. the event starts at 10:00 this morning, and goes until 4:00. it will also run tomorrow, and next weekend, as well. now, to the eyewitness wet for cast with meteorologist, chelsey ingram. good morning. >> good morning to you at home let's start you off with a look at center city just check out these blue skies, simply stunning this morning, it is a cool start, and temperatures across the delaware vale, ranking anywhere from the 40's to the 50's. 49 degrees right now mount pocono, 43 reading, actually the cool spot on the map.
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and 58 degrees, in philadelphia. we will be warming up quickly, no worries, as we head into the afternoon. we will make it to around 77 degrees with abundant sunshine, but cool down headed our way, front will bring rain on tuesday, then cooling down by wednesday. chelsey, thank you. that's it for "eyewitness news " this morning. but you can always follow us on our website at cbsphilly.com. i'm jan carabeo, have a great day.
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narrator: today on "lucky dog"... brandon: milo! narrator: ...a surprise discovery alters the course of one poodle mix's training. brandon: that's when i had an epiphany. narrator: but before brandon can sign off on milo's adoption, he'll need to find this special needs dog an equally special new home. brandon: you have to ask yourself, do you see a special needs dog in your home for the rest of their life? i'm brandon mcmillan, and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are living without hope. my mission is to make sure these amazing animals find a purpose, a family, and a place to call home.
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