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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  November 11, 2017 7:00am-9:01am EST

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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it's november 11th, 2017. veterans day. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturda saturday". they talk again about russian interference in the presidential election. details on what was said. plus a gop senate candidate under fire, endorsements are pulled and money dries up after accusations of sexual encounters with teenage girls. what roy moore is saying in his first interview. louis c.k. says the
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allegations against him are true. details on the fallout. and fields of green. the once struggling business of hops farming are now a booming industry thanks to the craft beer craze. we'll take you to the area responsible for 75% of its production. but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. do you remember dating girls that young at that time? >> not generally, no. >> roy moore speaks out and fights back. >> moore supporters portraying the former judge as the victim of a political smear campaign. >> i believe he's the victim of a political hack job. >> voters there think it is another establishment hit job. >> more allegations of sexual abuse. >> you say you were sexually abused? >> yes. >> by the national team doctor. >> yes.
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>> while you were representing your country. >> yes. >> we saw them cross paths several times at the apec summit in vietnam. the driver of the stolen pickup truck is in custody after leading police on a wild chase for hours. >> let me grab my luggage. bitter cold settling in. >> you'll need your winter wardrobe, the hats, the scarves, the big thick winter coats. it's going to be that cold. >> two subway rats struggling over a single french fry. >> it's come to that. >> all that -- >> jaguar cubs explore their habitat. >> they're cute. >> -- and all that matters. >> oh, my goodness. a highlight for the ages on night number one. >> -- on "cbs this morning: saturday." >> history made in pomona.
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the drag racer annihilated the drag record for the fastest pass. how fast was she going? knocked out the quarter mile at.366 seconds. >> we've got a great race car, a great team, and we're going off to number one spot. and welcome to the weekend, everyone. i'm anthony mason along with alex wagner. we're fast here, but i don't know that we can go 140 miles an hour. >> with a name like brittney force. put the pedal to the metal, lady. from trump was on his five-nation tour. >> they met at an economic summit of asian leaders. putin denied meddling in the
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u.s. presidential election and even said the oolinks between h and paul manafort were fabricated. major garrett is traveling with the president. good morning. >> good morning. his time here at the asian summit, any talk with president putin? no. no discernible progress on any one-on-one trade deals meant to replace the partnership mr. trump withdrew the united states from earlier this year. now the president and president putin had their casual encounter shaking hands and talking briefly as they walked alongside one another for the group shot with one of many leaders. they offered big plans for a new constitution and political settlement, one that read a lot like ones put forward during the
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obama administration. for their part, russians did a lot of talking, leasing news of the statement in texts hours before the white house. on board the plane, the president told the reporters he did ask putin if he ordered meddling in the 2016 u.s. election. he said he didn't meddle. i asked him again. you can only ask so many times. i just asked him again. he did not do what they're saying he did, the president said, adding that putin, quote, is very insulted by it, which is not a good thing for our country. now, one of the reasons mr. trump did not meet with other heads of state here is many of them were involved in their own conversations in putting together a new successor if the transamerica partnership. if that deed is passed it will not include the united states. anthony? >> major garrett in da nang, vietnam.
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thanks. four women told the "washington post" that retired judge roy moore pursued them when they were teenagers and he was in his 30s. one of them was 14 at the time. all four have confirmed their stories to cbs news. moore angrily rejected calls yesterday to abandon his campaign, which could have national implications. paula reid is following this story and she's in our washington bureau. paula, good morning. >> good morning. roy moore is running in a special election next month for the seat of jeff sessions who's currently the attorney general. this was supposed to be an easy win for the gop, but the new allegations have many of moore sip porters second-guessing their endorsements. >> these allegations are completely false and misleading. >> with pressure for judge moore to step aside, alabama's republican candidate for senate
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gave his side of the story. >> i believe they're politically motivated. i believe they're brought only to stop a very sung saysful campaign and that's what they're doing. >> moore said he dated a lot of ladies but denied meeting leigh corfman. coverman told the "washington post" he touched her inappropriately when she was 14 years old. >> i never had contact with her. >> he admitted the other two women but denies going out on dates or giving them alcohol. after his radio interview with shaun hennessey, two senators released their endorsements and the republican campaign committee stopped raising money. on the ground in blame, emotions are mixed. >> it's disgusting that you would take advantage of a young child. >> whether true or not, he just ruined his chances of being
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elected. >> henry told a local newspaper, if they believe this man is predatory, they're guilty of allowing him to exist for 40 years. republican state auditor ziegler defended moore by invoking the bible stating mary was a teenager when joseph was an adult carpenter. they became the parents of jesus. there is nothing immoral here. but the president was less forgiving of moore. press secretary sarah sanders spoke for president trump who was traveling in asia. >> if these allegations are true, judge moore will do the right thing and step aside. >> the worry for republicans now is this could open the door for a democratic win in deep red alabama. they could have a write-in candidate, however, that's always risky, especially when moore is vowing not to drop out.
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>> there are several perspectives brewing. for that we turn to ed o'keefe. good morning. >> good to see you. >> republicans have not been collectively a fan of roy moore for a while now is. there any recourse at this point to get him off the ballot? >> there's not much that republicans outside of alabama can do at this point to stop moore from remaining on the ballot, remaining a candidate, and potentially winning the election. at some point if he were to win, they could try censuring him. really, there's not much they can do. it's all in the hands of alabama republicans. they can ask him to step down or encourage people to vote for somebody else. >> if these allegations continue to hang over him, is he a problem nationally for the party if he's on the ticket? >> the fact that we're talking about him and not the tax reform
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and all the other things that republicans would rather talk about prove he's a problem. this is why they didn't want him to be the candidate in place for jeff sessions. they've had other issues with him, the fact he was, pelled as chief justice of alabama in the past. he was not their choice. they dropped him faster than i expected. within two hours they say if it's true he should be gone. that's lightning fast. >> republicans have a two-seat majority. we're looking toward 2018, big senate and house races. there were elections this week. democrats feel emboldened. >> what i think it showed is democrats at least at the local county and state levels are figuring out how to talk about somethingover than donald trump and taking advantage of the fact they're showing up to vote. they're not making him the
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central issue. polling suggests he's not the main factor. but you saw candidates across the country talk about the economy, health care, job creation. democrats have been saying for months that's what we've got to to do. it appears to work in new jersey and georgia. mayoral races across the country as well. >> what's your sense of how republicans are reading these results? >> if you talk to them, they would like you to believe this was only -- >> -- confined to those states? >> -- confined to those states and areas prevailed. running ads that talked about documenting immigrants, attack opponents. but because he's not donald
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trump it backfired for them and the divisiveness was rejected. they're going have to think how they run these campaigns in suburban areas of the country where democrats made big names. >> one of the things they must do when they hold onto the senate in the house is unveil a tax plan. how close are we to get a deal done? >> the plan is to have the house pass their version, the senate pass their version right after thanksgiving if not before and to see the two chambers come together quickly and put together a plan that the president can sign before christmas. >> that's very, very fast. >> it is. they tried to do it over the summer. it failed to move quickly. the issue for them if they can't get it done by january leading into an election year, there's concerns of it festering too long. the goal in the house was to get this done as quickly as possible so it didn't sit out there for
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lobbyists and other groups to start picking it apart, you're going to do this, you're going to do that. that' part of the problem. the other extent is when whether l corporations get a tax break. when are they getting favorable treatment. all of those things have to be sorted out. whether they can do it on that timeline, look, their track record has been pretty bad. >> it's also a several-thousand-page piece of legislation that will affect every piece of the economy. a daunting piece. ed o'keefe, keep telling us the great news. great to see you. more high-profile people are being brought out. richard dreyfus, whose son recently accused kevin spacey of assault allegedly exposed himself to a female subordinate. dreyfus denies the allegation.
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>>. >> meanwhile louis c.k. says allegations of sexual misconduct made by five women is true. fx is cutting ties with the comedian. he will step back from the spotlight and reflect on his behavior. tony dokoupil is here with more wide allegations of abuse. good morning. >> good morning. in a statement louis c.k. confessed to masturbating in front of women and exposing himself. hbo said it's cutting c.k. out of an up coming program and service. >> it's a problem. i'm trying to find a place in my house where i can masturbate without anybody bothering me. >> for years he joked about it.
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but for the two women it was no laughing matter when he got naked and masturbated in front of them in 2002. >> louie c.k. is one of the biggest names in comedy and even when it happened years ago he was a prominent comedian, so they weren't sure if they could speak out or say anything. >> in a statement c.k. said in part, these stories are true. the power i had over these women is they admired me and i wielded that power irresponsibly. he added there's nothing about this that i forgive myself for and i have to reconcile it with i am which is nothing compared to what i left them with. fx ended its relationship with c.k. who was an executive producer on four shows. fx said it will not produce a second standup show with the comedian. on saturday there were more allegations.
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actor ellen page accused rattner of outing her when she was 18 stores. soccer star hope solo said sexual harassment permeates the sports world. she said she was groped by sepp blatter before an awards ceremony. >> it was one year right before i was to go on stage. yeah. i mean it's -- it's been normalized. >> and writer ben ryan told rolling stone news he was offered work for sex. wehner said in a statement i met him 12 years ago. i attempted to have a sexual liaison with him. he turned me down, which i respected. also "top gun" and "e.r."
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actor thoenl actor anthony said he was. all these men have denied wrongdoing. alex. >> wow. to go back to louis c.k. for a minute, that statement is different that many of the other statements. >> he's being krit sighted for not apologizing but he showed a knowledge of the issue where others have not. >> and he's owned up to it. it's all true, he said. it's a bitter cold start to the weekend for much of those in the northeastern states. drive had to deal with ice-covered roads in syracuse, new york, on friday. freeze warning ares are up and chicago got a good taste of winter with the city's first snow of the season and windch l windchills below zero. let's get more on the weather from meteorologist ed curran from our chicago station
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wbbm-tv. good morning. >> good morning. the cold is moving to the east. we issue these when it's earl in the season for a freeze warning. in the mid-atlantic states we see that and up to the north as well, but the cold air has come pouring in and bringing very, very cold temperatures to the northeast this morning. some of the temps that we're seeing in the northeast will set new records for today. 18 degrees at albany. 13 at syracuse. 14 at state collusion. 18 degrees at pittsburgh. factor in the wind and you get windchills in the single digits in some areas. today our high temperatures in the northeast will come in at 37 in new york, 37 at portland. but by midweek, a real improvement. up to the 50s as you can see. alex, there is a light at the end of this temperature top. >> i hope so. i'm not ready for the single digits, ed. meteorologist ed curran of our chicago station wbbm-tv.
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thanks, ed. police in providence rhode island say their decision to use deadly force was justified when they pursued a subject. highway surveillance video and body camera video appeared to show the pickup driver using his vehicle as a weapon by intentionally ramming it into others'c cars sass as he tried o elude the police. >> we believe the footage shows the acts of the officers doing exactly what we would want them to do in stopping an imminent and significant threat at that moment. >> his driver was kill and passenger seriously injured after the state police and officers fired off 40 rounds. police did not say why he was fleeing, although, he had two outstanding warrants. a man live streamed a chase on facebook from a stolen pickup
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truck. he sped across highways, neighborhoods, and farm fields on friday while providing an occasional narration. >> i'm in a high-speed chase, bro. you've got to pull over. let me grab my luggage. i'm going to need an attorney for real. >> police democrat not shoot at him. they stun gunned him after he rammed his truck into a pond. lebanon's prime minister is revealing a potentially new flashpoint in middle east tensions. the prime minister stepped down in what was first thought of as a routine visit in arabia. the saudis claim they were protecting him from an assassination plot. in a statement this morning the white house expressed support for the prime minister and asked other countries to respect
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lebanese serenity. an air traffic controller and another man have been arr t arrested for a weapon of mass destruction. police say derek fells made the homemade pipe bomb in 40e7s of settling a score with a neighbor. he then changed his mind and handed it off to an employee of the airport. authorities say the weapon was never brought to the airport. the "detroit free press" says the university of michigan is the latest to take action on fraternity life by suspending the fraternity life of 27 fraternities on campus. it follows reports of sexual assaults and hazing incidents at several frat parties which sent hundreds of students to the hospital last month. they're continuing to investigate all allegations and says student safety is its top priority. "the wall street journal"
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says hasbro may be making a move to buy mattel, its rival toy maker. it 'eers currently valued at $11 billion made a takeover offer to mattel. the deal would put barbie and g.i. joe under the same roof. dating plans there. they're declining to comment. mike tyson was denied entry to chile and pout back on a plane to the u.s. his conviction for a 1992 rape conviction led to his denial. they tweeted a photo of tyson being escorted through the airport. tyson was headed to a film awards ceremony in santiago, the capital. not a good day for tyson.
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the war on drugs is more than a tag line in the philippines. thousands are dead as a result of that nice's controversial president pursuing a campaign pledge to root out illegal drug use. we will look at that situation on the've of president trump's visit zwroonld an extraordinary face-to-face meeting that's a life-changer for two people. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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it's green thumb therapy for the wounds of war. still ahead on this veterans day how they're helping soldiers heal from the traumas of the battlefield. we el be right back. this is "cbs this morning: saturday."
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good morning, everyone i'm jan carabao. philadelphia police are investigating a shooting involving one of their own officers, police responded to reports of a domestic dispute, earlier this morning, on the 1200 block of south 29th street in grays ferry. investigators say a man was wielding a knife there and an officer ended up shooting him in the chest that man is now in critical condition, and a woman in the home at the time of the shooting has no reported injuries. now to the eyewitness weather forecast with meteorologist chelsea ingram it is cold. >> super cold one this morning lets show you temperatures across the region. we are checking in with numbers in the 20's and even some teens out there, 19 in allentown, 15 in mount pocono, 24 in philadelphia, not a railroaded low but we did see record lows in wilmington,
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also in trenton, and in atlantic city we tied record low originally setback in 1973 the wind chill making it feel colder feels more like 13 in philadelphia, 19 in millville today look for a high of 41. mix of sun and included and feeling like january. back to you. >> chelsea, thank you. our next update 7:57. see you then. have a great day.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning: saturday." coming up this hour, the cures that could one day save our lives may already be inside us. we'll look at how the power in our own cells is being harnessed to battle deadly disease. plus, last week's mass shooting in a texas church came on the heels of the massacre in las vegas. these horrible crimes are, in fact, more common than we think and more deadly. ahead, we'll look at the theory that mass shootings may actually be contagious. that's ahead. but we begin this half hour with a controversial meeting between president trump and philippine president rogge rego duterte. it comes as he continues to cultivate a violent image.
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>> on friday he told an audience he committed murder at age 16. he's following through his campaign promise to purge the philippines of illegal drug use. it's a pledge that's come with a price of thousands of lives lost as kylie atkins reports from manila. >> reporter: it's almost 3:00 in the morning in the philippines and we're seeing duerr ter tay's response. police are responding to the murder of a drug user and we're going to go see the scene. >> when there's something happen here, you stay here. >> reporter: they're waiting here to see who died. >> yeah. >> reporter: who was killed. we're told that there's one person who was killed and that he was killed by policemen. the man was an alleged drug user. they say they shot him in
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self-defense. it was one of nine killings across manila friday night. a new reality since due ter tay's election. a plan to rid the country of drugs. former police officers say when he was mayor he paid death squads to kill sellers and users. they say this murder practice continues. [ speaking foreign language ] >> reporter: we didn't know it but he came to the interview with a gun in his satchel. what's in your bag? it's engraved "the enforcer." for every murder with that gun, the police pay him and his
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partner $400. >> so it's the government paying you? >> yes, ma'am. >> from due ter tay. >> the philippines recently experienced the bloodiest period in its war on drugs. 58 dead in three days this summer but crime was down in duterte's year. >> there's less crime in the philippines. this i is thing. >> reporter: despite due ter tay's public comment he said police hired a rule of law and they're not hiring hit men people in the communities say there are rogue hit men who are killing drug users and they're backed by the police. what do you say about that?
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>> these are all allegations. we have to prove that. we are conducting multiple investigation when there is a death. >> are the hit men, are they lying when they say they're backed by the police? >> we don't employ. we do not use >> do you think it's working? >> we lessen the demand. have we accomplished our target, yes, we did. >> reporter: we embedded with the quezon policing outside manila going house to house rounding up drug users. fearful faces lined the streets
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as the police shuffled through. on the third stop a child cried as the police took away her father for drug testing. this is how far duterte's drug war reaches. the man had not been caught with drugs. he was on a list of suspected users created by local leaders. minutes later the police announced the roundup was dub. it appears it was cut short because they didn't want us to see the turmoil that was caused by their raids. you said we were going to 20 houses. we didn't finish the -- i didn't see you go to any house except three. i don't want you to cut this short because we're with you and it seems that that's what you're doing. >> we have so many houses. it's already -- >> reporter: you told me 20 houses. we went to three or four.
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we didn't go to the whole list, his whole list. you see? when does this end? >> we want to have it by having no demand and no supply in the country. that's 100%. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning: saturday" kylie atwood, manila. >> shocking. >> especially when they're put on a list without any real accusations. >> shocking. today is the 11th day of the 11th month, the traditional observance of veterans day. later we'll visit chicago where peace and tranquility of a
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at a church in texas, some say massacres are spreading like a disease. we'll explain why each shooting makes the next one more likely. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." ou doing? watching this breath savers protect mint neutralize the plaque acids in my mouth. i can't see anything! that's because it's working so hard. hey, what are you guys doing? karen. we're neutralizing. maybe i want to neutralize. you ever think of that? (honking) (beeping) we're on to you, diabetes. time's up, insufficient prenatal care. and administrative paperwork, your days of drowning people
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the massacre of 26 people in a texas church last sunday is just the latest in a recent series of mass shootings. of the five deadliest shootings in modern u.s. history, three have taken place in the last two years and two in just the last two months. >> it has some suggesting that mass killings can actually catch on like an epidemic.
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the theory is examined in an online article in the "atlantic." we're joined by senior editor derek thompson. good to see you as always. >> good morning. >> talk about where there's a new approach to look at mass killings almost like diseases. >> it's really interesting. you look at all the killings in orlando and las vegas and texas and as you said there does seem to be people who are watching the news seem to feel like is this accelerating. and, indeed, there's research that suggests it is. there's a 2015 paper that says mass diseases or these mass shootings can spread like diseases through the vector of mass media. typically diseases spread between two vegs but these spread through mass media. you have certain men throughout the country who tend to be men who have an itch who are susceptible to this grandizement. they're frustrated and they see this example on the news and
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they say i can do the same thing and reach the same level of man. >> affect. that's a very strong word. >> you can think of it as infectious or copycat effect. because it's spread through broadcast, it may be spread in the same way as sue said has been shown to have a broad aspect. you could have a spate that clusters around that. all sorts of health behaviors. they show both positive and negative health behaviors can cluster like diseases. so i think we're just beginning to learn all sorts of behaviors, positive and negative can have a contagion effect. it's important for the media to study it. we need to know how to report these events so we don't create the clusters aspects itself. as far as mass killings, it's men of a certain type.
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you talk about men who have grandiose aspirations and harbor petty grievances. talk to us about that. >> any time this happen it's always a loner, someone who wasn't well known, someone who's wrapped up in the social fabric. most diseases are because you're wrapped up. you're close to people who are sick and that's what infects you. the reason this sort of disease is so interesting is because it spreads through broadcasts, it can find people who are alone, who are less likely to be infected by any literal virus that may be more likely to be infected by a virus of this sort of self-agrand diezment that says you're out there, you're frustrated, you're sad, he's a possible way to be grandiose. >> there's an interesting point you also make, that there's actually no significant association between the rate of mass shootings and the prevalence of mental illness in
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the state. >> that's right. i do think mental illness is a bit of a canard here. there's a lot of research here that says very simply where there are more guns, there are more gun deaths. they don't include done deaths or homicides. they include child firearm deaths. the u.s. has 5% of the industrial world's children and 5% of the accidental death involving children. the explanation is not that our children are 15 times more mentally unhealthy. it's simply that they're surrounded by weapons they don't know how to use. >> this is going to prompt a very serious debate about guns as it always does but also the ways in which we study the contagion of mass shooting. derek thompson, thanks for your time. >> thank you. the medical future may be in our hands. in fact, it may be inside of us. ahead. dr. max gomez with the
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in this week's "morning rounds," a look at medicine including therapy that includes the use of our living cells. they're the focus of our new book "cells are the new cure." >> we're joined by our medical correspondent from our cbs station dr. max gomez. good morning. >> good morning. >> let's start with stem cells. people have a passing familiarity with them but most folks don't know there are many kinds. >> the first is embryonic stem cells and they have moral baggage. usually in order to use them you've got to destroy an embryo. that's the problem people have
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with that, of course. plus we've got adult stem cells. every tissue o our body, brain, heart, muscle. even fat. >> that's good to know, something useful for fat. >> that's right. there are cells you can take from adults' skin that you can turn into things that look like imbrie onic stem cells. you don't need to go to embryonic to do something with embryonic stem cells. >> the other is gene therapy and you talk about crispr. what is that? >> it's a much more accurate and efficient way of editing dna, the genome. if you've got a mutation, a bad gene in there, you can go in, snip that out, an then insert the right cop -- a corrected gene if you will. the problem, of course, is you don't know exactly what that's going to do. genes often have a lot of different effects and you can
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get different effects that are unintended. >> and that raise as host of ethical concerns too. once that gene is edited, it's passed on through the generations. >> right. if you do that in what we call germ sell lines meaning eggs or sperm, those are passed on. now it's a permanent change. >> for the human race. >> for the human race. where everybody from that particular person has that problem. you can get these what we call off-target effects. the genes have not just one effect but multiple or you edited genes you didn't need to edit. you're not really sure. so there's a lot of potential problems with that. of course, there's the issue of gene editing issue like we want a baby with blue eyes and blond hair. we don't know how to do that yet but that's potentially how it works. >> just last month they approved a gene cell therapy.
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how big a deal is that? >> it's huge. it's the "c" word doctors don't like to use for a couple of cancers. you take car t-cells. you take your own ill mun cells do a little genetic manipulation and put those back in. now these immune cells know how to recognize the cancer cells and they go after the cancer cells and kill them off. >> immunotherapy seems to be at the forefront. we're at the tip of the iceberg, right? >> absolutely. immunotherapy is the hottest form now. it's all using your own cells we can use drugs to take the brakes off the system, use drugs to remove the cloak of harry potter off thome. we can use thome to manipulate and go after cancer cells.
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it's excited. >> the book is "cells are the new cure." thanks for being with us. >> thanks, doc. she was able to touch her late husband's face one more time through the miracle of modern medicine. up next, the rarest of gifts and a new life made possible through a rare transplant. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." part of your everyday routines with roomba from irobot. just press clean and roomba gets to work. roomba uses a patented dirt detect™ system that attacks dirt in high-traffic areas of your home. while two multi-surface brushes and power-lifting suction grab and remove everything from fine dust to large debris. daily dirt doesn't stand a chance. you and roomba from irobot.
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arranged this meeting between lily ross. ross's late husband rudy was the perfect match. >> he suffered a gun injury destroying most of his facial features. he said he's now able to return to everyday activities. >> you can stand in the elevator and not have to hide your face because you're scared of scaring other people. now u i'm able to sit down in restaurants and just -- it's been unbelievable. >> ross says she now sees him as a part of her family. >> that is unbelievable. >> it's just an incredible story. >> it's unbelievable. >> and he looks remarkably good. >> yeah. his life has been given back to him. >> it really has been. still ahead, seeing green. after the break we'll take you to these fields the washington state. aren't they lovely? which if you like beer -- >> who likes beer?
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>> i don't know of nechblt people like it a lot. a good morning, everyone i'm jan carabao. thousands of runners are now, channeling their inner rocky balboa as bitterly cold weather hits our region this morning. they are all bundled up, the annual rocky run, the starting line and the finish line are in front of the art museum, with the root taking them along martin luther king drive and back this year money goes to special olympics philadelphia. and now to the eyewitness wet forecast with meteorologist chelsea in gram, hi there, chelsea. >> lets start with the kutztown area where we have a, chilly, 21 degrees out there, of course, it feels even cooler when you factor in the winds. wind chill values for most areas are in the teens, we're 25 degrees right now in philadelphia, 25 in trenton,
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24 in allentown, it is 17 degrees currently in mount pocono to day it is going to feel more like january out there with a high of 41, very cold with the mixture of sun and included, we will see those numbers moderating as we head into sunday a high of 50 and mid 50 ease as we head in the middle of the upcoming week, jan. >> get through today, thanks, chelsea in. 7:58. our next update 8:27. 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 mason. coming up this hour the so-called weinstein effect continues to spread. more and more women and men coming forward about sexual assault and sexual harassment. we'll explain explore why this moment in time may be a tipping point. and then planting seeds of hope. this veterans day we'll show you how an act as simple as gardening is helping soldiers heal from the aftereffects. and we'll talk with her about her new album, her daughter following in her
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footsteps and she'll perform in our "saturday sessions." vladimir putin has again denied to president trump russia didn't interfere in the u.s. presidential election last year. mr. trump is in hanoi, vietnam this morning. he and mr. putin spoke earlier at the summit meeting in da nang. the white house says the two leaders will not hold a formal joint meeting in vietnam. roy moore, the republican senate candidate in alabama is denying accusations he made sexual advances to four young women decades ago. one of the women was 14 at the time in 1979. all four have confirmed their stories to cbs news. >> moore is refusing to drop out of the race. >> these allegations are completely false and misleading. i believe they're pliolitically motivated, i believe they're being brought to stop a
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successful campaign, and that's what they're doing. >> one of the gymnasts saying she is a victim of sexual abuse. ali raisman said she was abused by the u.s. team doctor larry nassar. >> he's in jail after pleading guilty to possessing child importantography but not guilty to sexual assault charges. raisman shared her story with dr. jon lapook for "60 minutes." >> you don't want to let yourself believe i am a victim of serksual abuse. that's really not an easy thing to let yourself believe that. >> you're saying you were sexually abused. >> yes, absolutely. >> by the national team doctor. >> yes. >> while you were out there representing your country. >> yes. >> reporter: few athletes have represented their country with as much distinction as ali
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raisman. the doctor she say ace boused her, dr. larry nassar, worked women thewomen's national gymnastics team at university of michigan for more than two decades. she was abused at 15 years old. now at 23 she talks about her experience in a new book called "fierce." it's the story of a dream of a girl getting to the olympics. she will not discuss in detail what he did to her but she provides new insight of the scandal that goes to the highest level of her sport. she tells us a lot of people ask why adidn't the girls speak up sooner. >> why not look at the culture. what did uusa gymnastics and larry nassar do that the girls didn't speak up? you're angry.
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>> i amount angry. i've been upset. i see these young girls that come up and ask for pictures and autographs. i want to create change so they never, ever have to go through this. >> you can see all of dr. jon lapook's interview with alley raisman tomorrow night on "60 minutes." soccer star hope solo said sepp blatter assaulted her four years ago. she said he grabbed her inappropriately before she appeared on stage at an convenient. she had nothing further to say. blatter could not be reached for comment. comedian louie c.k. is acknowledged the allegations of sexual misconduct against him in a different way. in a statement friday referencing the five women he said, quote, these stories are true. the power i had over these women is that they admired me and i wielded that power irresponsibly.
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following his admission, the fx network announced it was cutting their ties with the comedian yachblt netflix canceled his comedy special. they're among a growing list. the flood of accusations has opened up a national discussion on sexual harassment and sexual assault. for more on these developments, we're joined by dr. gayle saltz. she's a clinical professor of psychiatry at new york presbyterian hospital. good morning. >> good morning. >> gayle, we've seen a shift of sexual harassment and assault. what do we make of it? >> i think people have downs it's about power. powerful people, mostly men but women going after young victims
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who are in junior positions who cannot necessarily say something about it. and this is about humiliation and shame and people have stayed quiet bates is humiliating. that's the point of it. it is to make the person feel shamed and even potentially guilty as if maybe did i do something here, which is why it's so difficult to speak out, why it's taken years for often women to say something and why it's taken a crowd to break the ice to make this a watershed moment to not feel alone. oh, usually victims feel very alone. if you don't feel alone, you feel like maybe i can say something now. >> when you talk about shame, is there not some shame thal the predators themselves feel? when you look at louis c.k. and harvey weinstein allegations, there seems to be almost self-loathing bank in some of those instances. >> you know, there may be insecurity behind, which, you know, connotes a sort of
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narcissism. i'm insecure and the only way i can feel more powerful, which i need to feel, is to expert this upon someone else, to humiliate and shame them to make them less than me, to push them down, to control them, to prove that i am the most powerful to myself. and so psychologically that may be what's going on. whether these people have any insight into what they did and why they did that and therefore feel any personal shame, you know, i don't know. sometimes people have soes on pathieu involved with this and they really don't have empathy for others, truly. that's like a chip missing, and they truly feel the most important thing is gratifying themselves and feeling that they're the most powerful. >> to your pointing about power, gayle, the actress, brit marling, and she's a director as well wrote a piece in the "atlantic" said the root of it is economic that creates a power of disparity that allows this
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power to occur. do you agree with that? >> i do. i think if we had many more women in power, i'm not saying this could be gone because women can do this to women, men to men, but since the predominance is men doing it to women and predominantly men are in power, i do think if there were a more equal playing field, you would see less of this, but it wouldn't be gone. i think people need to understand this is not men versus women. this is powerful people taking advantage of and harassing younger junior people. this is sort of bullying on steroids if you will and that is a phenomenon of human nature to sometimes be sadistic, to sometimes take, and in this case unfortunately erotic pleasure in being sadistic and cruel and suppressing someone else. that's a piece of what's going on. it's not sex per se, but they may get a charge out of it from
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that vantage point. >> do you worry about a backlash given the number of allegations? >> i am hearing from some saying, hey, if this is about men, maybe i can't hire women or i can't be aileen in the office with a woman. frankly that ooh s a defensive copout. something in the system needs to change. we need to have reporting systems that are different. parents need to educate sons and daughters about this issue and to say, well, defensively, e eemg another going to hire women will only make the problem worse. we need to change the system and the education coming up. >>
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from the battlefields to the fields of green. on this veterans day, we'll see how working in a botanical garden has been helping wounded warriors heal. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." but their nutritional needs (vremain instinctual.d, that's why there's purina one true instinct. nutrient-dense, protein-rich, real meat number one. this is a different breed of natural nutrition. purina one, true instinct.
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they say being in nature is good for the soul, and oh, it is. on this veterans day in the chicago area some vets are proving it is true. they're benefiting from a you neeks program inside a botanical garden where tending to plantings also helps them tend to the lingering wounds of war.
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adriana diaz has the story. >> reporter: the chicago botanical garden has a new crop of likely green thumbs. >> i thought, what am i getting myself into. i'm a military guy. >> reporter: veterans like steve joseph was skeptical when he was told he could get paid to learn about flowers. >> i thought, what is this botanical garden about. i came to the gate and wow. >> reporter: what took his breath away wasn't the beauty but the effect on his ptsd, something called horticultural therapy. joseph was deployed five times and saw dozens of friends die. >> i relive those instances in my head every day, so the garden kind of puts out in peace when i walk through the front gate. it really puts my mind at ease. it takes away the darkless.
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i used to have migraines all the time and i'm down to one or two a month, and i think that's due in part to come and work in the garden. >> the air is different, the feeling is different. i don't have to be on guard here. >> reporter: he was in army setting up communications. he was homeless for the last decade. drugs and alcohol were his escape from what he called a military mentality of always being on alert. >> it's draining. to do that for years on end and not stop and have to drink to avoid that, i have to say i cut my drinking down tremendously since working here. >> reporter: it makes it difficult for some vets to hold jobs. nearly half a million are unemployed. the ones here learn new skills, attend readiness jobs and receive therapy from their
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surroundings in a way they can't quite explain it. >> i'm not sure how it works, but being around nature is very good for the soul. >> reporter: occupational therapist barb kresge says i nature's ability to heal is rooted in science. >> what's solid is spending time in nature decreases measures of stress, hard measures, not just i feel better. cortisol levels, heart rate, sweat. i don't care who you are. people respond to plants. >> reporter: kresge runs the program and says vets make the best interns. >> you do not serve a military term and come out a slacker, you just don't. >> have you seen them transform? >> yes, yes. >> it's like walking meditation. you can't help being happy here. >> reporter: they serve in different wars and fight different battles within themselves but these vets now say they all breathe a little
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easier. for "cbs this morning: saturday," adriana dias, chicago. >> reporter: growing things is good for the soul. my dearly departed dad always said that and that is so true. >> i don't care who you are but people respond to plants. speaking of the power of plants, hops. they put a spring in the step of craft beers but did you know 75% of beer get their hops from a special l single location. it's special and it's a mecca for beer lovers everywhere. >> announcer: sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ♪
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hi, i need your help. i've been trying to find a knee specialist... but nobody has an opening for months! you can't always control your feelings... oh, i found one in-network next tuesday. but unitedhealthcare can help you control your care. thanks, stephanie. unitedhealthcare the craft beer movement in this country has been powered by hops. the flower that gives beers like pale ales give beers their
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delicious flavor. they produce over 12% but they consume a staggering 40% of domestically grown hops, about three-quarters of which come from the yakima valley of washington state. >> the desert has high hours of sunshine and low water and perfect conditions for growing. that's where they go every september to personally search for their hops. dana jacobson joins them. >> reporter: this is the mecca of hops, the yakima valley in washington state, home to hops farms as far as the eyes can see. each fall it's the destination of choice for legions of craft brewers who make their pilgrimage not for the sights but for the sense. like sierra nevada founder ken grossman and a team who we
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watched selecting some of this year's crop. >> we're selecting over 50 varieties. >> she has a degree masters in . >> we smelled them and they w e werwere markedly different. >> it had to be different. >> it is. >> reporter: when he first came to yakima, grossman said it was pretty much a one-hop town. >> what changed? >> we started focusing on a hop. actually the hop behind us is called cascade in our pale ale in 1980. >> they began to tap in on the potential of other varieties. >> there are literally thousands of different varieties of hop. they'll grow to 18 feet tall. >> farmers like him are growing
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their crops to meet their demand. >> we've tripled the crops in five years. >> reporter: cls seasonal the only farm. >> would you say it helped save some of the farms? >> oh, sure. it's a more vibrant and healthier industry now with more players and more farmers. >> reporter: it's a far cry from the industry that's fourth generation hops farmer chose to enter in taking on the family business. was it something that your family wanted you do be in in. >> the hop industry in the 90s when i graduated from college was kind of in a 40-year secular decline, and so i think they would have preferred if i would have did something else, but i didn't quite let them have that option. i kind of nosed right in there. >> what we're really after is that yellow substance, and its term is called loopland. we like to get a little heat in
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that. smell that? >> oh, wow. >> and so every variety has a unique aroma to it. and so some are -- express themselves as pine. some express themselves as citrus. >> and that's my flavor that i may taste because it goes in at the end of the beer. >> right, exactly. >> reporter: we caught up with him during the business fall harvest. in that time the farm is in production 24 hours a day, seven days a week. >> 15 years ago, you would never see a brewer -- we would never have a visitor. >> you'd call in an order. >> yeah. that's dramatically changed in six years. >> now these brewers like adam schmidt in michigan make the trip. >> for us im's imperative we come out here. >> why? >> we need to match the hops that are on the vine right now and coming down. >> so my founders always tastes like my founders. >> exactly. >> reporter: it's not all
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business thanks to a month-long party. it's a chance for brewers and farmers to share the fruits of their labor and talk shop. >> getting down to business during the day, doing hop selection, checking out farms. then at night, we're all going and hanging out together and seeing what new things we're coming up with. not everybody was interacting with the farmers and getting know the people that were growing their ingredients, but they still felt the connection with the hops and that's kind of where everything grew. it's like, well, we're putting these in our beer, so we need to come out and see what's going on and meet these people. >> the draw mat iks growth and demand for hops the farms have seen over the decade has slowed down a little bit. >> there's nothing do with hops but make beer. when there's too many hops the price crashes very quickly, which is effective because it sends the message to stop producing. >> but he says there are
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indications the craft beer phenomenal will go global. >> we see four or five years of a little bit of ruggedness. in the market there appears to be a nice runway for a couple of years. >> so yakima, washington, in yakima valley will be at the center of it all. >> yes, absolutely. this will continue to be the dominant growing rooegs. >> for "cbs this morning" morning saturday, dana jacobson, washington. >> thank you, hops, for making my beer so delicious. >> that's the job i wish i had. >> the beer beat. >> i'll sign up for that. from harvard to the hot stove. she went from a consultant to being one of the most admired bakers. but it doesn't stop there. we'll show you some of the chef's savory concoctions next. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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good morning, i'm jan carabao. and investigation is now underway into the death of a pedestrian in burlington county. police rushed to pemberton bypass and shady lane in pemberton late last night, the victim was pronounced dead at that scene, police say driver stayed at the scene. and now to the eyewitness weather forecast with meteorologist chelsea ingram, hi there. >> even at this hour we are still checking in with temperatures in the 20's, just look at these numbers, 25 degrees right now in philadelphia, it is 27 in millville, 25 in wilmington, 24 in allentown couple spots even broke some record low temperatures. places like trenton, wilmington, atlantic city tied their railroaded low but feels colder when you factor in the
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win. feels more like teens and in the poconos feels like single digits, 4 degrees there but feels like 15 degrees outside your door this morning in philadelphia. we will make it to 41 degrees today, feeling like january even as we head in the afternoon, and temperatures will moderate as we head in the upcoming week. back to you. >> looks good, thanks chelsea. our next update 8:57. see you then. have a great day.
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chef joann chen. she graduated from harvard, not bad, and became a management consultant before pursuing a career in food. in 2000 she opened boston's flour in several locations winning the james beard award for outstanding baker. myers & chang kwds wrote their
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fourth cookbook. welcome to the table. >> good morning. >> tell us about it. >> i brought some homemade fortune cookies. these are our waffles. dumplings. an indonesian fried rice and at the end is our haka eggplant, my dad's favorite eggplant. >> what's that? >> sticky buns made at flour bacary. >> they look so good but so far away. and our beverage? >> this is our blood lest. >> i love it. cheers. >> okay. let's start with the obvious. how do you go from applied mathematics and economics to baking? >> what happened is i was working for a management consultant for a few years and one of my projects was to do undergraduate recruiting and i would interview kids, seniors who are applying for jobs with our company and i wanted to relax them during the interview
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process so i started off every interview the same. i asked them if you won the lottery, what would you do with your winnings. it always broke the ice. i'd hear skydiving. i asked myself after 200 interviews what would i do. i love cooking and baking. i got myself a job into a kitchen. >> you typed out resumes and sent them to chefs. >> i did. i sent them resumes. the very next day lydia sure, one of the top chefs in boston called me and said come in for an interview. i interview and two weeks later i was trading my business suit for chefs coat and clogs and chopping scallions. >> where did it come from? you didn't grow up in a house with a lot of desserts. >> i didn't. >> baking didn't go beyond tollhouse cookies. >> i grew up in a traditional
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taiwanese household which meant no desserts. it meant occasional oranges. i still love fruit but i didn't have an idea about pastries and except for my mom did like dhokt chip cookies and we would bake the tollhouse chocolate chip cookies. that's one of things i would sell at harvard. i made cookies for the dormitory gri grille and that led to my baking passion. >> where did flour come from? >> i wanted to create a bakery, home away from home. do you remember "cheers?" >> where everybody knows your name. >> that's why i wanted to create a place like that. >> do you think the precision of baking is a through line between that and mathematics and engineering? >> totally. i think the who process of going
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through the problem and having these disparate things and coming up with it is a lot like baking. you put it all together and make this beautiful sticky bun or homemade fortune cookie. >> i love the sticky bun. >> i love that. maybe it's just me. chef, as i ask you to sign this dish as is custom. >> i'd love to. >> if you could share this delicious bounty with any figure past or present, who would it be? >> i'm going to go with honestly my patients and my husband. they are the people who've made my life. i'm so fortunate i have the best life ever and it's because of my husband and my parents. they're so wonderful. >> right on. chef joann change. ing
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up next, singer/songwriter tori amos. she's captivated us for decades. we'll catch up with torey about life, family, and how her message is more relevant than ever. she'll perform right here in our saturd"saturday sessions." you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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this morning in our "saturday sessions," singer/songwriter tori amos, one of the most influential women in music, she scored four platinum albums in the 1990s and vh1 included her on its list of 100 greatest women in rock and roll. >> she's just release heard 15th album "native invader." we'll hear a new single along with a classic from her album in just a moment. but first i caught up with tori at the gibson guitar store here in new york. >> reporter: a classically trained musician, tori amos began to study piano at age 5. music came naturally to her, but songs, she said, sometimes come from another world entirely. >> it's not as if i hear voices,
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but i call them the muses. all of a sudden i am getting full structure, and i have not thought of this before. >> oh, wow. >> it is being plugged in almost like i take a plug, plug it in, and all of a sudden, i'm get tig it. just there. it ooh's seven-minute song. >> obviously you don't know when the songs are going to come. >> exclusively when it's inconvenient. driving. >> what do you do in. >> roll my eyes. pull over. >> and -- >> scribble wherever i can, sing it into a phone, do whatever it takes because it's fleeting. >> how do you feel when this is happening? >> that i know something exists that's not just from humans. i
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>> you've experienced this enough to know so when it does happen. ♪ i'm still >> reporter: not all songs arrive so easily. in 1992 on her debut album "little earthquakes," amos included "me and a gun." ♪ me and a gun >> reporter: about being raped in los angeles when she was 21. where did you find the courage to write that song? >> i saw "thelma & liouise," an i think i saw it 15 times and it began to come from very deep within. >> reporter: in the aftermath of the harvey weinstein scandal, she understands the "me too" movement. >> there's a grief process that is occurring. first it's ripping that scab off
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the wound that maybe healed up for years and years and the silence -- you just keep pushing it down until you're silent and you can't find the voice. you can't even voice it because you've pushed it down and pushed it down. >> and closed all those doors that that's right. in order to maintain. >> yeah. >> that's why this moment in time, will we look back in ten years and say that's when people said enough. >> reporter: amos has a fellow songwriter in her family now, her 17-year-old daughter tash who sings with her on the new album "native invader." it must be thrilling. >> for me it is. >> it must be fabulous to see a twist of yourself in a way.
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>> i sing like a fairy on crack, it's true, and she sings like a british soul singer and you think, okay. >> something happened here. >> yeah. something happened. not from my side of the family. >> now performs from her new album "native invaders" here's tori amos with "cloud riders." ♪ ♪ standing on the edge of the cliff didn't think it would come to this ♪ ♪ a dead calm before the storm not a sound from their engines ♪ ♪ from the other side saw a shooting star at 4:22 a.m. ♪
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♪ underneath the stars above i said, no, stop i am not giving up on us ♪ ♪ and i am not going anywhere soon annie, grab your bass guitar help me bring in the october moon ♪ ♪ then you shout, "run for cover" i scream "rev the triumph's engine" ♪ ♪ you say "baby we're too late
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from the cloud riders, no escape" ♪ ♪ darling, what's the blanket for riding out this storm we'll be riding out this storm ♪ ♪ ♪ carved a stave against the grain at the nine doors to gain ♪ ♪ the secrets of trees once i could hear them singing from the other side ♪ ♪ your life ♪ ♪ underneath the stars above i said, no, stop i am not giving up on us" ♪
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♪ i am not going anywhere soon annie, grab your bass guitar help me bring in the october moon ♪ ♪ then you shout, "run for cover" i scream "rev the triumph's engine" ♪ ♪ you say "baby we're too late from the cloud riders, there's no escape" ♪ ♪ darling, what's the blanket for s riding out this storm we'll be riding out this storm ♪ ♪
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don't go away. tori amos will return to play her classic, "silent all these years." next. 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. type 2 diabetes.here to test people's knowledge about so you have type 2 diabetes? yes i do. true or false... type 2 diabetes more than doubles your chance of dying from a cardiovascular event, like a heart attack or a stroke. that can't be true, can it? actually, it is true. and with heart disease, your risk is even higher. in fact, cardiovascular disease is the #1 cause of death for
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have a great weekend. we leave you with more music from tori amos. >> this is a classic, "silent all these years." ♪ ♪ excuse me but can i be you for a while ♪ ♪ my dog won't bite if you sit real still ♪ ♪ i got the antichrist in the kitchen yellin' at me again yeah, i can hear that ♪ ♪ but saved again by the garbage truck i got something to say
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you know, but nothing comes ♪ ♪ yes, i know what you think of me you never shut up yeah, i can hear that ♪ ♪ but what if i'm a mermaid in these jeans of his with her name still on it ♪ ♪ hey, but i don't care 'cause sometimes i said sometimes i hear my voice and it's been here silent all these years ♪ ♪ ♪ so you found a girl who thinks really deep thoughts what's so amazing about really deep thoughts ♪ ♪ boy, you best pray that i
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bleed real soon how's that thought for you ♪ ♪ my scream got lost in a paper cup you think there's a heaven where some screams have gone ♪ ♪ i got twenty-five bucks and a cracker do you think it's enough to get us there ♪ ♪ 'cause what if i'm a mermaid in these jeans of his with her name still on it ♪ ♪ hey, but i don't care 'cause sometimes i said sometimes i hear my voice and it's been here silent all these ♪ ♪ years go by will i still be waiting for somebody else to understand ♪ ♪ years go by if i'm stripped, stripped of my
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beauty and the orange clouds raining in my head ♪ ♪ years go by, will i choke till finally there's nothing left ♪ ♪ one more casualty you know we're too easy easy, easy ♪ ♪ well, i love the way we communicate your eyes focus on my funny lip shape ♪ ♪ let's hear what you think of me now but, baby, don't look up the sky is falling ♪ ♪ your mother shows up in a nasty dress it's your turn now to stand where i stand ♪ ♪ everybody lookin' at you here take hold of my hand yeah, i can hear them ♪ ♪ but what if i'm a mermaid
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in these jeans of yores with her name still on it ♪ ♪ hey, but i don't care 'cause sometimes i said sometimes i hear my voice ♪ ♪ i hear my voice i hear my voice and it's been here ♪ ♪ silent all these years ♪ i've been here silent all these years ♪ ♪ silent all these dl sileg silent all these years ♪
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good morning, i'm jan carabao. this is veterans day, a time to honor all of the men and women who have served our country and we do thank you for your services this morning philadelphia mayor jim kenney will attend a veterans day observance at the tomb of the unknown revolutionary war solder in washington square, and this ceremony begins at 10:00 this morning. you better bundle up. here's meteorologist chelsea ingram with the eyewitness weather forecast, hi, chelsea. >> lets start live with a live look at kutztown area where you have to bundle up there as well, 25 degrees there we broke record low temperatures this morning, in atlantic city new record low of 21, trenton 21. wilmington a new record low temperature right around 20 degrees. we also had a record low
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temperature in allentown of 18 we are checking in the 20's right now, 29 in philadelphia. twenty-seven in allentown. twenty-nine in trenton. of course it feels more like teens when you factor in the wind chill. forecast high of 41, it will feel like january but temperatures will moderate as we head into next week, jan. >> chelsea, thank you. that is it for eyewitness news this morning but you can always follow our web site at cbs philly.com. i'm jan carabao have a great
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narrator: today on lucky dog, a young german shepherd mix is scared of just about everything. brandon: they say she's extremely timid and she has been that way since day one. narrator: but if she can find her courage... brandon: nice, nice. good, good, look at that, perfect. narrator: she might just sail into her new future. [music - intrbrandon: 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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