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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  November 18, 2017 7:00am-9:01am EST

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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it's november 17th, 2017. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." doubling down on a double standard. the president's attacks on senator al franken's behavior are raising the question what about his own. plus, new questions swirl t son-in-law after more undisclosed contact with russia is uncovered. new claims of sexual misconduct against an nfl quarterback. details on the accusation from the uber driver. and for half a century, he ran "rolling stone" magazine and kept much of his backstory
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secret. we'll talk with the author of a once authorized biography so explosive that jann wenner has now disowned it. but we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> how is this different? >> senator franken has admitted wrongdoing, the president hasn't. >> president trump is under fire after franken's misconduct. >> is it a crime or not? >> roy moore's wife standing by her man. >> he will not step down. >> that's right. [ applause ] >> i certainly have no reason to disbelieve any of them. >> the governor of alabama who said i believe the women, i believe it's true, i'm going to vote for roy moore anyway. >> the president tweeting there will be no new body parts allowed here. announcements of his sons
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holding hunting trophies. >> is kislyak in the room? before i get started here. any russians? >> it took hundreds of firefighters in new york to put out an apartment fighter. >> a man got behind the wheel of a police car after being arrested. he crashed into a fence and ended up in the ditch. he got arrested again. >> all that -- >> danica patrick. >> i wasn't supposed to get emotional. >> -- and all that matters. >> he did not. he did not. the hard way. if you ever wonder what basketball root canal felt like, you now know. >> -- on "cbs this morning: saturday." >> you just celebrated your fifth year together as "cbs this morning," and you carry those
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guys, right? come on. they're not here. >> i'm glad somebody noticed. >> yes. and welcome to the weekend, everyone. i'm anthony mason along with alex wagner, and we begin this morning with a new page in the national dialogue on sexual misconduct from hollywood to the highest levels of government. president trump's comments on senator al franken's scandal have now brought back the dozen or so accusations about the president himself. >> that now has former presidential candidate hillary clinton blasting the double standard of president trump to roy moore. errol barnett has more. good morning. >> good morning. as they sweep the country targeting various men, president trump has reserved his tweets for one man in particular, a
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democrat in the senate, but that tactic has only drawn attention to reports of his own impropriety. >> look. i think this was covered pretty extensively during the campaign. >> the president's tweeted outrage of allegations of sexual harassment by democratic senator al franken led to questions about then candidate trump during the campaign. >> i think in one case in particular senator franken has admitted wrongdoing. the president has not. >> the president has set a double standard. >> there was a handwritten note allowed on friday for which he apologized for this photograph and behavior. >> look at how he apologized. >> hillary clinton's husband bill clinton was impeached after sexual harassment.
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the president did not reresponsibility this week to questions over another scandal rocking the state of alabama. the white house continues to refer to a statement issued last week saying the president believes republican candidate judge roy moore should step aside if the allegations prove to be true. >> what i plan to do is vote for the republican nominee, roy moore. >> alabama's republican governor on friday confirmed her support for judge moore, but said she believes the allegations against him from nine women, which rang% from unwanted advances to assault. >> there's never an excuse for or rationale for sexual misconduct or sexual abuse. it bothers me. >> the white house said it's up to the state of alabama to decide whether or not to delay the december 12th senate election. >> he will not step down. >> moore's wife kayla joined a group of female supporters on
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friday. >> to the people of alabama, thank you for being smarter than they think you are. >> the moore campaign brought out more than one tribute after another to pay tribute to his character. >> if moore is defeated, alabama is the victim. >> while polls show moore's support slipping his conservative christian base is fired up. that's important considering this is a special election in december on a tuesday. alex? >> errol barnett at the white house. thanks, errol. the sweeping and controversial tax plan clear yet another big hurdle when the senate finance committee approved the package on friday. it was a straight party line vote after 25 hours of debate and with plenty of sharp words. nancy cordes has the latest. >> this bull crap that you guys throw out here really gets thrown out after a while, to do
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it right at the end of this. >> tension had been building in the senate finance committee for four days. >> when the republicans are in power, the first thing they want to do is give tax cuts to the rich. that's in their dna. >> i really resent anybody saying i'm doing this for the rich. give me a break. >> they decided to have it out. >> with all due respect. >> regular order, mr. chairman. regular order. order! listen. i've honored you by allowing you to start off here. what you said was not right. that's not what i'm saying. i come from the lower middle class originally. we didn't have anything. so don't spew that stuff on me. >> at the heart of the debate was new analysis by the joint committee on taxation. a bipartisan congressional operation. it says the republican senate plan would initially lead to tax cuts at all income levels, but low income meshes would start
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seeing their taxes go up in 2021. and by 2027, all individuals making $75,000 or less would pay more than under current law, partly because many of the plan's tax breaks are temporary. kevin hassett is the president's chief economist. >> the hope is by the time it comes time for these things to expire, it gets extended. >> but there's no guarantee. republicans believe they can pass the bill without democratic support. so there is little incentive to compromise. for "cbs this morning: saturday," i'm nancy cordes on capitol hill. jared kushner's lawyer is pushing back after a senate committee said president's son-in-law had not been fully forthcoming in its investigation into russian interference in last year's presidential election. kushner's attorney said his client encouraged others in the
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trump campaign to decline meetings with foreigners. jeff pegues has new details. >> cbs news has learned in may of 2016 there was a request for a meeting with then presidential candidate trump. the question is a demand for more information on jared kushner. on thursday they asked for more information on kushner about a, quote, russian backdoor overture and dinner invite. among the documents they want is a request for a meeting from a man named alexander torshin and a woman who's his assistant, maria butina. they're also suspected of having ties to organized crime. they were hoping to meet candidate trump and were eager for mr. trump to travel to russia to meet with russian president vladimir putin. the question was made through an
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intermediary who was attached to a national rifle association event in kentucky. the e-mail with the request to attend the meeting was forwarded to kushner who declined the meeting. anthony? >> thanks. he replied, quote, a lot of people come claiming to carry messages. a very few we have able to verify. for now i think we'd decline such meetings. most likely these people then go back home and claim they have special access to gain importance for themselves. be careful. joining us for a deeper look with all this is sahil kapur. good morning, sahil. >> good morning. >> let's start with the legislation that's taken up a lot of discussion this week. is the senate going to pass it? >> there's a decent chance it
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passes out of the senate. they've not repealed the affordable care act. they have not built a wall. they have not done an infrastructure package. they could end this year, go home for christmas without any accomplishments. >> do you think they'll do it before the end of the year? >> they're so eager to do it before the end of the year, because they want to complete the year with an accomplishment. it's upon. or they go to conference and sort out the differences. >> what are the impediments to it? >> i would say three big imped meants. one is mixing health care with taxes. they tried to smash it together this year. it did not work out. they' ee've awakened the sleepi giants, health care. the cost is a deficit. there are still some republican deficit hawks who are concerned about that. the third is an issue that senator ron johnson of wisconsin has raised.
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he's the one republican so far against this package as it is. he worries it benefitted large corporations other small businesses like he used to run. >> senator susan collins is concerned because whatever benefits they see may be wiped out. >> senator collins and voted against it. a third senator john mccain who also voted against it seems a little more open-minded to the man date. we'll see. >> let's turn to the alabama election coming up quickly in december. we heard a short time ago, clearly there are elements of the republican party in alabama who do not want things to change. they're backing roy moore. what are the republican leaders in washington saying right now? >> this is a devastating no-win
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for the republicans. they either win that seat and invite an alleged child molester into their ranks or they lose that sink which should be a slam-dunk seat in a ruby red state in which they won in 2014. so they're considering all options to try to save that. they're trying to suggest a write-in candidate. the attorney general has suggested he's not interested in that. there's been some chatter about delaying that. imagine if you do that for political purposes. it looks like that's not going to happen. the governor has ruled that out. it looks like they're stuck right now. >> if roy moore wins the election, what can mitch mcconnell do? can he prevent him from entering the senate? >> the law says they cannot prevent him from entering the senate, but they can expel him. it's been since the civil war. >> it's been a long time. >> it's been a long time. it would be an extraordinary
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thing to do and there would be obviously blowback, frankly, from the trump base who's on the side of roy moore, the swing of the party, which is to continue to support him. it's a tricky brop sigs. by the way, if they lose the seat, they're slim margining the senate. it imperils everything else they're trying to do. >> meanwhile the democrats have their own problems with democratic senator al franken. he's owned up to this. there's going to be a hearing. what are the damages to franken and what will they do about it? >> it's very damaging. his first response was a little casual. but he put out a statement, apologizing, promising to cooperate with them. we have seen men at the highest levels of news and entertainment and politics accused of sexual misconduct going back decades and decades. i think whether it was the
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election of president trump who had his own accusers coming forward or something else that precipitated it, there are enough women coming forward and saying enough is enough. >> it's a sea change. >> thank you. >> thank you. president trump spoke about the elephants. on thursday the fish & wildlife said they would reverse a decision from possible but following criticism from animal rights groups and even some republican lawmakers the president delayed that decision saying he will review all conservation facts. an intensive manhunt is under way in pennsylvania this morning for a suspect suspected of shooting and killing a police officer last night in new kensington about 20 miles northeast of pittsburgh. authorities say an attempted traffic stop led to a foot chase where shots were fired. police have recovered the
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vehicle but have not released details about the suspect. the victim was 25-year-old bryan shaw who had less than one year on the force. tampa bay buccaneers quarterback jameis winston is denying allegations that he groped a female uber driver last year. the nfl and the buccaneers are investigating the claim. roxana saberi is here with more. good morning. >> good morning. the uber driver said the incident happened in march 2016 after she picked winston up in scottsdale, arizona. the drug driver known ontario as kate told bugs by news that he grabbed her crotch. kate said when she picked him up, he was the only passenger and sat in front. right away he behaved poorly
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shouting homophobic words at passengers. when they went through a drive-through and he grabbed her crotch when she looked up in shock and said what's up with that. he said, i'm supportish of the national movement to raise awareness and develop better responses to the concerns of parties in these types of situations, but this accusation is false. the alleged incident came just nine months before winston and a woman who accused him of rape settled the civil lawsuit she brought against him. the woman, erica kingsman said he raped her when they were both students at florida state university in 2012. >> he was on top of me and i couldn't breathe very much and i kept saying, stop, stop.
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>> winston said the sex was consensual and he was not charged. he went on to win the heisman trophy in 2013. he also made headlines in 2014 when he was caught on surveillance video stealing crabs legs in 2016 from a supermarket. as for the uber investigation, they're moving quickly and the buccaneers are taking the matter seriously. winston's account was suspended a f the 2016 incident. the driver kate did not want to be identified and she didn't want to file a police report because she didn't want to be known as the woman who jameis winston fwroeped. >> the stories keep coming. >> they do. this morning there are celebrations in the streets of zimbabwe. this morning they hope the house arrest of the longtime president robert
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robert. >> good morning. it has plunged the country into uncharted territory while they have retained power. tens of thousands of zimbabwens took to the streets calling for it. they're hoping to witness the dying days of his power, but mugabe who's ruled zimbabwe for 37 years will not go easily. he may be under house arrest but he's been seen twice. here he was photographed meeting zimbabwe officials. 93 years old and in failing health he is regarded by his critics as a brutal tyrant who ran the country into the ground but it was his insistence on
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pushing his controversial wife grace mugabe as his successor that was the ultimate undoing. they appear determined to force him out by week's end. exactly how that happens is unclear. anthony? >> debora patta, thanks. the "los angeles times" reports an l.a. county sheriff's vehicle on the way to an emergency jumped the curb and killed two brothers ages 7 and 9. several were others including the boys' mother. the suv had its lights flashing when it crashed into a car and careened onto the sidewalk. witnesses say they never heard a siren. they say greg gianforte mislead reporters when he body slammed a reporter in the
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spring. he claims ben jacobs initiated the assault by grabbing gianforte's wrist after he tried to grab his recorder. gianforte says that's not what happened. he was ordered to perform 40 hours of service. he apologized to jacobs. "the wall street journal" reports u.s. attorney intelligence identified the regular flag the russian cyber security firm as a likely spying agent for moscow as early as 2004. the defense department also told congress that a pentagon-wide assessment was made by kasperskylab four years ago. new rev lags follow an apparent hack targeting a national security contractor last month through antivirus software made be kasperskylab. and "variety" reports that a jury has been found in favor of
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katy perry. she bought the property from the archdiocese of los angeles for nearly $14 million but the nuns who lived there tried to sell it to dana hollister. they say the archdiocese had the right to sell it, not the nuns. it's a familiar safety precaution that may be in your child's school. this time it may have saved countless young lives. ahead, a california school superintendent tells us how lockdown drills protected students and staff when a deranged gunman opened fire.
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>> later, from tires that require no air to elevators that move sideways, we'll look at some of the top inventions of the year, many of which we'll soon be using. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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it's a magazine that rocked our world. as "rolling stone" celebrates its 50th verse, we'll talk to the controversial author and the book with the articles he printed in its pages. plus, his tv roles have been family-friendly. his standup routines, anything but. we'll talk to bob saget about his triumphs and trials. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news". good morning, everyone, i'm jan carabeo. investigators are returning to what's left of the barclay friends senior living community in west chester. they're looking for clues that will help them find out what started thursday night's fire that injured 27 people, and and they're still in the process of accounting for everyone who was inside. many neighbors helped first responds nerves rescuing residents, wrapping them in blankets and caring them to ambulances or buses. now, to the eyewitness wet r forecast with meteorologist, chelsey ingram. hi, kelly. >> good morning, everyone, let me start you off with live look at the neighborhood network, looking at the kutztown area, nice sunrise going on, there but it is chilly, 28 degrees, as the clouds continue to move across the region. 38 degrees right now in
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philadelphia. thirty-seven in wilmington, it is 35 degrees in dover, so chilly start, clouds continue to increase throughout the morning. afternoon showers, you can look for high temperature today in the mid 50's, and your eyewitness weather seven day forecast, 53 sunday, winds pick up, see gusts over 40 miles per hour, and you're looking dry for thanksgiving travel. back to you. >> thanks, chelsey. next update is at 7:57. see you then, have a great day
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welcome back to "cbs this morning: saturday." coming up this hour, tesla announces one of its most anticipated creations, an electric tractor trailer. 2017 has been quite a year of innovations. we'll show you some of the products that may soon change your life. then this week we saw the highest price ever paid at auction for a painting, but it is actually part of a larger trend of shocking sums spent on works of art. that is ahead. but we begin this half hour with lessons learned from tuesday's shooting rampage in the rural northern california town of rancho tehama. >> five people were killed when a gunman opened fire at several
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locations. one was at an elementary school where one child was injured. others were injured by broken glass. jamie yuccas sat down with the school superintendent who reflected on how the school's training saved many lives. >> reporter: the tragedy is too familiar, a gunman shooting up a school, leaving evan heartbroken. columbine in 1999, in 2009 and sandy hook. but here, the outcome was different. >> we didn't have a body count or one of the headlines seen all over the world. a crazed shooter failed. that was a victory. >> reporter: he believes it was repeated drills at his school that saved lives. >> it's something we've been doing in schools for your years
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now, and we take it very seriously. >> reporter: when the school's secretary heard gunshots nearby, she immediately signaled students to get off the playground and hide under their desks. >> we didn't have macho warriors that stood up against a shooter. we had men and women who dug deep in their heart and found some strength to do the right thing and be selfless. >> and protect those kids. >> yes. >> reporter: first and second grade teacher jennifer bauman helped the kids get to safety. >> we did what we were trained to do. our job was to protect those kids. they did something out of norm for them, and they're the heroes. >> reporter: one 6-year-old ali hernandez remains hospitalized. he was shot through the hall. >> he weighs heavy on my heart. >> reporter: he's expected to be okay. there were several crime scenes. two neighbors had feuded with the neighbor in the past and
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were shot after they dropped off a child. they think that's why the gunman headed there. >> that's why he went to the school, i guarantee it. >> reporter: 25 minutes of terror has left the town of about 1,500 people grieving. those injured and killed ranged in age from 6 to 68. >> i'm not saying that we have the lock on how to fix school violence, and i honor those who have lost. i have a real special place in my heart and i understand it. i was that close to having it happen. but i do think we need to focus on hope, because i think that hope and love and care for our kids and high professionalism will defeat evil every time. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning: saturday," jamie yuccas, rancho tehama. >> it is still really hard to process that this is something we need to train our kids to deal with. >> that it's happening on such a regular basis they have to be ready for it. >> yeah. still ahead, we'll talk to
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the author of a new book about "rolling stone" magazine and its controversial some of us didn't realize we had high blood pressure until a major medical group changed the definition this week. up next on our morning rounds medical news, we will talk to dr. tom frieden, former head of the cdc about that and other health challenges facing people in this country and around the world. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." it's ok that everyone ignores me while i drive. it's fine. because i get a safe driving bonus check every six months i'm accident free.
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rounds" medical news, major health issues and in september, result to save lives is a $225 million global health initiative by vital strategies, a global health organization. >> it seeks to address two areas in particular, cardiovascular health and epidemic outbreaks. we're joined by tom frieden who was the director of preventive disease and control in 2009. thank you for being here. >> thank you. >> thanks for being here. some have chosen to say, i'm going to the beach. but you chose to head up a plan. why? >> we identified these two initiatives this ka make a huge difference. we can save 100 million lives and save the world from epidemics. >> those seem to be two good things. >> we mentioned cardiovascular
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health. this week we saw new guidelines. redefining high blood pressure and how more people have it. what is the implication of this? >> they make the point lower is better. the higher the [ bleep ], the more likely you are to have a stroke or heart attack or kidney failure. this is a neglected problem globally. this is one of the most neglected problems. with all of the funds spent for global health, less than 1% goes to preventing heart attacks and strokes even though it kills more people than any other cause of death. >> i think most people don't see cardiovascular health as tracking on the same level as evpivepidemics and outbreaks. >> there are two. if we succeed, we will really change the trajectory of health around the world, and with the cardiovascular approach, we have a simple formula where 50 plus
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30 plus 20 equals 100. it's only 14%. only one out of seven people have it under control. if we can decrease that to under 50 and reduce sodium and get rid of the trans fat that's in the food supply, we will save 105 million lives over the next 30 years. >> another key issue your organization is addressing as you mentioned is outbreaks and epidemics. how prepared are we? >> the world is at risk because anywhere there is a blind spot, anywhere, there could be a new disease spreading, whether it's ebola, sars, or mers or hiv and tick-born disease. what we need to do is fight outbreaks around the world there so we don't have to fight them here.
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that's very much at risk. the money used to control the outbreak and defend it, it will expire next year. unless congress gives more to the cc, we will be less safe. >> it seems globalization and that would increase the likelihood of epidemics. is there something we should be watching? >> we're all connected by the water we drink, air we breathe. and what we need do is strengthen the other countries to find threats as they emerge through laboratories to stop them as quickly as possible and physician out and prevent them wherever that's possible. >> disease detectives. >> yes. we have epidemiologists who figure out where disease is coming from, what's causing it, and what are the critical things to do to prevent it. we're helping others do it. >> fantastic. >> the opioid epidemic is probably the major health
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problem. how much progress do you see us making? >> we need to do much better and caring for people with pain and caring for people with addiction. we also need to reduce the sources. we're still seeing far too many opioids being prescribed for chronic pain. they really aren't very effective for chronic pain and they're very dangerous. we also need to see law enforcement continue to reduce the influx of fentanyl and heroin because unless that's reduced, it's going be very difficult to see progress. >> is this an epidemic that can be stanched in the halls of congress? >> there's not only that which we can do but regulatory change to make it easier for people to get treatment and harder to get opiates that are flowing in this country that flow in so there will be fewer opiates around. that will mean less people addicted, less tragedies, less economic stress and a more secure society.
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>> dr. tom frieden. thanks so much for being with us this morning. >> thank you. inventions, they improve our lives and can even extend them from electronic glasses to help the blind to see to a high-tech helmet that protects the athletes' brain. we'll see what inventions made the list for the very best of the year. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." i'll never find a safe used car. start at the new carfax.com show me minivans with no reported accidents. boom. love it. [struggles] show me the carfax. start your used car search at the all-new carfax.com. why should over two hundred years of citi history matter to you? well, because it tells us something powerful about progress: that whether times are good or bad, people and their ideas will continue to move the world forward.
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this i can do! it may not be long until you see these trucks out on the highways of america. this week tesla unveiled its electric powered semitruck. tesla promises its truck will be capable of hauling an 85,000 pound load as far as 500 miles on a single charge and at the cost of a single semitractor
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trailer. many including walmart have already placed orders. >> the tesla truck could be a game-changer but it's not the only remarkable invention to measure a debut this year. the editors of "time" magazine have compiled a list and the top 25 are featured in this week's cover story "the 25 best inventions of 2017." >> they range from life-saving innovations to lifestyle innovations like the drone who puts the selfie stick to shame, taking airborne videos from a controlled craft that recognizes hand gestures. joining us with more is jeffrey kluger. good morning. >> good morning. >> i'm excited about it. >> i'm terrified. >> that's an even balance. everybody feels both of those things. >> let's start with the multi-elevator. this is an industry that hasn't undergone a change in a long time. >> when your business model goes
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back to 1988, there's something about refreshing your inventory list. this elevator works both horizontally and vertically. >> this blows my mind. >> you can have elevators in tall towers that goes back and forth and goes to magnetic levitation rather than cables and the cars are able to pass one another in the same shaft. you increase traffic, speed, and increase the flexibility of your building's design. >> and you'll net get stuck in one again. >> we're working on that. the next up is eglasses. they're for the blind. >> they're for the blind. if you're totally blind, unfortunately they won't work for you. they provide clarity, contrast, and finds zoom so you can find images coming in. they can allow legally blind
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people to play sports. they're expensive, just under $10,000 a pair, but companies are helping to connect potential patients with funding so they can get access to it. >> that's amazing. >> that's really impressive. we mentioned tesla's electric semitruck. >> we're in an industry that's competing with a global 1.2 billion conventional cars as opposed to 2 million electric. the reason for that in part is price point and range, but tesla is tackling that by bringing the cost of this model down to $35,000, which is competitive, and allowing a range of 200 miles on a single charge, which is basically what the chevy bolt has increased -- achieved. they have quite a problem. they're getting 1,800 orders a day which they cannot keep up with. musk says we're in production
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hell right now. >> that's a good place to be. one of the coolest concepts on the list is michelin's tire called the vision. what is it and does spive it on? >> it certainly looks like spider-man has it. it takes care of air in the tires. if it's dry in your city one day and snowy the next day, you don't have to change the tire. you swap out the tread covering and they're good go. they have sensors in them so when your tread is wearing down, you get an alert, time to change. >> amazing. next up, the redesign of the next football helmet, the zero 1. >> this is critical. there are 300,000 sports-related head injuries each year. one way of dealing with this is to redesign the helmet. it's made hard shell
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but more flexible polymer. it was designed by a pediatric surgeon on the back of a bar napkin. there are now 20 college teams and 18 nfl teams using it including alex smith of the kansas city chiefs. really quickly before we finish up. nasa is planning another mission to mars. tell us about it. >> this is very sweet. we're all spoiled by mars rovers that go and toddle around the planet. they're going to learn more about mars' thermal history. it will be detecting the planet's wobble, the planet's internal composition. basically this will be a full cat scan. >> amazing. i love it. jeffrey kluger, it's a brave knew world. thank you, sir. >> thank you for having me. we still don't know who paid the earth-shattering sum of $450
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million for a painting by leonardo da vinci. they're not the only ones dropping jaw-dropping amounts for works of art. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." do what i did. ask your doctor about humira. it's proven to help relieve pain and protect joints from further irreversible damage in many adults. humira works by targeting and helping to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. humira has been clinically studied for over 20 years. 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.
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to grab and remove everything from fine dust to large debris. daily dirt doesn't stand a chance. you and roomba from irobot. better together. and, so, ladies and gentlemen, we move to the leonardo da vinci, salvator mundi. >> reporter: this week a piece of history made history. >> and the piece is sold. >> leonardo da vinci's salvator mundi sold for a record price of just over $450 million at an auction here in new york. while some experts dispute the superi origin of the painting of da vn chi, it's said to be the last.
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they set a record in 2015 when it sold for $300 million. the era of art mega sales was ushered in back in 2004 when picasso's "boy with a pipe" was the first to sell for more than $100 million. since then about two dozen other paintings have eclipsed the $100 million mark. they're also joined by two sculptures, both by 20th century sculptor alberto jack a mennie. the "walking man" and then "the pointing man" which sold for $145 million. >> that's cool if you have a half a billion lying around. >> it was not thought to be -- >> -- one of his greatest. >> or original. he bought it for $10,000. >> that's called appreciate.
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chronically the "rolling good morning, everyone, i'm jan carabeo. while many are getting ready to give thanks for all they have, others are getting ready for thanksgiving, by giving. today, the food bank of south jersey is holding its annual turkey drop, to help feed families to struggling to put meals on the dinner table, this is all happening at the food bank headquarters on john fishton boulevard in pennsauken, food bank is also excepting non-perishable thanksgiving food. now to the eyewitness weather forebay. news desk. >> chilly out there, for the half marathon runners, let me show you a look at the current conditions, at least the winds , really not an issue, the winds will come into play tomorrow, for the full marathon runners, and it is 42 n
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philadelphia. we have 41 in wilmington, and it is around 39 degrees, in dover. today, we'll see increasing clouds this morning, folds by afternoon showers. high temperature right around 64 degrees. your eyewitness weather seven day forecast, 53 sunday, and on sunday we could see winds gusting over 40 miles per hour , at times. otherwise, looking dry, for thanksgiving travel. back to you. >> chelsey, thank you. >> our next update is at 8:27. we will see you
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♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning" saturday. i'm anthony mason. >> and i'm alex wagner. coming up this hour, for 50 years "rolling stone" has defined the intersection of music, pop culturing and politics. we'll talk to the author who was given personal access, jann wenner. and two sides to bob sackett. beloved dad on tv and controversial comic on stage. we'll catch up with the comedian as he returns to both roles. and they're one of the biggest bands in the uk and a cult favorite for those in the know. the band elbow's last two records went number one across the pond. we'll talk about their newfound success and they'll perform in
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morning sessi in ing saturday sessions. that's ahead. the president tweeted about franken on friday. the minnesota senator is accused of forcibly groping and kissing leeann tweeden back in 2006. >> the president has not spoken publicly about republican senator candidate roy moore. on friday the press asked press secretary sarah sanders about whether thegations against the president should be investigated? >> i think in one case senator franken has admitted to wrongdoing and the president hasn't. that's a very clear distinction. >> a senate ethics panel will investigate senator al franken. the tax reform bill cleared the committee on friday. it was a straight party line vote. there are both winners and
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losers under this plan. cbs news analyst jill schlesinger is here to break down what the proposed tax plan means for all of us. good morning. >> good morning. >> the first thing we should point out is there are major differences between the house and the senate. >> absolutely. we start with the tax bracket. the house bill reduced the number of brackets from seven to four. the senate bill retains seven brackets but changes them up just enough to be really confused. both plans do double the standard. nearly the standard deduction. both boost the child tax credit. the house plan goes to 1,600. the senate plan goes to 2,000. the house plan adds something for a family credit, which goes away after five years, and i think that the real issue here, the senate plan would actually repeal the individual mandate under the affordable care act. nothing about that in the house plan. and that removal of the mandate would add about call it $300 billion or so, gives them a
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little bit of squish room. both plans, very focused on the corporate tax code. in essence, the best way to think about both of these plans, it's a tax reform for corporations and a little bit of a tax cut for some americans. the individual mandate repeal, you're going to save some there, but that also means somewhere around 13 million americans lose health insurance and what does that mean for insurance premiums? double that affect the family's pocketbook too? >> yes. and i think this is going to be something that will start being discussed much more openly because people may say, well, i get my coverage through, say, my employer. i'm one of the 150 million people who get my coverage. i don't really care about the affordable care act. obviously we have to care because when people fall off the rolls, the cost of taking care of them down the road falls to everyone and i think this is going to be a bigger issue as the senate plan starts getting released and more people are
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focused on it. >> you talked about corporations. but for average folks, who are the winners and loses? >> it's really hard because this plan does pick winners and losers based on not just how much money you make but how you make your money, so you'd be somebody who's a small business person, a sole proprietorship. you may see an advantage. it also means where do you live because in certain areas, you're going to lose your state and local tax deduction. >> in this state, it's not a good thing. >> right. new york, new jersey, california. also, let's think about this. the standard deduction nearly doubling means more americans will be able to file more easily, but they're going to lose personal exceptions. so the thought is if you have a lot of children, you could be hurt by this plan. it's a very strange plan where you can hurt people who you
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wouldn't expect to be hurt. >> what do we do about the deficit. we're talking $1.5 trillion to $2.2 trillion. what's your assessment? >> $1.5 trillion was the line in the sand. every lawmaker says, oh, i don't want to add to the deficit. now they're very quiet. adding a trillion is a lot. we've got $20 trillion right now. many say it's hard to undo a tax cut, so when we see some of these provisions that are supposed to sunset in five years or ten years, the fear is nobody's going to have the gut to do that, so the real impact is that beyond this year, it could be $2 trillion or $2.2 trillion. nobody's talking about the debt. it's the strangest thing in the world. they used to talk about it in the past. >> it sure is. there's a lot to process before the end of the year. jill schlesinger, thank you for
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being here. >> dwrt to be here. tomorrow morning on "face the nation" john dickerson's guest will include how budget director doug mulvanemulvaney. in texas republican governor greg abbott did not hold back on friday, calling the size of the relief effort completely inadequate. >> and when you compare what has been offered up by omb to what was provided in the aftermath of just hurricane sandy, you'll see that this falls short of the response to a hurricane or superstorm sandy, which was half the storm of what hurricane harvey was. >> the white house later suggested that texas may want to foot more of the bill for its own recovery. the u.s. navy says its hospital ship the "comfort" is wrapping up its tour.
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it treated nearly 1,900 patients and performed more than 200 surgeries since it arrived in september. it has been used as an iraq war effort and has helped following hurricanes maria and katrina. it there aren't many things that have stayed relevant in the pop culture world for half a century, but for 50 years, "rolling stone" magazine has been there, and all that time with editor and publisher jann wenner at its home. up next we'll look at a revealing and controversial new book about wehner and the
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magazine he founded. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." -it's holiday time, and no fruit is as versatile as our ocean spray cranberries, which is why we're declaring it "the unofficial official fruit of the holidays." -the fig's gonna be so bummed. -[ chuckles ] for holiday tips and recipes, go to oceanspray.com. you or joints. something for your heart... -the fig's gonna be so bummed. -[ chuckles ] but do you take something for your brain. with an ingredient originally found in jellyfish, prevagen is the number one selling brain-health supplement in drug stores nationwide. prevagen. the name to remember. i work ovi need when i my blood sugar to stay in control.
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journalism, the names don't get much bigger than "rolling stone" magazine's publisher jann wenner. an eagerly awaited autobiography of wenner has been he had excl the archives. we're joined by him. go the author. good morning. >> good morning. >> you spent hundreds of hours an then he decided he hated the
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book. >> yes. >> what happened? >> listen. his expectations of what the book should be and what they were is obviously diverged. he wanted a more rev rent account of what happened and i kind of wrote the true story which is a lot more complicate and messy. >> it's a rock and roll story. >> it's a rock and roll story. >> by definition it's messy. >> yes. >> this is someone who had personal relationships with the giants of rock and roll. you delved deep into his personal archives. what story surprised you the most? >> i think i was surprised how the personal stories translated to what people read in the magazines. his relationships with john lennon and mick jagger, people don't understand how hand in glove these relationships were, how social they were. it related to mick jagger having more covers than anybody else and the name rolling stone and the band rolling stone, there was a copyright business there and that translated into 50 years of a relationship. >> and john lennon didn't like
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the fact that he thought it was a shout-out to the rolling stones, did he? >> that's right. all these kinds of petty grievances an betrayals and personal stories translated to what people read in the magazine, so to me that was exciting to write about. >> what was interesting to me is wenner came along during the pop festival. he was working there a little bit. >> yeah. >> he saw what was happening and he saw a market for a magazine that treated this culture seriously. >> that's right. and he created a window into it for your the rest of the world who everybody was fascinated with what was going on in san francisco, this rock and roll renaissance. his essential vision was that he knew this could be taken to the mainstream, that rock and roll generation was going to take over and they did. he tracks it. they tracked the rolling stone generation as they went from hollywood to washington. for 50 years they were going the take over until you get to bill clinton in the white house, the
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consummate baby boomer is beyond words too. >> how do you go to someone as a dropout from berkeley with no real experience to have an empire that lasted 50 years. >> listen. he had a history. he was shrewd, a workaholic and obsessive, all the traits of an entrepreneur. they were not common among the counterculture world. hippies, a lot of drugs. he was able to kind of survive in that world and guide it and shepherd it and be the gatekeeper really. >> it's interesting. he wanted to take it mainstream. he wanted to. >> he wanted to. he was a mainstream person. he was not a hippie himself. he was a preppy originally. he was essentially a social climber. he was where he wanted to be with fame and stardom and money and that's where rock and roll was going.
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>> i interviewed him for "sunday morning." what he seemed to bristle at the most is you hold him responsible in part for the growth of the celebrity culture. >> i stand by it. listen. "rolling stone" and "people" magazine were the two most popular magazines of the 1970s. they pioneer ed and reinvented what celebrity was around the new youth culture and generation. they had different values than what they had before. their values were sexuality and confession which we know now to be commonplace for celebrities. think about where we are today in our culture and some of the values of the celebrity world. some of those were very familiar to jann and "rolling stone" was there from the beginning. >> but it complicated the relationships, did it not? >> absolutely. this is the title of my book. this is what it's about. hee wanted to be at the center
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of the action, wherever it was. he would have relationships with mick jagger and for one thing he might like to be on the cover but he doesn't like the way jann needs him and it's going to be a complicated dance with all these figures. they needed him, he needed them. it's a soap figu. >> thanks for being here. >> thanks for having me. if there's a jek & hide of comedy, it may be bob sag it. known for tv roles and a standup comedian with an edge. we'll talk about that and his return to tv roots. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> announcer: this portion sponsored by toyota. let's go places.
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anything that offends anybody, basically i'm not like that in my real life, so what i'm telling you is i'm the only television father left you can trust. that's what i'm telling you. >> that's "from zero to 60," with bob saget. there's two per sew nays. bob sag it of "full house" and a standup comedian who contends toward the decidedly blue. jamie wax spoke with him. good morning, jamie. >> bob saget returns that way. even as he returns to his family comedy sitdown roots, he also does comedy. >> it seems like when you look back, you've had multiple
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careers. >> i'm having them right now. >> you're doing two at once. >> there's a little bipolar in my work. i'm doing standup and i feel the need to perform more. >> you are a good-looking bunch of people. some of you are not and that's why you're seated in the dark. >> earlier on he was the warmup for the 1980s sitcom "bosom buddies" where he was given a small standup role where he met jeff franklin. >> jeff franklin was a producer on that show and he always thought of me for danny tanner, so he knew about bob's edgy side but he knew i could also be the rich cunningham of the show. >> hey, deej, here's something. always rotate your couch
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cushions where you sit. >> and he starred in "full house." in case i forgot to mention it, you're a pretty great kid. >> a few years later he became more of a family fixture as host of "america's funniest home videos. oots even back then it was in stark contrast to the stark standup he'd deliver at comedy clubs at night. >> we made these children, my wife and i. we have three daughters. i'm in hormonal hell. >> people were surprised. >> they were. i was playing in vancouver and there was a lady who started to walk out, went like this to me, bye. but for the most part, i always adapt in a chameleon-like way to the audience. i don't purposely go i'm going to be crass here if they're not enjoying it. i want to get laughs.
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>> reporter: behind the smiles saget is no stranger to loss. his sister andrea died of an aneurysm at the age of 34. his sister gay died of santa clara derma at the age of 37. >> my sister came down with something and they didn't know what it was. she was misdiagnosed and it was scler derma. >> when you go through these losses does it make you refocus and take stock of what you're doing with your life? >> it really does. it's hard to make gallous humor out of something which is what we always fell back on, which my dad instilled upon me, make people feel better during this horrible time. >> that's just what he did for others and for himself, turning the toughest times into an ac movie inspired by his sister gaye. >> it made me want to make movies more because it got me into the zone, why am i doing
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this, what story do i want to tell? >> reporter: saget has been working steadily performing "dirty, we" with norm macdonald. there are two roles. and a foul-mouthed parody of himself on "entourage" that gained him the attention of a new fan base. >> i all have these scenes that every seven years or so, i have a resurgence. it's not something i plan but it's just how long my gestation period is for whatever i've been doing. >> reporter: the latest resurgence includes directing the upcoming independent film "benjamin" and coming back full circle to play the "full house" danny tanner. >> you don't have to ring the
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bell. it is your house. >> i wuchblt dinging it. i was cleaning it. >> did we'd be talk about it after all these years? >> no. a lot of people go, i love your stand up. the kids watch it b they love the standup. i never used to get that. >> reporter: saget has had many legends. one was don rickles. >> don was like, i'm going to give them everything i have. i called him four weeks before he passed away. his mind was sharp. i said, how are you doing. he started screaming at me, what did you have to do to get you out of my life. the sad joke is i didn't want him to go this far away. >> "full house" is going to be
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"fuller house" with me in an urn on a window. >> i see 20, 25 years of work coming out of me that hopefully will entertain people. >> bob sag it's standup special is available on several platform including amazon and i toon. i should say he was part of the incarnation of the "early show" years ago. >> there's always a seat for you, bob saget. >> i think it lasted about six months. >> i think we should try it again as an experiment. >> i'm all for it. >> why not. jamie wax, thanks very much. his background includes some of the culinary world's top honors and o long run of what may be the nation's top restaurant. t timmy hollingsworth has brought us some of his favorite dishes. stay with us.
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good morning, everyone, i'm jan carabeo. investigators are returning to what'sft of the barclay friends senior living commune in west chester, looking for clues to help them find out what started thursday night's fire that injured 27 people. and they're still in the procession of accounting for everyone who was inside. now, many neighbors helped first responders, in rescuing some of the residents, wrapping them in blankets and caring them to ambulances or buses. now, to the eyewitness weather forecast with meteorologist, chelsey ingram. thank you, kelly. >> good morning to you at home , it is a chilly start to your saturday. let's see some of the numbers. we're in the 40's in philadelphia, 423 degrees, 30 's for allentown, trenton, 34 degrees right now in the poconos. and we're in the 40's in
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wilmington with a temperature right now around 41 degrees, headed into the afternoon, look for high of 54. those clouds increasing this morning, leading to afternoon showers. bettha rain overnight, stray shower lingering sunday morning, then about the winds sunday, gusts over 40 miles per hour, possible, jan, back to you. >> chelsey, thank you. our next update is at 8:57. we'll see you then, have a great day.
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> . this morning on "the dish" timothy hollingsworth has humble beginnings in the industry. born in texas and raised in central california, his first restaurant job was as a dishwasher, but he rose through the ranks and to the highest heights. he became the chef to cuisine at thomas keller's world-renowned fresh laundry and earned the james beard award. >> he serves vibrant rustic dishes influence of his travels. good morning. >> good morning, chef. >> thank you for having me. >> tell us what we have on the table? >> almonds with grapes.
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on the far end a fig and a barata tart with onion jam on the bottom. this is one of our most famous dishes. herb roasted chicken with seasoned potatoes. for desert it has hazelnut and >> of course. all right, chef. let's start with the very humble roots in the southing big family. where do you think you learned to love food? >> i think it was around the table. we were all together sitting around the table and eating. we have a very close family still today and that's why i have such a love and care for it. >> what i was struck by in your story, you started out in texas and moved to california. but at age 19, i think it was, you flew yourself to new my fit airport. i out
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nary schoo i out institute for a week, c do>> what were you telling yourself at this point? >> i was telling myself i wanted to be a chef. >> how did you go fro never air that's a big jump. >> you had big ambitions. >> being young and a little nigh you've. i don't know. >> amazing. why did thomas keller choose you? >> i think he chose me to get me off of his back. i called him and called him and called him and he said, come and try out. i tried out. and then i called and called and called and called and called and he finally said come. >> did you go there literally with a resume on a night you knew he would be there? >> i called multiple times he would be in the restaurant and i turned in my resume to him. >> what did you learn at french
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laundry? >> i lrned the work ethic that he had, the legacy he tries to build, the love he has for the industry that we're in is pretty impeccable. he's so detail-oriented. every detail matters. >> yeah. >> you stayed at french laundry for 13 years. >> yes. >> that's a long time for any restaurant. >> yeah, but when you're somewhat comfortable in an environment you're able to lear. i spent a lot of years traveling. you know, i'd work and then we'd have two week office. during those two weeks off, i'd go and travel to france and work for a couple of weeks in others' restaurants and come back and apply that to french laundry. >> when we talk about your ow you have wove tround the wor. h think it's amerinfood, american food of the fielcultur
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who we are. los angeles, there's how many different ethnicities and cultures and different cities for different pe that's what american food is about. >> it's about food from the whole world. >> i is. >> chef, as i a this dish as is custom o segment, i ask you the question i if you could share mealr preseno would itbe? >> wo tough chappelle. so inspiñ i would have loved to have met him and work for hi >> mbe up in you'll bounty. chef timothy hollingsworth. thanks iffer yo ur time and and congrats on everything. >> thank
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up next, they're one of the biggest bands across the pond with their two last records going straight to number one in britain, but in this country, it's word of mouth more than air play that's created a fan base for elbow. ahead on our "saturday sessions," we'll introduce you to the band who has quite a few famous followers, and elbow will perform in our "saturday sessions." you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." (fish tan) ♪ save on all fisher-price little people, imaginext and power wheels. toys"r"us. today we play™ copdso to breathe better,athe.
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"saturday sessions," elbow. they've been together since they've been kids but it was only in the last decade that they've been big in britain. their album went straight to number one. >> we'll listen to that in a minute but first we caught up with guy garvey. the four singers of elbow have been playing together since
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1990, but their kenconnections back to grade school in england. >> we've been together since primary, kindergarten. >> you've known each other since you were in kindergarten? >> i met them later. elbow's a terrible band name but we were called miscellaneous sal saleslady. >> it was garvey who gave them a new name, elbow, following slowly. their breakout record coming in 2008. t "the seldom seen kid" sold over 2 million copies. >> the specter of real jobs was floating around. >> you might have to make an honest living. >> exactly. it really pushed us to make a
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good record. >> it truly did. >> yeah. >> images of yourself with a mcdonald's hat on. >> which pete had done. >> 16-year-old me did. >> which station? fries? >> i did everything. a jack of all trades. >> it was really humiliating because your dreadlocks wouldn't fit under the cap. >> their last album, "the takeoff and landing of everything" was their first to go to number one in britain. it included the song "new york morning." the lyrics make reference to john lennon and yoko ono. >> so the lyrics went into the song. ♪ >> she heard it and she sent us a beautiful e-mail how much john loved new york and a photograph of them together in central
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park. >> as elbow were working on their new album "little fictions," garvey met the woman who would become his new bride, rachel sterling. >> you met at benedict cumberbatch's wedding? >> yes. she was an actress. cumberbatch invited me to the wedding. he was the only one i knew there. i bought a nice new suit and i met rachel. >> their son was born in april. it has been a magnificent year for the band elbow. >> when we recently got an e-mail from paul mccartney, which was amazing and completely unexpected, all he said was he was dropping off one of his kids at school and he had to stay in
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the car to find out who the song on the radio was. it was us. he said the song was magnificent. it doesn't get much better than that really. >> now to perform that song "magnificent" which appears on their new album "little fictions" and their fourth album coming out next week, here is elbow. ♪ ♪ this is where this is where the bottle lands ♪ ♪ where all the biggest questions meet with little feet stood in the sand ♪ ♪ and this is where
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the echos swell to nothing on the tide and where a tiny pair of hands ♪ ♪ finds a sea-worn piece of glass and sets it as a sapphire in her mind ♪ ♪ and there she stands throwing both her arms around the world ♪ ♪ the world that doesn't even know how much it needs this little girl ♪ ♪ ♪ it's all going to be magnificent she says it's all going to be magnific t magnificent ♪ ♪
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♪ this is where it all began to light your mother's cigarette ♪ ♪ and to go to touch her hand and my heart ♪ ♪ there defrosting in a gaze wasn't built to be that way suddenly i understand ♪ ♪ ♪ there on the sand throwing both her arms around the world ♪ ♪ the world that doesn't even
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know how much it needs this little girl ♪ ♪ ♪ it's all going to be magnificent she says it's all going to be magnificent she says ♪ ♪ it's all going to be magnificent she says it's all going to be magnificent ♪ ♪ ♪ the echos slow the lands ♪
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♪ the echoes slow and there she stands ♪ ♪ it's all going to be magnificent ♪ don't go away. we'll be right back with more music from elbow. 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. there'that only uses 100% american oranges.and simply orange and tropicana ship in juice from overseas. only florida's natural
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have a great weekend, everyone. we leave you with more music from elbow. >> this is "all disco." ♪ ♪ young man with a bruised oil soul one snap to bring you back ♪ ♪ hands smudging the night into day ♪ ♪ there's lend time in the alley we could slip ♪ ♪ buthere are still to squeeze through and i'll reach you, spirits to
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cancel ♪ ♪ come to the river sun let your obsession go ♪ ♪ what does it prove if you die tune ♪ ♪ it's really all disco everything ♪ ♪ let's joi the yellow-eyed snow flies rejoicing in choices they made ♪ ♪ let's be a bird laughing at not having learned ♪ ♪ let's be a hundred and five u and sing out a tune of regret to the moon ♪ ♪ perverted old-timers i'll feed you one-liners ♪
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♪ come to the river sun let the obsession go ♪ ♪ what does it prove if you die for a tune it's really all diskco ♪ ♪ what does it prove if you die for a tune don't you know it's all disco everytng ♪ ♪ ♪ i can here how deep you're going pull the cord ♪
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♪ i can feel your tempo slowing pull the cord ♪ ♪ come let your obsession go ♪ ♪ what does it prove if you die for a tune it's really all disco ♪ ♪ what does it prove if you die for a tune ♪ ♪ don't you know it's all disco ♪ ♪ everything everything ♪
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>> this is cbs-3 "eyewitness news". >> good morning, everyone, i'm jan carabeo. thousands are running through philadelphia this weekend, the half marathon started just about over an hour ago now. the 8k run is later this morning, the 24th annual marathon is tomorrow. the course takes runners through center sit, fairmount park, and it means some roads are off hint. find the road closures unnerve cbsphilly.com see. now, the updated forecast with chelsey ingram. >> you can see them bundled up , here's (temperatures on the chilly side. 44 degrees in philadelphia, 44 in wilmington. in the 30's in reading, and allentown, 34 degrees there, it is 36 degrees in trenton.
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now, as we head into the afternoon, you can look for high temperature in the mid 50 's, we are going to run the risk for some showers to develop across the region, so keep an eye on those, better chance for steadier rain as we head into the overnight hours tonight. then things turn very windy headed into sunday but looking dry for thanksgiving travel. back to you. >> 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", it's a tale of two adoptions, as an abandoned puppy gets a second chance with a former "lucky dog" family. brandon: pluto! come here. colleen: he's ready for you. brandon: come here. i haven't seen you forever. come here. narratoran brandon: whoa. is that you putting your pouty face on because you know you did wrong? narrator: ...and a twist ending you won't soon forget. dr. nardi: i have some interesting results for you. brandon: are you serious? i'm brandon mcmillan, and i've dedicated my life to
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saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are

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