tv CBS This Morning CBS October 3, 2015 7:00am-9:00am EDT
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look at this nor'easter. spreading rain the entire eastern sea board. >> a run in with a massive rainmaker. >> six states under emergency. >> this will be historic rainfall event we have not seen before. >> joaquin is off shore. expected to steer away from the u.s. mainland. >> doctors without borders says a hospital in the afghan kunduz has been bombed and it may have been a u.s.a. air strike. >> the shooter was enrolled in the class he attacked. >> the investigators paint a picture of a disturbed loaner. >> so far we've recovered 1 weapons. >> reigniting the debate over gun control. >> stuff happens. and the impulse is always to do
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something and it is not necessarily the right thing to do. >> i don't think i have to react to that one. >> a farmer dug up the skeleton of a woolley mammoth in michigan. the remains 15,000 years old. >> that's another catch. >> these guys are ready for the playoffs. >> and all that matters. >> monsoon rain has caused the river to swell to sizes expected to a attract a record number as china celebrates its national day. >> on "cbs this morning saturday." >> someone has started a pointless military operation in the mideast. and for once, it wasn't us. >> putin would like to take syria off our hands. but this is serious. if russia shoots down one of our planes or vice versa, this could be world war iii.
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bottom of what's in hillary's e-mails. >> and welcome to the weekend everyone. we got a great show for you this morning. including a look at the non stop rise of the sneaker industry. just when it seemed to notgy net bigger, the prices are up, high fashion designers are in. and even a museum. >> and she failed at advertising so she moved to food where she quickly became a rising start. she'll join us later in the dish. >> and leon la halvis one of the best new albums of the year and the voice described as the liquid confection for a or thechy declaration. you will hear her ahead. >> more rain and flooding expected for the already saturated east coast and the storm has turned deadly. two people were killed last night when their both capsized in strong winds and heavy rain
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three others on board survived with two rescued by emergency responders. the storm has also been linked to a drowning in the south carolina. >> look at the worst of it. you can see where weather warnings are up and down the eastern sea board. for more we tourney to meteorologist lizette gonzalez from miami. good morning. >> reporter: good morning bone that -- we have the stalled frontal boundary that just continues to pummel the east coast. you can see the torrential rain up and down the atlantic into the new england areas. an additional 1 to two feet of rain especially around the carolinas. flash flood warnings in place there. and the associated with a hurricane joaquin, which is x expected to say east of the u.s. coastline. however with the tropical connection and the strong on shore winds, we're going to see
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the impacts. finally hurricane joaquin is moving away from the bahamas. it is category 3, expected to weaken to a category 2. possibly north of bermuda or near on monday morning and continuing into the atlantic. however with joaquin to the east in addition to flooding, we'll see the potential for coastal erosion, dangerous surf, rip conditions. all the way from the mid atlantic koes to the florida coast. we'll continue to be individual lent vigilant and prepared. >> a cargo ship carrying 33 sailors, most americans, the search was suspended because of the hurricane. the ship's been missing since thursday when it sent out a distress call. >> reporter: this vessel
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disabled basically right near the eye of hurricane joaquin, it right where the strongest winds. are. so up to 140 miles per hour. >> the coast guard says they are furiously working to find the ship with 28 americans and 5 polish nationals on board. but the weather is making it incredibly dangerous. >> the challenge is trying to get our assets as close as possible to try to find the vessel. >> they were supposed to arrive in san juan puerto rico on friday. when they left jacksonville on tuesday, the crew was monitoring then tropical storm joaquin. but their last contact was thursday. >> we have not heard from this vessel since yesterday morning. >> that morning the crew sent a distress signal saying the ship at taken on water. while they were able to contain the flooding, they lost power and couldn't propel the vessel.
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makes for an even more tenuous takes. >> when you are powerless at sea you are totally vulnerable to the sea scape. and there are 10 to 20 foot waves out there. >> they will be pulling in more assets. >> we are going to keep doing everything we can to try to locate that vessel. >> for "cbs this morning saturday," julianna goldman in washington. >> back now to the problems being caused by that nor'easter. some places could set historic records with more than foot of rain. david begno is in hard hit charleston south carolina. good morning. >> reporter: the rain is coming down at the pretty steady clip here in charleston and we are at the beginning of whether the national weather service is saying could be a historic rain event for the potential for life-threatening flash flooding. right now this morning as we come to you live, 40 vehicles, and streets in charleston are closed and where we are right now on calhoun, people are
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trying to drive through the water. governor nikki haley has declared a state of emergency here in the state as she warns people to prepare for what is coming. overnight authorities reported multiple evacuations took population in north myrtle beach and the north town of georgetown. similar in north carolina there are reports of evacuations happening over night. roads are washed out. in waste deep water in north myrtle beach. and authorities say they have responded to several accidents and motorists stranded in water. amtrack is also suspended some of its service throughout the southeast for today. so far we're told here in the charleston area, back out here live. they have gotten 3-5 inches within the last 12 hours and they are expecting what could be another 5-8 inches over the next 12 to 24 hours. here in charleston, where 40
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streets are closed this morning. there was a report of a drowning overnight. police are so busy at this point they don't even have a chance to get to all the flooded streets. it is nearly knee deep here and people are continuing to drive through it. >> a dangerous situation. there could be live wires under all that water too. so be careful. we thank you david. we are learning more this morning about the gunman's lik to the community college in roseburg oregon or. christopher sean harper mercer died in a shootout with police. john is in roseburg this morning with the latest. >> the college it itself will now remain closed through next week. chis harper mercer was a student in the college and he was enrolled in the class where he opened fire. investigators are looking in and they are trying to determine his motive. >> investigators had been
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searching through the apartment just outside roseburg where the shooter lived. they found a stash of guns and ammunition, all purchased legally. >> so far we've recovered 13 weapons. out of those 13 weapons, we currently have in custody six were recovered at the school. seven were recovered at the shooters residence. >> but they were all purchased legally by the shooter. >> some were purchased by the shooter. some were not purchased by the shooter. >> neighbors describe him as distant. >> quiet. pretty reserved. like i say you pass him in the parking lot and stairs, something like that. and, you know, he'd say hi. and he wouldn't even really acknowledge you. >> officials are trying to piece together the notive. they discovered a lengthy document. a source describes it as someone who was mad at the world. loser without a girlfriend.
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out in a blaze of glory. she told her brother the gunman asked his victims about religion. >> he would stand them up and if they said they were christians he said something along the lines of you will be with god soon. that's what i was told. >> one person's deranged act may have indeed broken all of our hearts, but he cannot prevent our hearts from growing back bigger and stronger and more committed to the oregon that we all love. >> as a country we cannot just shrug our shoulders and move on. >> as roseburg mourns, investigators are focusing on chris harper mercer. reports say the note he left behind portrays him as depressed and angry. but apparently not affiliated with any group.
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>> funeral preparations will soon be under way for the nine victims of thursday's rampage. from the creative writing teacher to a promising nursing student, most of them trying to write the next choopt chapter of their lives. ranging in age of 18 to 678. and all now have family that are grieving. >> reporter: the victim's families are clearly still grieving right now and most don't want to talk. but there are a few ones that have shared more about their loved ones. including a brother of one of the survivors. minutes after he heard the news corey boylan called her sister. >> she immediately told me she had been shot. and i was on the phone and i told her she was going to be okay.
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>> she lay dead, trying not to breathe when the shooter shot her in the back. >> what it would take to lay on the ground with a gunshot thinking you are going to die while blood is pouring out of your body and not cry, not talk, not move at all. the strength it takes to be so still in a situation of worry and treachery is just brave. it is bravery. >> jason johnson wasn't as lucky. his cousin tells cbs news the 33 had just gotten out of rehab, had enrolled in school and was focusing on changing his life. a sheriff's department representative spoke on behalf of johnson's mother. >> they felt that jason had finally found his path. his family says that he will be loved and missed. >> law enforcement believes the death toll could have been a lot higher had it not been for the quick actions of first responders and the selflessness
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the army veteran was shot several times while trying to protect other students. he underwent several serious surgeries and has a long road of recovery ahead of him. rehabilitation. the exact discharge place will physician. i think chris has the spirit and has the physical conditioning to begin with that will serve him well. >> reporter: there are two patients still here in roseburg at mercy medical center, including chris. there are three others recovering north of here in critical condition. or they were in critical condition. including anna who's mother tells us she's doing a lot better and in good spirits. >> thank you so much. president obama used part of his friday news conference to keep up the pressure for action on gub control. >> we can't sort through and
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identify ahead of time who might take actions like this. the only thing we can do is make sure that they can't have an entire arsenal when something snaps in them. and if we're going to do something about that, the politics has to change. >> but will the politics change? phillip bump covers politics for the washington post. good morning. >> good morning. >> when you listen to that speech in entirety it is such a sense of frustration. and it is confusing because you look at the numbers and you see 88% of us agree there should be more background checks and that includes republicans. what's going on? >> the first problem is there is a huge power imbalance between folks who want maintain control and those who want to lessen gun lows. there is a tlot of strength in the community to say we need to keep gun laws as they are or less. and one of the things about the background check issue is yes we
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all agree there should be universal background checks. 88, 90% of us. but there is a huge partisan gulf and makes the politics tricky. >> since sandy hook there have been 986 mass shootings killing more than a thousand, wounding more than 3500. at what point, is there a point these numbers will start having impact in with sht. >> hard to imagine how they could get much bigger. there is a lot of detail that's buried in there. but it's hard to imagine. president obama's speech the other day which he essentially said we all know what happens here. we've been through this so many times before. i don't know if there is a number that you can hit where something would change along those lines. >> to you does it color the conversation at all? >> it's tough. the nra and planned parenthood are the two most popular organizations in the country.
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one on the left and one on the right. the nra is very strong. but there is also, there exists a constitutional amendment which says you have the right to bear arms. that's tough to overcome. the problem with president obama is he's viewed -- the split is huge between how democrats and republicans view him. so i don't know if he said to republicans let's pass a law that the republicans would agree. >> you mentioned groups like the nra. there have been a number of high profile gun control advocacy groups. michael blumoomberg. gabby giverfford. >> part of the problem, pew research did a study and found folks who actually advocate for keeping gun laws the way they
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vote and other folks just aren't motivated in the same way. >> i think we all thought newtown, this is the time it will change. what will it take? >> for folks to want to pass new gun restrictions, i think what has to change is the court's interpretation of the second amendment. d.c. passed a gun law that restricted how many people could have handguns. and the court threw it out for being in violation of the second amendment. and as long as they have that can do. >> phillip bump, thanks so much for being with us. >> my pleasure. breaking news over night. u.s. war planes may have killed nine local staffers at the medical clinic run by doctors without borders in a bombing raid in afghanistan this morning. the attack was in the city of kunduz. apparently trying to dislodge taliban insurgents who had seized the city on monday. >> good morning. the u.s. military has confirmed troops were conducting air
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strikes against the taliban and there may have been what they are calling collateral damage to the nearby medical facility. photos posted showed shock and confused staff in the aftermath of the bombing. the early morning strike completely engulfed the kunduz hospital. and they were hit several times it was said during sustained bombing. at least nine staffer members killed, 37 injured and dozens still missing. thousands of civilians have been caught in the cross-fire between u.s.-backed government forces and insurgents. the kunduz medical center is the only one in the region that can handle major injuries and over 100 people were being treated at the time, half of them children. doctors without borders told u.s. just this morning they recently reported the gps coordinates of the hospital to nato and afghan forces in effort to prevent this kind of tragedy.
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nay toe officials and the u.s. military are now investigating what exactly happened. thank you. president obama is calling russia's entry into the syrian war a recipe for disaster. russia says it's main purpose is fighting terrorism. but the u.s. says moscow is trying to support syrian president bashar al assad. holly is in istanbul with the latest developments. >> reporter: good morning. the russian defense ministry said today that it bombed nine difference isis targets in the last 24 hours. and that is despite criticism from the u.s. that what russia is really doing is propping up the southeastern regimeyrian regime. >> russia says its air strikes have destroyed a command center and a training camp. but russia's air strikes have also targeted so called "moderate" rebels.
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some of them backed by the u.s. syria's civil war has already cost more than a kbaurquarter of a million lives. many of them taken by the syrian regime of bombing civilian areas. but now it is also giving syrian government forces an even more critical advantage. russian. >> russian aviation is helping us a lot said this man, a tank commander in the syrian army. but for those who oppose the regime russian air strikes will only strengthen government forces and worsen their agony. in this suburb of damascus, emergency workers rescued children from a bombing. and then another blast.
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peace in syria. it is not just the u.s. but also its coalition partners in europe and the mideast that accuse russia of causing civilian casualties. and they are calling on moscow to target isis and stop attacking the syrian opposition. >> holly williams i a wet, windy and cold,ification degrees the high, expect mist, drizzle and gusts up to 50 miles per hour. biggest concerns are along the coastline, coastal flooding and also beach erosion. 52 overnight, similar conditions tomorrow, a little bit of sunshine. 63, still showers and windy, though. coming up. he was a legend in climbing at just 23 years old. details on the death of famed extreme sportsman johnny strange. >> and later, the remains of a woolley mammoth were found not
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you can even try new york's exceptional cider and spirits. this fall, drink in the beauty of new york state. plan your trip at iloveny.com. there's something for everyone. coming up a miracle on broadway. after a near death experience, american musical theater has reached new heights. a new book about the gritty history of the great white way. >> back in the seventies broadway almost went under. and a new look at how a new speaker turned into the museum quality art. >> some of these prices ashocking you are going to to
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good morning. 7:27 on this saturday, october 3rd. i'm diane mecedo. in the news today, high winds and the threat of coastal flooding has some new jersey residents still rebuilding after sandy on edge this morning. although hurricane joaquin won't impact our area, the rising tide from a different storm could send water into homes in sea bright. some homes have built barriers on the beaches to contain the water, but in union beach, some residents were unable to make it to their homes yesterday when the wraritan bay moved into the streets. new this morning, two people have died after a boat capsizeed in jamaica bay. police say five people were on that fishing boat when rough waters and high winds caused it to tip over. two people were able to swim back to shore and call for help. the nypd aviation unit rescued a third person who was stranded on the rocks. two others were in the water and rushed to beth israel hospital in cardiac arrest, but we now know they later died. now let's head over to
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vanessa murdoch with a look at the weather forecast. vanessa. >> unfortunately it is going to be a cold, wet and windy day out here. here's what you can expect, periods of rain and drizzle for today. it comes more scattered later in the day. gusty winds will continue, gusts up to 50 miles per hour along the coast are possible, and we will experience moderate to major coastal flooding today. so certainly a situation very similar to yesterday with a little less rain. so gusty winds, 56 degrees, that's it for your high, along the coast will be even cooler, likely upper 40s. winds out of the northeast at 20 to 30 miles an hour, gusts as high as 50. coastal flooding most likely during high tide times. so this afternoon from roughly noon until 3:30-ish is when we expect the worst of it. overnight tonight 52, showers and drizzle, staying windy. diane. >> vanessa, thanks so much. we'll have another update for you in just a half an hour. i'm diane mecedo. "cbs this morning" continues in just a moment.
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the search for survivors is expected to continue in guatemala this morning following a massive mud slide. at least 26 people are dead but hundreds of others are missing after heavy rains buried dozens of homes ten miles east of the capital guatemala city. >>s we cue workers worked through rubble and rock. it is believed many of the victims were asleep in their homes when the mudslide began. >> extreme sportsman johnny strange has died in an accident in the swiss alps. >> so we're waiting for weather. >> yeah. >> strange has within wing suit base jumping in switzerland. this video posted five days ago sew shows him flying over the
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he was there shooting videos where, we fly super close to stuff. at 17 he was the youngest person to climb all seven of the highest mountains in the world. he talked about the feet soon after with cbs news. >> i went out. said i was going to do it. didn't care who said i wasn't and then did it. >> strange would go on to participate in many other extreme sports using his platform to raise awareness for causes such as parken sons and genocide. police say strange crashed shortly after attempting a jump thursday. he was just 23 years old. >> time to show you some of this morning's headlines. the washington post reports secret service director joseph clancy appears to have a better re recollection of the information.
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knowledge of files being shared of the attempt to apply to the secret service. apologize. >> the "new york times" says firefighters union is having second thought about endorseing clinton for candidate. a campaign spokesman said the endorsement was never guaranteed. the move comes you have a senator bernie sanders gains traction in recent polls and a continued speculation about vice president joe biden entering. >> a normal rockwell painting of a small town american newsroom could fetch at least $10 million month. the work tiled norman rockwell visits a country editor shows rockwell at the paper in
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it's being offered as a donation to the national press club. >> and the new york daily news reports that slave bikini from return of the jedi fetched $96,000 this week. it was part of a tv and film memorabilia auction. the price for the 16 space kraft, the first one seen in the original movie. it sold for $400,000. if i was her i think i would have wanted it. >> i heard she was very uncomfortable. so i. >> i heard that also.
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today the verdict in the up next, medical news in our morning rounds. including why chemotherapy, standard treatment for breast cancer, may not be right for all patients. plus doctors john lapuk and holly phillips on whether bacteria in your gut could express whether you suffer from asthma. you are watching "cbs this morning saturday." song: "that's life" song: "that's life"
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>> in 2010 ann louise wiz diagnosed with early stage breast cancer. the kind fueled by estrogen. results showed she was a low risk so doctors treated her with hormone blocking therapy alone, sparing her the side effects from what's usually also given, chemotherapy. >> why do that if it wasn't going to give me a different outcome that i would get for not having the chemotherapy, so it made sense to opt out of it. >> the study in the new england journal of medicine followed 1600 women with hormone-driven breast cancer and a low risk zero. they received hormone blocking therapy but no chemo. after five years less than 1% had their cancer recur in a distant part of the body. breast cancer specialists say this provides the clearest proof of the accuracy of a test that's been used more than a decade. >> it allows the doctor to sit
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up a little straighter in the chair and look the patient in the eye and say you know what? it really looks like you -- genetically in terms of the proteins that are expressed on the surface. completely different. every single one of them. you and you may want to be able to tailor the treatment specifically and differently depending on the genetic profile. and after that, over time the tumors can mutate again. so maybe that what's defective on day one isn't five, six months later. then you look at the profile again and change your game plan. so the tumor is mutating, the game plan changes and this is the idea of the chronic cancer. that it is not just one treatment.
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and people can go much longer. next up, some 22 million american suffer from asthma. >> i always assumed the increase was because of the environmental variables. is that it? >> sure. even our bodies in some ways are part of the environment. now, this is a very interesting part of what's an ongoing canadian study. where researchers are looking at children from birth to the age of 5 and looking at possible risk factors for asthma and allergies which are thought to be along the so i'm kind of medical continuum. what they found was that for children, a group of children who are considered very high risk of developing asthma based on their early symptoms, when they were three months old, they had lower levels of four specific bacteria in their intestines. researchers took it a step further and followed up in mice and found that by giving mice
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able to lessen the severity of some of these symptoms. in no way was this a cause and effect study. we can't say having too little of this bacteria causes asthma. but it is a really compelling connection to follow up on. >> interesting. so how might bacteria in the gut effect this risk of asthma. >> to follow up on bonita, yes. in terms of the bacteria and asthma one way is we have these trillion os bacteria in our gut. when we eat food, they eat the food and make chemicals and -- these are hypotheses. but some of the chemicals they make may be absorbed into the bloodstream and they are anti inflammatory. so they go to the lung and decrease inflammation in the lung and then there is interaction between the different type of species. there are thousands probably of different types of bacteria and the way they interact can effect
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>> but is there a way to identify what is the biggest reason for the increase? is it the bacteria? or the environment? >> we are changing our microbiome. and it may be that for example by giving antibiotics, we know for sure we change the gut bacteria that way. other things are less obvious. for example the rise in c-sections. when the baby is delivered through the birth canal the baby picks up the bacteria there from the woman. if they go through the skin it is a different set of bacteria. so there are a lot of factors playing. >> we've been talking a lot about gut bacteria late. why is it so important. >> this is a huge area of focus. when we think about it there are of course trillions of bacteria in our body in a symbiotic relationship. in fact there are ten times as many bacterial cells as human cells in our body.
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they are active participants in everything that happens in our body. they effect our digestion. producing and absorbing certain vitamin. b and k for example. they play a role in possibly causing or preventing certain cancers, hard disease. and our mental health, that is an area of extreme focus. we know that bacteria can help to produce neurotransmitters that effect our mood and ultimately even ourhealth. >> even obesity. >> absolutely. so keeping these in good balance really should be at the front of our fore thinking and research. >> i added more yogurt to my diet. you always hear that is the good bacteria. >> but we don't know which is the good bacteria. lot of research there. finally parents struggle to get their kids do each vegetables. researchers at texas a&m university stumbled on a fact that might help.
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and found vegetables paired with more popular items like burgers or chicken nuggets were more likely to be thrown out. so pairing with proper foods could keep the vegetables out of the trash. >> and the science behind that. we can't just blame the kids for choosing cheese burgers and piz pizza pizza. the best way to get adults to eat vegetables is just give them no options. just put the vegetables on the plate and there you go. >> when we were kids my sister refused to eat her lima beans. he said the next thing you are going to eat is those lima beans. put them in the refrigerator. that was the next thing sheate. >> thank you so much for being with us this morning. up next.
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say the cost of higher education just can't worth it. we'll tell you about a company that may have a solution for them. you are watching cbs"cbs this morning saturday". take a look at these bbq trophies: best cracked pepper sauce... most ribs eaten while calf roping... yep, greatness deserves recognition. you got any trophies, cowboy? whoomp there it is uh, yeah... well, uh, well there's this one. best insurance mobile app? yeah, two years in a row. well i'll be... does that thing just follow you around? like a little puppy! the award-winning geico app. download it today. feel secure in your dentures... feel free to be yourself all day. just switch from denture paste to sea-bond denture adhesive seals. holds stronger than the leading paste all day... without the ooze. feel secure. be yourself.
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with the cost of higher education continuing to skyrocket, more and more young americans are asking, is college really worth going deeply into debt? a new gallop university poll finds 50% of graduates from the past decade strongly agree their education was worth the cost. now pwc, one of the nation's biggest accounting firms is stirring up the debate with its program to hope its employees pay down their student loans. good morning. >> good morning. >> what exactly is pwc doing for its employees here. >> they are saying they are
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going to put skin in the game and help pay off student loan debt. >> this seems like such an obvious solution. for so long we've seen yoga gyms and the snack room. >> they are looking at the long game. saying we want to recruit millennial. this is the biggest issue we're facing as a generation right now. and what is the biggest issue that is going attract them to us? student loans. >> a significant pay down there. >> they are saying it could help them up to $10,000 over the six year process. but you have to take in account taxes. this money does get taxed. you are doing a monthly payment from a start up called gratify. and students go in and get a little money they can put towards their student loan dead. but it is going tab taxed. >> people had hit the five years ago but nobody was talking about it.
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do you think pwc is maybe the catalyst is this. >> i hope so. but right now only 3% of companies are offering a the benefit like this. we can't call it a trend quiet yet. what's much more popular is tuition reimbursement. i think this could effect 22,000 employees and this is a huge sample size. and i think companies will be looking at pwc and saying does this work and if they seed in attracting them and retaining we might see larger companies follow suit. >> that is the key here. if it helps lure workers it's a really valuable tool. if you don't work at the company like this, what are your other options? >> there are a lot of actions. a lot of states and organizations to retain medical professionals and legal professionals will actually have student loan repayment assistance programs. if you are a teacher a lot of
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states want to retain teachers and get them to work in areas with shortages so rook at the state government website there might be that teacher shortage program. >> how did we end up here? it feels like a ball and chain. especially for a young person enter into into the workforce to have that 30,000 dollars that you were endebted t to. feel likes something. >> and 1200 dollars a year is something. but college costs today have so much higher than when our parents were in college. and that is the larger issue here. it is going to take a lot more companies stepping up and contributing. >> 3% is not. >> not enough. >> i remember handing over the college check and check and it was like $4,000. how long was that? >> you probably know exactly where you were and how you felt when the o.j. simpson murder
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of his ex-wife nickole brown simpson and her friend. >> i can't believe they ound him not guilty. i just don't think they came to the right conclusion. >> now justice means just-us too. >> 13 years to the day after that infamous acquittal he was read a different verdict. >> count one, conspiracy to commit a crime. guilty. >> he was convected on charges of armed robbery and kidnapping. simpson was sentenced for up to 33 years in prison where he remains to this day. >> everyone has so many memories of this. but we want to remind you of where you were when you were covering this. >> where?
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>> oh good morning, 7:57 on this saturday, october 3rd. i'm diane mecedo. in the news today, high winds and the threat of coastal flooding has some jersey shore residents still rebuilding after sandy on edge this morning. although hurricane joaquin won't make landfall in our area, the rising tide from a different storm and some remnants of joaquin can send water into homes in sea bright. some communities have built barriers on the beaches to contain the water, but in union beach residents were unable to make it to their homes yesterday when the raritan bay moved into the streets. new jersey police have arrested a priest in little ferry after he was accused of threatening a boy with a gun. the bergen county prosecutor says 54-year-old kevin carter pointed a firearm at the 8-year- old inside saint margaret of crotona church and indicated he would shoot the boy. witnesses say it happened just before mass got started on september 13th.
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he's charged with endangering the welfare of a child and aggravated assault by pointing a firearm. now let's head over to vanessa murdoch with a look at what you can expect from the weather. vanessa. >> well, unfortunately it is going to be a very damp, very windy and certainly not a good day along the coast. here's what you can expect. periods of rain today, drizzle as well. the wet weather becomes a little bit more scattered as the day progresses now, the gusty winds will continue, and as a result we're expecting moderate to major coastal flooding and also it's going to be cool today too, 56 degrees for your high. we should be in the upper 60s right now. those winds will be out of the northeast at 20 to 30 mile per hour, gusts as high as 50. for tonight we're talking 52 degrees, showers and drizzle. still windy tomorrow, some breaks of sun, a little warmer at 63. diane. >> vanessa, thanks. we'll have another update for you in just half an hour. "cbs this morning saturday"
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welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." i'm anthony mason. >> and i'm bo ninakneeanitaknee --. scientists have dug up the remains of a woolley mammoth. the remains will hope to tell us about what man was doing around the site around 8,000 years ago. >> a new book reveals how and why audiences have returned to make the great white way sing again. >> first the water logged east coast is getting more rain and flooding. last night two people were killed when their boat capsized
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here in new york. three others survived with two rescued from the chilly water. the storm has also been linked to a drowning in south carolina. >> the radar shows why weather warnings are up and down the eastern sea board. more than a foot of rain are expected in places today. >> reporter: it is a bit chaotic here in the historic stiff of charleston as there are more than 40 streets that are flooding. we are on calhoun and the water is nearly knee deep. there are a few vehicles stalled out here. most are healthcare workers at the nearby hospitals who were headed to work when their vehicles stalled out and they decided to get out. the governor declared state of emergency for this very reason. the national weather service is predicting what could be historic rainfall and
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flash flooding in and around the state of california. authorities report multiple evacuations took place in myrtle beach and nearby georgetown. a similar situation in north carolina where there are reports of evacuations in communities of carolina shores. roads are washed out in waste deep water in north myrtle beach. and authorities have responded to several accidents and motorists stranded in water. amtrack has also suspended some service throughout the southeast today. and with flood warnings in effect officials warn to take cautious. live in charleston, they are under a flood warning and we've been told there's three to five inches of rain already fallen in the last 8 hours and another 8-10 inches of rain that could potentially fall over the next
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>> worst may yet be to come. amazing to see people still trying to drive through the water there. >> more on this storm system and hurricane joaquin. we learn to lizette gonzalez from our miami station. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the threat for severe to historic flooding continues through monday for portions of the east coast due to this stalled frontal boundary. and it is just drenching the mid atlantic, especially the carolinas. the ground is already saturated. we could see an additional one to two feet of rain. especially south carolina with north carolina where flash flood warnings are in place and there is a tropical connection. as we take a look at all the moisture streaming in due to hurricane joaquin, which is finally moving away from the bahamas, as we look at the latest satellite image you can see that really has been bearing down on the baahamas and it's
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expected to move northeast werd. the latest voesadvisories. although joaquin is expected to stay away from the u.s. coast we are going to see the potential for coastal erosion, rip current, rough surf and hazardous marine conditions from the new england coast to the weekend. >> lizette gonz lens of wfort in miami this morning. thank you. >> this will be a somber day in roseburg where nine people were killed in the latest mass shooting. we are get more word of chris per harper merscermercer's investigators say he had guns with him when he started shooting here. they searched his apartment and
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harper mercer was a student at the community college here. that he was enrolled in the class where he opened fire and that the teacher was his first victim. now additionally they found a disturbing document written by the 26-year-old it's been described as the rant of someone who is mad at the world and feeling like a loser. he writes about going out in a blaze of glory. the note he left behind portray this is gunman as depressed and angry but apparently he's not affiliated with any group. >> the daliai lama is telling followers he's in excellent health. he's 80 and returned to the tibetan government in northern india. he said he had a thorough check up at the mayo clinic in minnesota. doctors say he's good.
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woolley mammoth may provide new evidence about ancient humans. a paleontologist from the university ofmy myichigan says it may tell us a lot about human activity and he says it is only a partial skeleton. so that probably means it was probably brought think there by humans. >> it might sort of stretch backward in time our idea of when humans were here in michigan and active in that sort of way. >> the evidence could show that humans were in michigan as far back as 15,000 years ago. the farmers who found this they were looking in a drainage ditch and when they hit it they thought it was wood. but isn't it incredible that it's so intact. >> can you imagine whether it would have been like to pull a that up?
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chicago t oscar winning 2000 film based on the new musical that was revived on broadway 40ise40 ise years ago. it hasn't been always been that way. >> in the 1970, interest in live theater hit an all-time low and broadway's dilapidated theaters almost turned out the lights for book. this newrazzle-dazzle. >> the book is so interesting it follows a historical narrative but we also meet the families. why did you decide to do this book. >> well i was interested in the revival of broadway, because if you have been around as long as i have. you know the city was going bankrupt. time square was dangerous. there was no tourism. theaters were being torn down. and i was interested in a handle
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of people. the people who owned those theaters who felt they needed to revive broadway. and in so doing they lifted the fortunes of time square and new york itself. people from all over come to see a broadway show now. >> a couple of the major theater owners and producers in the city going to mayor koch. >> you got to fix time square. and koch used to say, listen, don't bother me. where is broadway going to go? new jersey? but there is something new york has that no other city in the world has and that is broadway. and i would argue as i do in my book, the water shed moment in the history of city was when michael bennett sat down and interviewed all of his friends
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shows. from that he created the chorus line. >> let's talk about that. what did that show cost? and what did it earn? >> the initial kaptlation was about 500 thousand dollars and it went on to make 3, $400 million. >> wow. >> and the ratio of success to failure is shocking. >> sure. for every hit show on broadway there are probably 20 that lose everything. the biggest loser of all time was spiderman turn off the dark. they lost a hundred million dollars. but the current worldwide gross of cats is 4.5 billion, with a b. >> staggering amount of money. but the up front costs are
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substantial now to put on a musical. >> of course. the average musical now is 15 to $20 million. ao it's gotten more and more expensive. but again, if you have a hit now. and we don't think back in the 70s we thought well a show would run in new york for a time. now they run around the world. >> do you think there is something about the name recognition recognition? because you look at so many the showes on the broadway and they were movies. like lion king. a alladin alladin. >> is there something to that. like the audience wants something that is spoon fed. they know the trend. >> they flow broadway is a place to make a lot of money so they take the famous own old moves. but the shows that are the big hits are the ones that are completely unexpected. if someone said hey let's take this thousand page novel and
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turns out to beless less miserables. >> don't give them what they want give them what they couldn't even imagine. and that is when theater is exciting. you go to the lion king and think i'm going to see a cartoon on stage. and onall of a sudden you are sitting there astonished and when the hairs stand up on the back of your neck that is when the theater is fun. >> where does it go from now? >> i think again the shows that surprise us are the exciting ones. the biggest show on broadway now is hamilton. it is a rap musical about alexander hamilton. does this sound commercial to you? it has a $40 million advance. >> everyone who sees it loves it. >> i would rather see a hamilton than some old movie that a hollywood studio has exhumed and
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trying to put on stage. >> razzrazzle-dazzle. thank you so much. >> coming up they are called low-speed electric vehicles. essentially street legal golf carts but the fans are boosting the fun notion and sales. coming up "cbs this morning saturday." and when you bundle your home and auto insurance through progressive, you'll save a bundle! [ laughs ] jamie. right. make a bad bundle joke, a buck goes in the jar.
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we're talking about low-speed electric vehicles. more commonly known as golf carts. but these rebate aren't just any cart. some look a lot like miniature hot rod sfls you own two. >> two golf carts. >> one for you and one for your wife? >> no. one for me to go golfing in. and one for me to take her out to dinner and to take her shotting. >> since moving to florida he trades in his car for a golf days. but not a run of the mill model. his tricked out candy apple red california road sters look more like a hot rod. and has safety features to which makes it street legal. >> we can get to all the doctors the hospitals. we prefer just cruising around in our golf carts. >> this is a community that
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here there are more carts than cars. >> this is quite the sielgtght. >> with over 60,000 golf carts in the villages, it is a major transportation for most people. >> saveing money with this? >> save a lot of money on gas. this is electric powered. i take it home, plug it in. it is ready to go the next morning and off we go. >> is there enough room in here for your wife? she doesn't mind it. >> my wife loves this. she's half the size of you. >> well that's good. >> you can buy a car, at times a planned new car for less than you can spend on some of these golf carts. >> right. from ordinary to extraordinary can run anywhere from 10,000 to $50,000. retired new yorker tim carroll bought his first street legal six years ago. >> you have to register just like a car.
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and you have to get insurance. >> like car insurance. >> yeah sure. >> oh. so this is what? your showroom? >> this is my fun and game room. >> to get one, potential buyers need to go and see the golf cart man. tony de angelo senior used to sell cars. now owns one of the two that village. for the right price de angelo will build whatever you want. from a classic chevy to a vintage mustang. he says business is booming. your clientele. >> i would say 59-99. how much. >> whatever they feel like it. >> you have sold to a 99-year-old? >> yes. >> really? >> they don't care.
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listen, i wanted to make coffins. i'd rather get buried in my car than a coffin, wouldn't you? that what's all about. >> i was born and raised in atlanta and went to georgia tech. and i've always wanted a replica of the georgia tech ram blin reck. >> he paid 17,000 for this look alike 1934 ford. >> seven days a week this is how you get around? >> yeah. this is how i go to the dining room, to entertainment, this is how i take people to and from and go to the post office. this is my chariot. >> better than a car. >> for my application, absolutely. >> what was the main bells and whistle skbls the main thing is i wanted a horn to play tunes because i wanted to play the fight song. and i got that. . >> they are on the path of
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>> regardless of cost, harvard business school thomas bartman urban areas. >> we expect as performance improves and manufacturers add more features, improve safety and comfort, that these will become more and more relevant to the mainstream consumer and the lower prices will bring more people into the market. >> major cities have lowered speed limits making the use of these environmentally friendly and versatile vehicles more viable. gary thinks we could all take the lead. >> do you see this becoming a trend around the country? >> there are over a hundred thousand people here, that live in the villages. and you will see at least half if not more than half are driving golf kartdcarts all around town. ao i think this could be a footprint for other city stos
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decrease the amount of traffic, and parking spaces. two golf carts fit in one parking space. so it eliminates a lot of problems. >> i'm david begno, at the village, florida. >> i want one. i would ride one. would you. >> i want like a maserati. >> they go a lot faster than i thought. they go about 45 miles per hour. i was shiing a really slow golf cart. >> a controlled environment with a low speed like that i can see how it works. >> can you put any more qualifiers on that? >> no i can't. >> coming up. the lowly sneaker, a form of art. we'll visit the world of the sneaker head.
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morning saturday" good morning on this rainy saturday. it is 8:27, i'm andrea grimes. in the news, high winds and thets of coastal flooding have some jersey shore residents still rebuilding after sandy on edge this morning. although hurricane joaquin will not hit our area, the rising tide from a different storm could send water into homes in sea bright. some communities have built barriers on the beaches to contain the water. in union beach, some residents were unable to make it to their homes yesterday when the raritan bay moved into the streets. new this morning, we learned overnight two people died after their boat capsized in jamaica bay. police say five people were on a fishing boat when rough waters and high winds caused it to tip over. two of them were able to swim back to shore and call for help. the nypd aviation unit rescued a third person who was stranded on the rocks.
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the water were rushed to beth israel hospital in cardiac arrest. they later died. now let's head over to va isness a murdoch, get a check on this forecast. vanessa. >> to sum it up, it's going to be cold and wet today. the biggest concern, though, will be the winds. winds will be gusting up to 50 miles per hour along the coast. we're anticipating rough surf to perpet wait itself. waves will be six to 10 feet high, moderate to major coastal flooding expected again today. the biggest impacts, of course, during high tide between, like, noon and 3:30, 4:00 this afternoon for most. so today we will see rain, it will be lighter, though, than we had yesterday, gusty winds, 56 degrees, very cool. those persistent northeast winds are the problem. they'll be at 20 to 30 miles per hour, gusting to 50. tonight it is still soggy, still windy. 52 tomorrow, though, and it starts to settle down a little bit and we start to see some sunshine. andrea, back to you. >> thanks, vanessa. we'll be back with the news at 9:00. i'm andrea grimes.
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continues after this. i'm michael douglas, and new york is my home. there's no place like it in the world. and there's no time to see it like the fall. take metro north to take in the beautiful fall foliage from high above the hudson. swing a club at one of america's greatest courses... see spectacular sights underground... ...or thrilling sights above it. there's so many incredible ways to experience the fun of fall in new york state. plan your trip at iloveny.com.
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welcome to a traffic jam in the rocky mountains in colorado. commuters in estes park got an unexpected surprise the other day, when a herd of elk decided to converge on an intersection. that brought traffic to a standstill. one woman approaching the translate took advantage of the time she had in her hand and recorded the episode with the elk and putting it on facebook. >> i lived in colorado so i had seen elk but naefr herd like that. we begin with sneaker culture. the shoes were invented a year ago.
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the wearer sneak around quietly. and now you can even find them in art museums. >> footwear, as works of art? that's the premise of an exhibition at the brooklyn museum called "the rise of sneaker culture." lisa smalls curated the exhibit. >> it is sort of this all encompassing universe really for sneaker collectors. their collections to sports, to music. and i think most especially the drive and the mania to collect the next new release. >> sneaker enthusiasts better known as "sneaker heads" will spend thousands on their vast collections of must have shoes and special limited editions. >> so when you own a pair of really cool sneakers that when maybe just a few are around it is kind of an art piece. >> for sure. and when you think about the artistic design process.
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excar designers or architects or industrial designers. >> they collaborated to create the limited edition pigeon dunk xb sneaker. it is now a center piece. >> did you ever imagine to be part of an art exhibit at the world class museum? >> never. they're sneakers. >> we were the outcasts. we were the nerds. >> since he was 12 years old. and his taste in shoes is impeccable impeccable. >> we're both wearing converse. you have the old version. i have the brand new converse twos that just came out. >> we might wear the same brand but i don't own 2,000 pairs of sneakers. he does. >> when was it that you saw a pair of sneaks and you were like, man i got to have those. >> the first one that did it i remember vividly was the air jordan 3.
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and i remember walked in with these shoes and everyone looked at me because i was late. and then they looked down at my feet. and they were like what are those. and i was like this feeling i'm going replicate for the rest of my life. itch knew i was ahead from that point. >> the film maker behind the documentary credits michael jordan with setting off the sneaker craze. >> when you look back he made more money last year selling sneakerers in one year than he did in his entire nba career. >> you can trace it back to michael jordan in 19784 was the debut of the jordan 1. and i think that is when the whole thing exploded. >> from sports, to music, to hollywood. >> sneakers became a status symbol.
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run d.m.c.'s iconic song "my adidas" helped forge the style that remains popular today. but as a demand for sneakers grew, they also became more exclusive and harder to get. that is when things started to run afoul. >> i certainly was surprised that there was significant violence attached to some of these releases. >> this is the one that started it all. the nike pigeon. the original one. >> the nike pigeon dunk sc which was dedicated to new york city. even before the release date was made public people started forming lines outside the store. >> this shows the scene outside of the store on the lower east side yesterday. >> were you expecting this? >> no. we thought this will be cool. we'll release this and they will sell hopefully. there were people that came and they knew they weren't going to get a shoe. they were waiting for the kids who got a shoe to get it from
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them. and they had baseball bats tucked under their jackets. >> ten years later the asking price for that shoe is up to $8,000. evidence that the sneaker culture continues to march on. >> it is a 42$42 billion a year business. hard to imagine it growing much bigger but it is definitely something that has not hit the top yet. >> for "cbs this morning saturday" i'm vladomir in new york. >> and the sneaker will be at the brooklyn museum through tomorrow before heading to the toledo museum of art.
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up next, the dish. vivian howard left her north carolina home in search of some good chinese take out. she returned an award winning chef. can i at least put my shoes on? if your bladder is calling the shots... ...you may have a medical condition called overactive bladder or oab. you've got to be kidding me. i've had enough! it's time to talk to the doctor. ask your doctor about myrbetriq to treat the oab symptoms of urgency, frequency, and leakage. myrbetriq is the first and only medicine in its class. myrbetriq (mirabegron) may increase blood pressure. tell your doctor right away if you have trouble emptying your bladder or have a weak urine stream. myrbetriq may cause serious allergic reactions.
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in my mind i'm going to carolina >> she already likes the music anthony. vivian howard grew up in small town north carolina and dreamed of moving somewhere with more sophisticated dining options such as take out chinese. she realized that dream in new york and after a failed try in advertising she turned to cooking. >> worked with culinary stars of the world. and then went home to north carolina and opened a ground breaking restaurant, chef and the farmer. later she launched a chef's life, the award winning tv show. welcome to the dish. >> thank you for having me. >> what do we got? >> we're starting off with a take of an old fashioned.
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pear and brussel sprout salad. big pork chops with sweet and sour beets and their greens. and dirty faroe. >> take us back to north carolina. i know you said a lot of people who grew up in this small town, kinston, they leave. why did you decide to leave? >> well i just had like big dreams. i want to like walk somewhere other than the car. and order take out. i wanted to live in a town with an applebies, believe it or not. >> modest dreams. >> i know. i know. and so i went to college and then i moved to new york and worked -- >> you tried advertising. >> i did. i did. and i found that desk work was probably not for me.
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so i started working in restaurants. starting as a server and found my way into the kitchen and -- >> and as we mentioned you had a very successful career here this new york. >> i think if i had stuck with it i could have. i was certainly in the right places and right kitchens but i was not a leader in any of those places. >> what made you go back home, i'm ready? >> opportunity. my family helped us open a restaurant. >> this was an interesting pivot point for you. there were investors who offered to help you open a restaurant here but you went back. how did you weigh that decision. >> i had a very tight family. and they never thought that i would actually stay here. so when we say, you know, going to up o a store front of our own in new york. and they thought oh no you're not. so the pull of family really was very compelling for me. >> and you met your husband here too.
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>> i kid. -- did. and he's from chicago originally and convinced him to move to north carolina. >> how did you figure out what kind of food you wanted to cook? >> well it took a little while. and i did a dish called blueberry barbecue chicken. basically a take on eastern carolina style vinegar based barbecue. and it was really the first thing that i had ever done related to the food of the region. is people just responded to it wildly. and i thought okay maybe i should pay more attention. so i started paying attention to the foods i grew up eating and putting modern spins on these things. >> wonderful. as we give you this dish and get your signature we want to ask if you could have this meal with any person, past or present, who would that person be. >> oh. maybe i kids. i work a lot and travel a lot -- actually not my kids [ laughter ]
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they wouldn't want any of this. maybe my kids in ten years when they have developed the palate i want them to have. >> do you have a next choice then? >> my kids in ten years. >> that is a really good choice. >> that is a great choice. for more on vivian howard and the dish head to our website at cbs this morning.com. >> up next, a marvelous sicker song writer from london. leon la halvis. critics and audiences love her music, and you will will too. you are watching "cbs this morning saturday." cozy. let's go check out the pantry! it's our dunkin' dream room. amazing. delicious dunkin' donuts coffee. pick some up where you buy groceries. try our k-cup pods today. america runs on dunkin'. too weak. just a moisturizer. not good enough. eucerin intensive repair...
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mirror thinking who's that girl and does the mirror world go on forever calmly you roll sharpening the knives in the attic trying to watch cartoons through the static thinking where am i gonna be if i'm ever 23, oh i'm looking at life unfold dreaming of the green and gold just like the ancient stone every sunrise i know those eyes you gave to me that let me see where with i come from found an old friend
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meeting my guitar in the city feeling like a star in the city and suddenly it seems that i'm where i'm supposed to be oh and now i'm fully grown and i'm seeing everything clearer oh, just sweep away the dust from the mirror we're walking hand in hand on the warm white sands i'm looking at a life unfold dreaming of the green and gold just like the ancient stone every sunrise i know those eyes you gave to me that let me see
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i'm looking at a life unfold dreaming of the green and gold just like the ancient stone every sunrise i know those eyes you gave to me that let me see where i come from ancient stone green and gold those eyes you gave to me green and gold ancient stone green and gold >> the remarkable li yan la havas.
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don't go away. we'll be back with more from li yan. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." feel secure in your dentures... feel free to be yourself all day. just switch from denture paste to sea-bond denture adhesive seals. holds stronger than the leading paste all day... without the ooze. feel secure. be yourself.
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but i know what i got and i know where we're going you don't need to show it, i already know it all it's what you don't do it's what you don't say what it's what you don't do i know you love me i don't need proof it's what you don't do the games you don't play it's what you don't do i know you love me i don't need proof ive been saving up my time so i can spend it all on you you i know what i got oh, all i need is to see you smile blue because i know what i got and i know where we're going you don't need to show it i already know it all
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hurricane joaquin will not make landfall here, but the tri- state area can still expect strong winds and possibly coastal flooding. we have team kofnlg. queens. a boat capsizes in jamaica bay. the latest on the people who were saved. plus developing overnight, three people are dead at a doctors without borders u.s. airstrike. cbs 2 news saturday morning starts right now. good morning. it is coming up on 9:00 on this saturday, october 3rd. i'm andrea grimes. >> i'm diane meceda. we begin with the weather today. hurricane joaquin is no longer making landfall in our area, but effects from that storm and another storm could still cause weekend. >> on staten island huge flashes of light lit up the sky
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after gusty winds downed poles and trees. on long island overnight winds toppled down a tree right on top of a car and the rain dropped more than two inches, causing roadways to flood. and right here in the city people struggled as 30 to 40 mile per hour winds destroyed umbrellas. >> we have team coverage this morning. meteorologist vanessa murdoch is in the weather center. christine sloan is in new jersey and allana gold is on long island. we begin with vanessa who's tracking that storm. >> well, guys, it's going to be another cold, wet and very windy day. here's the setup. we've got a stationary front off the coast, driving rain inland, but joaquin is a major source of moisture for all the rain we're getting and it's also helping to turn up those seas. so it is going to be a mess qui day. thankfully, as we said, no direct hit from joaquin here. but the bahamas, my goodness, for 48 hours the storm just sat over top of them. finally this morning it really started to take that northeast turn. it's moving northeast at 13 miles per hour, but this storm with sustained winds of 125
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