Skip to main content

tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  March 19, 2016 7:00am-9:00am EDT

7:00 am
captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is march 19th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." breaking news overnight. a passenger flight crashes in russia killing everyone on board. a camera captures the moment of impact. plus, a key suspect in the paris terror attacks was taken aalive in aa aalive in a violent rage. >> spring break rules. finances in florida's hot spots and animated movie only for adults to a first-person action thriller.
7:01 am
breaking films at the south-by-southwest festival. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. it did make two attempts to land. state media showing this video which they say is the moment of the crash and the fire. >> a flydubai crashes in russia killing all on board. >> iestigators are focusing very much on the weather conditions. >> severe storms and rain continue to pound the south. >> a brutal snowstorm may hit on the first day of spring. >> coming in from d.c. and then up across much of new england. >> europe's most wanted man captured friday in brussels. he is the first suspected participant in the november terror attacks in london to be taken alive.
7:02 am
spotlight from a donald trump rally in salt lake city, utah. jeff williams on board the nasa. >> pluto's aim here. all that matters. >> half court heave for the win. got it! put-back is good. the blue raiders have won it. >> this is why you call it march madness. >> on "cbs this morning: saturday." >> my job to give you important news. i usually try to stay with the positive stuff but this is important. the epa announced the other day that the flint water thing not just in flint. the water. that's the bad news.
7:03 am
of help explain the trump thing. welcome to the weekend, everyone. anthony mason is off this morning so demarco morgan is with us. >> thank you for being here. >> a trip to a museum to a matchstick museum to the mutual of bad art. we will you take you to the quirky, yet, captivating museums in the world. >> patrick o'connell, with his success, some things keep him up at night. we will talk to him in "the dish." >> he recorded an album with scar let johansson and he'll perform in our saturday session.
7:04 am
southern russia killing all 62 people on board. surveillance video shows the fiery crash of the plane as it attempted to land 600 miles south of moscow. >> the plane belonged to flydubai flydubai, a low cost carrier. kris van cleave is in washington with more on this story. >> reporter: this was a violent crash, leaving little of the airliner intact. 55 passengers and seven crew members were on board when it went down. we are learning this morning investigators have recovered the cockpit voice recorder and the flight data recorder. those so-called black boxes will be key in figuring out what went wrong. the deadly crash happened about two hours after the flight from dubai was scheduled to arrive. based on flight path data, it appears the 5-year-old boeing
7:05 am
the plane ended up about 800 feet short of the runway and in bad weather and included strong wind gusts and rain. the airline says 33 of the passengers were women and 1 men and at least four were children and 18 men. the vast majority of those on board were russia dubai is a popular vacation spot. flydubai began service in 2009. it's only other safety incident occurred when a flight took small arms fire when landing in baghdad last year. among the potential causes being looked at are pilot error, a technical failure, and the bad weather conditions. >> so many thoughts with those victims. kris van cleave in our washington bureau this morning, thank you. france may request extradition as early as this weekend.
7:06 am
this morning. he was arrested on friday in a nearby neighborhood of molenbeek, belgium. >> reporter: this is where the raid took place yesterday afternoon. they have already boarded up the windows but still broken glass on the wind sills and on the sidewalk. even blood stains. abdeslam was treated for a leg injury at the hospital overnight and we understand he since has been transported from the hospital to a secret location. this is thought to be the convoy carrying abdeslam and suspects away this morning. explosions rang out even after yesterday's raid to capture the fugitive as belgian anti-terror squad cleared suspect locations. this is believed to be abdeslam the moment he was hauled away
7:07 am
his leg wounded in the raid. esham owners a corner shop and was there when it happened. what happened when the raid took place? we heard shots fire, he told us, explosions. after ten minutes we saw a man who had been wounded in the leg. throughout the night, forensic teams were seen searching the apartment and collecting vital evidence. investigators believe abdeslam was the driver of the car that carried terrorists to locations in paris last november where 130 people were killed in the massacre. most of the other attackers were shot dead or blew themselves up. in the chaos, abdeslam was able to slip away, calling on friend to pick him up and drive him back to belgium and crossing the border undetected. he disappeared and became the key target of an international manhunt, until yesterday. police got an unexpected break when they discovered abdeslam's fingerprints in another raid
7:08 am
federal prosecutor said that house search was just a routine check to close a few doors as he described it and take a few dna samples. little did they know then it would be to the capture of europe's most wanted man. belgian police say that abdeslam will face interrogation today. at some point he'll stand in front of a judge today or tomorrow and extradited to france to face charges there. >> charlie d'agata in brussels, thanks. protesters clashed with donald trump supporters on the streets last night in salt lake city after republican president front-runner gave a speech. you hear protesters also chatted mr. hate out of our state. police and riot gear blocked the entrance to the venue. no arrests. this was trump's first appearance in utah ahead of the state's tuesday caucus.
7:09 am
president sham nomination took a new turn on friday where mitt romney endorsed ted cruz. julianna goldman is in our washington bureau with that part good morning. >> reporter: good morning. mitt romney has been the most senior republican voice in the stop trump movement and he now says that the path to defeating donald trump is to have an open convention in july and the only way to get there and deny trump the majority of delegates is to help ted cruz succeed in as many of the remaining contests as possible. in a singing rebuke of donald trump, but not really an endorsement of ted cruz, 2012. nominee mitt romney called the current race a contest between trumpism and republicanism. trumpism has become associated with racism, is a south knee and big on theotry and vulgarity. >> mitt let us down. he just let us down. are you sure he's a mormon?
7:10 am
he joked like a dog. >> reporter: campaigning in salt lake city last night, trump fired back. >> he is out campaigning with kasich and then he endorses cruz. people are saying are you sure you know what you're doing? >> reporter: but romney's move bolsters the main argument cruz has been making for months, that he is the only republican candidate who can beat the party's front-runner. >> he would not be a very determined person if this stops. >> reporter: a message he reiterated yesterday in arizona where he was touring the u.s./mexico border. >> if you want to beat donald trump, cruz is the only campaign that can do it. that's why he's voting for me in utah and governor romney explicitly observed that a vote for john kasich only helps donald trump. >> reporter: while cruz was long viewed as the anti-establishment alternative to trump, romney support could be the canary in the coal mine. a signal that more established republicans will follow. perhaps more of a blow to john
7:11 am
with this week in his facebook post, romney said, a vote for governor kasich in future contests makes it extremely likely that trumpism would prevail. >> this is -- it's okay. it's fine. we will just move beyond it and we are going to keep doing our thing. >> reporter: kasich who was also in utah yesterday, shrugged it off. his aides argued he can do well in a host of northeastern states that vote in late april and giving him a boost for republicans with an open convention. >> i don't believe anybody has enough delegates to get to the convention and i'm the only one that can beat hillary clinton. that's what the polls show so maybe they ought to knock it off and get behind me. >> reporter: kasich's chief strategist was less charitable saying in a quote it's unfortunate to see that mitt romney is getting bad political advice. now they said yesterday they would still be using romney running in ads in utah featuring footage when he campaigned with kasich in ohio.
7:12 am
severe weather hit parts of texas last night. powerful storms rolled through austin and houston and packing heavy rain and thunder and lightning. in houston, lightning. the crowd in the south-by-southwest festival were forced to take shelter in a parking garage. parts of louisiana were also hit by very heavy rain there. from rain to snow. yes, snow. parts of the northeast and the mid-atlantic are bracing for one last gasp of winter just in time for the first day of spring. with more on that, we are joined by meteorologist ed curran from our chicago station wbbm-tv. good morning to you, he'd. >> reporter: good morning, demarco. what a welcome to spring with snow maybe in the middle east east. rain in the south, southeast. we have lots of rain moving
7:13 am
shows the rain that moves in here gives us a marginal chance for severe storms as we move florida. now to the northeast. what is headed that way as we head into sunday, especially sunday night into monday. this low is tracking well off the coast and pretty warm temperatures, so very few people will see any amount of really disruptive snow. most of it light snow. winter storm watch for parts of massachusetts and rhode island. >> i don't know. all snow right now feels a little disruptive. thank you, ed curran. kurdish forces are gaining ground and forcing isis to pull back in north iraq. this week the kurd captured an american who joined the islamic state and said now, quote, he made a bad decision. khweis is one of 200 who tried to join isis and fight with them
7:14 am
jeff pegues has more. >> reporter: mohammed khweis is one of the few foreign isis fighters we know of to walk out of isis-held territory alive. >> i didn't agree with their ideology. >> reporter: he is a prisoner of the kurds and being interviewed by the fbi a world away from the washington, d.c. suburb where he grew up in this townhouse. he said his parents immigrated from the palestinian territories. his father a limo driver, he says he has spoken to the state department and the fbi about his son. >> i have nothing to say! >> reporter: he graduate in 2007 where friends describe him as a norm guy. >> he wasn't an outcast or anything like that. >> reporter: aaron says growing up, mohammed was known as mo or mike. >> there wasn't anything to lead me to believe that this was on the radar that he is just going
7:15 am
>> reporter: but khweis did join isis and investigators want to know why and how. he left baltimore international airport for england and there he traveled to amsterdam and met a woman who took him to turkey where he crossed the border into syria. he says a month later, he decided life with isis wasn't for him and fled. >> our daily life was basically prayer, eating, and learning about the religion for about eight hours. >> reporter: khweis told kurdish tv he did not see other americanforeign fighters. they will take their time debriefing him. a new poll suggests that americans are divided over
7:16 am
encrypted iphone of one of the suspects in the san bernardino terrorists attacks. 50% say apple should unlock the phone but 45% say no. cbs news justice reporter paula reid is following this case. are you surprised to see the country is pretty much split on this issue here? >> it's not surprising that americans are divided. particularly when you think of the interest at stake here. potentially getting evidence in the deadliest terror attack on u.s. soil since 9/11 or promising the security of our iphones. what was surprising to me in this poll, however, is that the fbi and the department of justice still have a slight edge in public opinion and surprising because as our poll shows, apple is a very beloved company and people view it very favorably and had the means and the will to wage a pretty significant par war. >> tim cook on the cover of
7:17 am
cooperated and did everything they asked and learned about the court order initially through the press. why do you think it is -- i mean, who is getting their message out better at this point? >> as you mentioned, the cover of "time" magazine, apple has that. i think apple has the money, the will, the means to get their message out more effectively to be a little more allowed in this argument. the department of justice is also restricted in terms of what they can talk about in a case that is currently being litigated so why it's so surprising in this poll the fbi and the department of justice still most people side with them in this case. >> you've spoken to sources in both camps. any room for a compromise at some point? >> it does not appear any chance of compromise. this case is likely going all the way to the supreme court. when i talk to sources on both sides even they say we are willing to compromise what about this or do that? i think to myself that not going to be acceptable to the other side. so even what they put forth is compromised, it's not
7:18 am
>> let's talk about what president obama said in his keytote speech at south-by-southwest. he says technology can empower individuals to do things they could have never dreamed of before. it can also empower folks who are very dangerous to spread dangerous messages. who is he referencing? >> he is specifically speaking to terrorist groups because that is a concern going dark. of all the places to make this argument and come out with this argument south-by-southwest is not a very receptive audience. i know that fbi, the department of justice were pleased that he came out and stuck his neck out for them in this case but they also wish he had done that earlier the past two and a half to two years as head of the fbi and others have been out there trying to get legislation, trying to start a national conversation on this issue. >> i think the "time" magazine article will start the conversation. tray walker, baltimore ravens cornerback, is dead following a dirt bike crash in miami.
7:19 am
with no lights and wearing dark clothing when he collided with an suv on thursday night. walker played only one season in the nfl. upsets abound and brackets busted on the second full day of the ncaa tournament. now for the just eighth time in tournament history, a two seeded ousted by a 15 seed. michigan state, a favorite of many, including president obama to make the final four, gets shot in the first round. middle tennessee state university ran out to an early lead and never trailed in the game. the blue rared win their first tournament game since 1989. 90-81. in the second biggest upset of the day, 14th seeded stephen f. austin knocks out third seeded west virginia. lumberjacks win their 21st straight game but the most dramatic finish of the day certainly belongs to northern iowa and texas. >> taylor attacks. floats.
7:20 am
last chance for the panthers. >> he said he wouldn't take a time-out in this situation. >> jefferson. half-court heave for the win! he got it! northern iowa wins it at the buzzer! for that? >> you got to love it. >> you saw moments after the sixth seeded longhorns tied the game at 72, jefferson nailed a half-court buzzer beater to give northern iowa upset victory. >> the madness continues today. coverage starts at noon eastern with miami taking on wichita state and followed by duke and upstart yale. then later on, kentucky faces indiana and kansas meets uconn. it's all here on cbs. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. "the boston globe" reports a judge in new hampshire ordered owen labrie to jail friday. it comes after labri e
7:21 am
court-ordered curfews. the judge accused of the student bringing it on himself. he is facing a one-year sentence. hollywood reporter says a movie is on hold after o'brien was injured on the set. he fell during a scene. his injury is described as not life-threatening. the death cure is expected to be released early next year. "usa today" says star gazers are gearing up for a double-header. emerald green comet is expected to streak across the northern hemisphere on sunday. astronomers say it should be visible to the naked eye barring any interrupting light. pope france is about to use another social media platform. the pope is expected to appear on instagram today. he has almost 9 million followers on his twitter account where he posts a variety
7:22 am
hardly any photographs. don't look for any pictures. that could change now on the photo oriented instagram site where the pope's handle will be francisus. >> bruce springsteen came through for a young fan. fourth grader attended the boss' concert with his father in los angeles on tuesday night and knowing he would be out past his bedtime he managed to get springsteen to vouch for his late arrival at school the next day. springsteen had a security team escort them back stage where he wrote a note acknowledge is that the boy was out rocking with him. the teacher was okay with the note and even let the boy keep it. >> pretty cool. >> i would say that is fake! pringsteen didn't write you a
7:23 am
>> what a cool father to coming up, concerns over lead in school water fountains. the contaminated drinking water in flint, michigan, is not an isolated incidence. details on testing of dozens of schools in the northeast. later, one florida city puts the brakes on routing spring break antics but the breakdown comes with a price.
7:24 am
7:25 am
stay with us. the untold stores by photographers to give a big picture of the vietnam war. >> kate middleton speaks out in her first solo interview.
7:26 am
7:27 am
saturday." morning. march 19th. i'm andrea grymes. the nypd is searching for the slashing. a cyclist believed to be a delivery man was stabbed and slashed by a pedestrian. this happened just before 8:30 last night near 31st and 8th near madison square garden. investigators are not sure what led to the violence. the victim was treated at the hospital and is expected to survive. police have also released a sketch of a man they say slashed a woman in the neck in brooklyn. surveillance video shows the man police believe attacked the 53-year-old last thursday. the victim says she was looking at her text messages when the man approached from behind, slashed her and then ran off.
7:28 am
repair the wound across her throat. the suspect left behind a knife and an american flag bandana. as of march 13th, there have been 809 slashings and stabbings in the city. that's a 20% increase from last year. and now vanessa murdock with a check on the forecast. >> yes, the potential for snow tomorrow although the totals look less impressive than yesterday. the storm is tracking more out to sea. right now, chilly, 36 in the city. we've got mostly clear sky, a few clouds moving through central new jersey. otherwise, a beautiful start to your day. 46 degrees this afternoon. increasing clouds. maybe a slight chance of a little bit of wet weather to the south of the city today. and then overnight, some snow flakes. fall to 32 overnight. mostly cloudy. tomorrow afternoon, we expect the chance for some snow, 39 degrees, a trace to 2 inches for most of us. >> thank you. we will have another news
7:29 am
7:30 am
"cbs this morning saturday." our top story this half hour, growing fears that the threat of lead tainted drinking water extends far beyond the city of flint, michigan. worse, it is turning up in school water fountains. >> the epa says in over four years the water systems in over 431 schools nationwide have been found to have unsafe drinking. anna werner hat story. >> reporter: tanker walker brought his daughters into school for lead poisoning. >> i think the school is the safe. that shows they are not on top of their game. >> reporter: parents were concerned about elevated lead
7:31 am
schools this year. the district has now revealed 12% of the water samples taken between 2012 and 2015 have also been above the federal limit of 15 parts per billion. doctors say no level of lead is safe for children. valerie wilson is a newark district administrator and she blames old fixtures. >> we have 67 schools. they average 82 years old. the building infrastructure needs to be replaced. that is significant. >> reporter: wilson says the district has been addressing lead problems in school's water since 2004, including adding water filters. but the teachers union released these pictures of what it says are outdated filters. some dated 2012. union president john abegone. >> i believe they pushed it to the back burner because it was not on their to do list. >> reporter: are you comfortable that children have not been hurt by these higher lead levels? >> i am not a medical expert so
7:32 am
i don't want anybody to think the district is not concerned about that. right? but it is not a primary source of contamination for children. >> reporter: district officials told us late thursday, they disagree the filters the union photographed were outdated, but could not tell us how many filters do need to be replaced. the superintendent has brought in state environmental officials to work on the problems here and the students are already drinking bottled water. anna werner, cbs news, newark, new jersey. coming up in this year's election what is fueling the popularity of some candidates. election experts say it is the
7:33 am
what areas are the most up next medical news in our "morning rounds," including why the cdc is pressing directors to cut back on addictive painkillers. jon lapook and holly phillips answer questions that every smoker asks. what is the best way to quit? this is "cbs this morning: saturday." we know designer when we see it. like the designer smile. it's bolder, brighter and our blogs are buzzing about it. it's the new must-have look. the designer smile by colgate. new optic white high impact white toothpaste. with a professionally recommended whitening ingredient... ...for four shades visibly whiter teeth. and...a buzz-worthy smile!
7:34 am
colgate optic white high impact white. if you have moderate to severe ulcerative colitis or crohn's, and your symptoms have left you with the same view, it may be time for a different perspective. if other treatments haven't worked well enough, ask your doctor about entyvio, the only biologic developed and approved just for uc and crohn's. entyvio works by focusing right in the gi-tract to help control damaging inflammation and is clinically proven to begin helping many patients achieve both symptom relief as well as remission. infusion and serious allergic reactions can happen during or after treatment. entyvio may increase risk of infection, which can be serious. while not reported with entyvio, pml,
7:35 am
may be possible. tell your doctor if you have an infection, experience frequent infections, or have flu-like symptoms, or sores. liver problems can occur with entyvio. if your uc or crohn's medication isn't working for you, ask your gastroenterologist about entyvio. entyvio. relief and remission within reach. if your family outing is magical for all the wrong reasons. you may be muddling through allergies. try zyrtec for powerful allergy relief. and zyrtec is different than claritin . because it starts working faster on the first day you take it.
7:36 am
time for "morning rounds" with dr. jon lapook and dr. holly phillips. last sunday, "60 minutes" report on oregon the first state to -- >> elizabeth water had advanced colon cancer and talked about the importance of having end of life issues. >> when we shine light on anything, it gets better. and i think that we are all getting older. let's face it, you know?
7:37 am
education would call it, old age tsunami. this isn't something we are getting away from. the more we can have a conversation about death and how that is handled and be okay with it, i think the better our society is, and the more loving we all become. >> good morning to both of you. jon, we start with you. where does the conversation go from here? >> hopefully, it widens. the dying conversation is a small sliver of the bigger issue of the end of life. as a country, we are not very good for a lot of reasons at embracing that. there are areas there has been a example. the people who i've met who work in hospice, they are amazing! there have been tremendous advances in that field. but we still have a ways to go. >> i also i think just on an individual level, i know i'm trying to do better in my own practice talking to patients about end of life issues.
7:38 am
do they have a living will? have they given thought to what they would want as they near the end of their life or what they want their family members to know about. >> it seems a polarizing issue that people have strong feelings about it when it comes in. >> i think the issue of aide and dying, there are natural conversation that is bubbling up. in terms of the whole issue of end of life discussions, i think it's just harder. i think as physicians, we don't start the conversations. we think of death, unfortunately, as a failure too many times rather than a normal part of living and we have to get better at starting that conversation with our patient. >> sure. there's a great focus on, you know, as physicians, taking care of patients and keeping them healthy' taking care of them toward the end of their life. but rarely do we sort of cross over and say, once we are approaching the end of life, then let us help our patients do that as well. >> the time to have the conversation is not when you're staring death right in the face. it's earlier when you're feeling
7:39 am
more relaxed conversation. >> but a difficult conversation to have. up next the cdc urged doctors to stop overprescribinge ing opieen open opie. the recommendation are focused on primary care doctors who give about half of the now. the big picture. first and foremost that doctors consider nonmedication therapy first before nonhabit forming medication. finally before considering the more serious painkillers. other things they want to make sure doctors have conversations
7:40 am
front about the possibility of addiction, abuse, and overdose of the drugs. then also once the drugs are dose, they should be short acting and she should be given time. we shouldn't open up the treatment here is a month worth of pills. it should be here is three or four days worth of pills and but doing that i think we can curtail the explosion of use we have seen the last few years. >> but you have to have a prescription. >> right. >> in your view, how did we get to this point there is so much prescription prescribing? >> i spoke to the head of the cdc about this. he puts the blame squarely on the shoulders of the primary care physicians especially. since 1999 the number of prescriptions for opioids have been overprescribing. we are overestimating the benefits.
7:41 am
school and learning how to treat pain. >> what are people with chronic pain and doctors treating these people supposed to do as a result? >> sort of picking on what dr. jon was just saying right now, not only have we had a shift in the understanding of the serious risks of these medications, we are shifting our understanding of the effectiveness. there are great limitations on the effectiveness of these drugs. if you take many forms of low back pain, those respond better stretching, yoga, even mindfulness. they respond to even better to those things than the serious painkillers that we are prescribing a lot of now. also, other medications that aren't habit forming.
7:42 am
question for anybody trying to kick their smoking habit. researchers divided nearly 700 adult smokers into two groups. one gradually reduced smoking and the other quit suddenly and completely. both have nicotine patches and other therapies. like a band-aid is the best way? >> it's just cold turkey really was the best way. when i have patients come into my practice that successfully quit, so many times when i say how did you do it? they say, i woke up and threw out the cigarettes and never looked back. i always say, i want to bottle that. what was that moment right before that? >> a body moment. >> yes. if only figuring out how to get patients to that point, we could help so this other people. >> drawing from nicotine, some experts say is as hard as withdrawing from heroin. in my experience, that is actually true.
7:43 am
lots of other modalities. >> finally, want to improve your health? a good question. australian researchers have some advice. retire! you heard it right! remembered! after retirement, 25,000 older australians were more active and decreased sitting time and less likely to smoke and get more sleep. all factors linked with better overall health. >> can i sign up for that? i'm out of here! over the years. it's all over the place whether you're happy or unhappier, less health, health care. it depends. if you're retiring because you were just fire and in bad health it's one thing. if you retire because the end of a glorious career, you have plenty of money to live on, that's different. >> there is a right and a wrong way to retire. if you keep up your social connections and do it the right way, it's the right way. if you slow everything down, like your health, it's not the
7:44 am
>> thank you both for joining us. up next, time again on beaches everywhere. college students are cutting loose for spring break. but some places this year isn't quite so wild. we will take you to one of them. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." if you need advice for your business, legalzoom has your back. our trusted network of attorneys has provided guidance to over 100,000 people just like you. visit legalzoom today. the legal help you can count on. legalzoom. legal help is here. i love to take pictures that engage people. and to connect us with the wonderment of nature. the detail on this surface book is amazing. with the tiger image, the saliva coming off and you got this turning. that's why i need this kind of resolution and computing power. being able to use a pen like this. on the screen directly with the image. it just gives me a different relationship to it. and i can't do that on my mac.
7:45 am
trugreen presents the yardley's. sfx: leaf blower dad! sorry. this is more than a lawn. this is a trugreen lawn. live life outside with trugreen, america's #1 lawn care company. spring is on. start your trugreen lawn plan today.
7:46 am
with ingredients like roasted hazelnuts and cocoa, the delicious taste of nutella takes pancakes to a whole new level. make any day a pancake day with nutella. spread the happy! seresto makes it easy to help protect your dog or cat from fleas and ticks. with the performance you expect from a monthly topical in a non-greasy collar... seresto kills and repels fleas and ticks for 8 continuous months.
7:47 am
swing, out of control crowds and a shooting death. in panama city beach the party is all but over and leaving some businesses struggling to survive. mark strassmann has that story. >> reporter: panama city beach used to have his own version of march madness -- spring break. the final four once meant last call for 20,000 college kid a week. but a year later, beaches here look plenty quiet. grown-ups stepped in and took control of the beach party. >> we are seeing a decrease in
7:48 am
have here on spring break. >> dan roe leads the panama city beach convention and city leaders. >> the city leaders were compelled to make legislative changes because of young people behaving badly. >> not just badly, criminally. this cell phone video allegedly shows the gang rape of an - unconscious woman. no one in the crowded beach stepped in. seven people were shot at a house party. and police made more than 1,000 arrests in march alone. this year it's against the law to drink booze on the beach for the entire month of march. police chief drew whitman. >> we are enforcing the drinking on the beach but we try to educate first. the officers have total discretion on that. they can warn them but if an individual need to be cited they are cited and if an individual needs to go to jail they go to jail. >> reporter: police presence is part of that new grown-up supervision. roughly 50 beach drinkers have left the sand in handcuffs but that is also how many beach
7:49 am
>> the people that wanted to get rid of spring break were successful. >> reporter: sparky sparkman has owned spinaker's since 1986. he says this year's business has plummeted. >> between 80% and 90%. normal this time 300 approximately staff members. we have less than half of that now. >> even so the last week at this daze inn a 23-year-old from ohio died after an apparent drug overdose. and a 20-year-old from indiana, after a day of drinking, fell to his death fra-from-om a parking garage. this year the address to spring break has changed and places like miami beach. how many here? a couple of hundred thousands are frequent guests but drinking that ninth beer, the number no longs matters except to miami beach cops. fewer than 400 trying to keep
7:50 am
bobby jenkins ask president of the miami beach fraternal order of police. when communities like panama city beach ban drinking on the beach and get tougher with it, do you see people from other communities who have clamped down the spring break flooding into here? >> we have. we have people making comments they couldn't go to panama beach and they would be harassed from the time they got off the airplane to the time they left. harassed. last weekend the beach party moved into the street and out of control. seven partiers were arrested. >> i guess the people got too rowdy. >> you can deal with one or two but not thousands of them. >> reporter: worse than in years past? >> yes. >> reporter: how so? >> usually people leave when you tell them to leave. here they want to challenge you and take you on about it. >> reporter: miami beach also has a ban on beach drinking. but it's widely ignored. overwhelmed cops say they have too many other issues. for "cbs this morning," mark strassmann, miami beach.
7:51 am
who said folks want to get rid of spring break were successful but it hurt the businesses. we were both talking about this. when with the rules were enacted i knew they would take the party somewhere else. >> if you can't find a beach, you'll find a house. >> and keep partying. david bowie recorded his final album at this legendary new york studio. now the magic shop has closed its doors. amazing history. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." here's a little healthy advice. take care of what makes you...you. aveeno daily moisturizing body wash and lotion with active naturals oat. used together, they provide 2x the nourishment for beautiful healthier looking skin.
7:52 am
this corolla's got a sweet sound system and low apr. nah, i don't live far. it's got tons of room. i do own a broom. this is pretty fun. yeah, i've been thinking of growing a man bun. during toyota's 1 for everyone sales event, get 0% apr financing for 60 months on a 2016 corolla. offer end april 4th. for great deals on other toyotas, visit toyota.com thanks, jan. no, it's jan!
7:53 am
twenty more years of this job? yikes. my kids say go for it, mom. be that woman who does what she loves. knows what she wants. "yeah, mom's gonna go for it!" except ... i don't have a clue where to start. hey we hear you. that's why aarp created life reimagined. it's designed to help you find your true passion - with personal advice from experts, coaches and people like you who are going for it. if you don't think "this is right for me" when you think aarp, then you don't know "aarp". get to know us at aarp.org/possibilities want great whitening without the mess? think outside the box. colgate optic white toothbrush plus whitening pen for 5 shades whiter teeth. brush, whiten, go! no mess, no waiting, no rinsing. colgate optic white toothbrush
7:54 am
parts of the grammy winning suburbs.
7:55 am
studio for his final album. but this week, new york's famed studio, the magic shop, recorded its final note. the latest victim of an ever changing city. during its nearly 30-year history, the studio played host to a long list of musicians, including the legendary lou reed. >> kurt vile. >> reporter: even some saturday sessions veterans like real estate. >> reporter: they recorded their 2014 "atlas" there. with rent rising and a music industry changing, the magic shop was forced to close its doors. >> here what it looked like when
7:56 am
>> reporter: foo fighters front man spoke to steve rosenthal for hbo's "sonic highways." >> what would you like the legacy of this place to be? >> i want people to think that it was place that they could be comfortable in, that worked well, and that things happened musically that couldn't have happened anywhere else. >> such a sad closing. foo fighters tried to buy it and typically new york store, the coop cord said no. >> one thing about neighborhoods, they change over the years and new yorkers who know so ho and say shops everywhere. >> we need those. one side of the political spectrum to the other. huge number of american voters can be characterized in one word. angry. we go in search of the angriest of all. you're watching "cbs this
7:57 am
good morning. it is 7:57 on this saturday morning. i'm janelle burrell. new this morning, police are searching for the driver of a yellow cab who struck and killed a woman in manhattan. it happened around 4:00 this morning. investigators say the woman was already lying on the ground when the cab hit her at 1st avenue and east 17th street. the driver took off. the 44-year-old woman later died at bellview hospital. the city is now facing a $30 million lawsuit from a massachusetts man injured in last month's deadly crane collapse. the 73-year-old says he was sitting in his parked car when the crane's boom crashed down on the roof last month. the crane fell while being lowered in high winds. the suit claims the city was
7:58 am
a spokesman for the city's law department says it will review the claim. now we go to vanessa murdock with a check of the forecast. good morning. >> good morning. the clouds are on the move in advance of what could be a little bit of wet weather for us tonight. well, to the south and some snow tomorrow. but it is not looking nearly as impressive as it was yesterday. the storm is now trending much more to the east which means lower snow fall totals. today, 46 degrees, increasing cloud, slight chance of wet weather to the south later today. overnight, mostly cloudy, maybe a few snow flakes to the south, 3. and then tomorrow, here's the deal. mainly dry in the morning and better bet of snow through the afternoon, evening and overnight hours. most of us get a trace to 2 inches. the high tomorrow 39 degrees. we're talking accumulations mainly on grassy sures ifs. back to you. >> thank you. we will have another update in a half hour.
7:59 am
8:00 am
continues in. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm vinita nair. >> i'm demarco morgan. this half hour, taking shots under fire. hear the incredible untold stories from soldiers photographed in the vietnam war armed only with a camera. they are not the most popular but the most unique. we will show you the country's quirky, kept captivateing, museums. >> and what is happening at the south-by-southwest faelve. a dubai plane crashed in southern russia overnight and killing all 62 people on board. the fiery crash was captured on
8:01 am
tried to land 600 miles south of moscow. the cause of the crash is under investigation. near hurricane strength winds may have been a factor. >> flydubai left dubai for southern russia carrying 55 passengers and seven crew members and most of them russian. >> the top suspect in last year's paris attacks that killed 130 people could soon be sent to france. salah abdeslam is in police custody in belgium. on tuesday, belgian police tracked him through a brussels neighborhood and he was arrested on friday in a raid in a neighborhood where he grew up. during the raid for allegedly helping to hide salah. charlie d'agata has more in brussels. >> reporter: that is the house where the dramatic raids took place yesterday. it's all boarded up and a police guard in front. there is still broken glass and blood on the sidewalk.
8:02 am
he tried to get away. they dragged him into a police car. he has been treated overnight at the hospital for a leg wound but he has since been moved on from there. belgian police say that he will face interrogators today and stand in front of a federal judge either today or tomorrow. he will be extradited to france to face charges and french authorities believe that will happen sooner, rather than later. a fairly straightforward process. prosecutors believe he was one of the drivers in a massacre targeting cafes and stadium and a buskmusic concert and been on the run since november. now investigators believe he may have been lying low inside these neighborhoods in brussels all along. >> charlie d'agata, thank you. parts of the south and southwest are recovering from severe weather. powerful storms battered texas with heavy rain, thunder, and lightning. it was quite a light show in southeast houston last night as lightning bolts lit up the sky. in austin, lightning forced a
8:03 am
south-by-southwest festival. the crowd had to take shelter under a parking garage. >> heavy rain and hail to texas it was very heavy rain in parts of louisiana. arrival of spring tomorrow, winter weather returns to part of the mid-atlantic and the northeast. we check in with meteorologist ed curran from wbbm-tv in chicago. >> we continue to see rain down to the southeast here. our future cast shows us as we go through the day, a marginal chance for severe storms here in florida. then we turn our attention up to the northeast where this nor'easter is moving off the coast but well enough off the coast and most people see a very little bait of snow. the most will be seen in parts of massachusetts, near boston and parts of rhode island and it's in that area we have a winter storm watch until monday at 8:00 a.m. from tomorrow during the evening time. so we are looking at temperatures that are staying up too.
8:04 am
even tomorrow, 39 in new york. so whatever snow falls wents beon't be around for long. >> ed curran, thank you. republican presidential front-runner donald trump got an icy reception during an appearance in salt lake city last night. supporters clash with protesters state. there were no arrests. it was trump's first appearance in utah which holds its caucuses on tuesday. former presidential candidate mitt romney said he will vote for texas senator at the cruz in the utah caucuses even though he campaigned with john kasich in ohio this week. bernie sanders visits arizona today and former president clinton will campaign in phoenix on behalf of his wife. a presidential campaign season unlike any other, one word used time and time again to describe how many voters are feeling. >> voters are angry.
8:05 am
>> 4 in 10 voters say they are angry. >> they have ankle remember that% is unbelievable. >> the people are angry and people are very frustrated. >> look. someone who has been angry for decade, i'm getting a little tired of these people thinking i got to care about their anger. >> where are the angriest voters in the united states and how does that play in the presidential race? yahoo! finance columnist rick newman crunched the numbers. how do you define angry? >> we looked at it economically. ranked states by unemployment rate and changing employment and overall employment and manufacturing employment the last ten years and change in income. the point is identify where people feel like they are falling behind and which states are relatively prosperous. that does correlate with the so-called angry vote we are seeing for donald trump. >> which states were they angriest and least angriest? >> here is the most angry list. new mexico, alabama, rhode island, nevada, delaware, new
8:06 am
states prospering both the dakotas. idaho, iowa, utah. primary is coming up. oklahoma, montana, colorado, washington state. >> there is really no debating if you watch any media coverage that people feel donald trump has been able to use that momentum and capitalize on the most votes. what is your assessment of how he is doing it? >> well, we put this list together first. then we said, well, of the angry states that have held primaries how many has donald trump won? of the 20 angry states held primaries, 11 held primaries, winning percentage. the only one he didn't win was ohio. john kasich won there. if you flip it around the least angry you think of the most prosperous states he won 36% of those states where there have been primaries. so, clearly, he is doing better struggling. >> he is talking about the economy more than the other candidates? >> sure. trade. these terrible trade deals that
8:07 am
economists have always sort of said, yes, that happens but, overall, everybody benefits from free trade. even economists are starting to change the way they think about that and saying well, let's look at china. we know we are getting a lot of cheap stuff from china but has the overall economy, you know, improved because of open trade with china? and they are staying we are having trouble identifying the benefits. the new jobs that are supposed to be generated as the overall economy improves. we are not seeing those. there is legitimacy to this claim. there are angry voters and they are angry for legitimate reasons. >> looking at the angry voters in so many key states, do you think that led to the downfall of marco rubio? >> rubio tried to run a positive campaign for the most part. we know he went negative on the trump at the end and he himself acknowledged that didn't work. yeah. so he was probably a little too optimistic. another test. john kasich is trying to run a positive campaign. talking about the things we can do, things going right and things we can do better rather than everything is wrong.
8:08 am
works. i think the real question with regard to trump are there enough angry voters to really put him over the top and my guess on that is no. there are not enough angry voters overall, because things are generally going relatively well in the economy. >> it's working for him now. >> that's right. right now, he's getting enough but let's remember he does not -- he is not getting mantle of -- majority of voters in these states and that correlates to the portion being left behind in this economy. >> i can't imagine the angry comments you got after that poll. >> you're right about donald trump. you got to take it when with you write about donald trump. a jury in florida awarded hulk hogan 115 million. he sued gawker media for use a sex tape video for him. hogan's attorney says it protects the privacy of celebrities.
8:09 am
other people who have been victimized by tabloid journalism. consider punitive damages. gawker plans to appeal the decision. for the first time since becoming a member of britain's royal familiar, we are hearing from kate middleton. she sat down for an interview as part of a television special on queen elizabeth's upcoming 90th birthday. in watching her interactions with her great grandchildren. >> i think as soon as we came back here to kensington she is one of our first visitors. i think she is very fond of charlotte and watching what she is up to. [ inaudible ] she always leaves a little gift or something and that shows her love for her
8:10 am
>> the duchess and potential future queen says the queen has been generous in not being forceful with any of the reviews and kind in providing what she describes as gentle guidance. it is interesting. we heard her speak with her husband but this is the first solo interview since the engagement. everything she says is generous. >> when the queen is happy, everybody is happy. >> mother-in-laws can up next, vietnam. only those who fought there saw it. meet soldier photographers who
8:11 am
fiercest combat zone. only half a century later is their work being shown to the public. this is "cbs this morning: saturday." time to stop hey watch that town everybody look what is going down announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by sensome. protect your teeth. i wanted to fix it right away. my dentist recommended pronamel. he said that pronamel can make my teeth stronger, that it was important, that that is something i could do each day to help protect the enamel of my teeth. pronamel is definitely helping me to lead the life that i want to live. and at progressive, we let you compare our progressive direct rate... great deals for reals! ...and our competitors' rates side-by-side, so you know you're getting a great deal. saving the moolah. [ chuckles ] as you can see, sometimes progressive isn't the lowest. not always the lowest!
8:12 am
not right now. you said i was gonna be the hype man. no, we said we wouldn't do it. i'm sorry, we were talking about savings. i liked his way. cha-ching! talking about getting that moneeeey! talking about getting that moneeeey! savings worth the hype. now that's progressive. mastering the enchantment of chocolate. the lindt master chocolatier is stirring up our finest chocolate... and bringing back our dearest friend... the lindt gold bunny. make the magic of easter come alive.
8:13 am
fact. there's an advil specially made for fast relief that goes to work in minutes. the only advil with a rapid release formula for rapid relief of tough pain. look for advil film-coated in the white box! relief doesn't get any faster than this. advil. finding colon cancer early gives me the best chance for treatment. we got screened because i know colon cancer doesn't always come with symptoms.
8:14 am
but got screened when i learned there are options. my doctor helped me find the right test for me. we got screened when we turned 50 and we're so glad we did. if you're 50 or older talk with your healthcare provider. there's more than one way to screen for colon cancer and it's easier than ever. if you're 50 or older get screened for colon cancer. vietnam has been called the first televised war. combat scenes broadcast every night and still photos credited in america's newspapers every morning to shape the perception of the conflict. many of those images were capture by soldiers who received little credit for the risk they took, until now. here is dean reynolds. >> reporter: this is a wounded soldier? >> yes.
8:15 am
and was being evacuated. >> reporter: this is how soldiers like bob lafoon saw the war, through the lens of his camera. >> he just happened to be there. right place, right time so i took the shot. >> reporter: he was an enlisted member of a little known department of the army's special photographic office. their mission? to provide an unvarnished look at the war. he went out in the middle of the fighting? >> yes. >> reporter: ted atchison was one of the camera men. >> i was drafted. >> reporter: you were drafted? >> i was a junior in college. >> reporter: did you think to yourself, oh, boy, if i could just get over there and take pictures? >> no! >> reporter: their access to the battlefield was far greater than press photographers, many of their assignments were classified. >> we shot every conceivable subject in vietnam, everything. >> reporter: bill san hamel was their commander. was your criteria for sending people, this looks like it's going to be really active?
8:16 am
>> reporter: so the more fighting, the more likely you were to send a team? >> yes. washington liked us to get the combat footage. >> reporter: this is among the scenes atchison recorded, an army assault on a vietnamese village 45 years ago. you're just shooting while -- >> yes. i'm out there with my camera gear. and i'm thinking, what the hell am i doing here? >> reporter: more than 200 of them deployed over a decade. two were killed in action. many were wounded. few wore helmets. >> they got in the way. >> no way i could put a camera up on my shoulder standing there trying not to shake. i'm shaking. it's no good. >> reporter: what they shot was used for combat training and about a quarter of it was made available to newspapers and networks. the rest was archived without much note for the photographers.
8:17 am
military museum in chicago. i'm just wondering what you hope people will take away from this exhibit. >> i'd like these people to understand what the photographer went through to take these pictures and what he was thinking, what he had to go through to get to the place to take the pictures. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning: saturday," dean reynolds, chicago. my. >> you have to think a lot of these photographers also felt compromised. like you need to capture the image but you also have to help. probably an interesting line. they were constantly gauging themselves on. should i get involved or stay out of it? >> it's tough. it hits home to let you know and send a reminder to folks fighting a war is dangerous but covering a war is just as dangerous so it's nice to see that they are getting their due after all this time. >> amazing images. >> museums of the unusual up next. thousands of museums in this country and many of them are
8:18 am
we will show you some of the quirkiest collections. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
8:19 am
you may be muddling through allergies. try zyrtec for powerful allergy relief. and zyrtec is different than claritin . because it starts working faster on the first day you take it. try zyrtec . muddle no more . the roles you play in life are part of what make you, you. and you're not going to let anything keep you sidelined. that's why you drink ensure with nutritious calories, 9 grams of protein and 26 vitamins and minerals. come on grandma! giving you the strength and energy to get back to doing... what you love. from the #1 doctor recommended brand.
8:20 am
we know designer when we see it. like the designer smile. it's bolder, brighter and our blogs are buzzing about it. it's the new must-have look. the designer smile by colgate. new optic white high impact white toothpaste. with a professionally recommended whitening ingredient... ...for four shades visibly whiter teeth. and...a buzz-worthy smile! get your designer smile from new colgate optic white high impact white. what's going on here?
8:21 am
we're putting away acorns. you know, to show the importance of saving for the future. so you're sort of like a spokes person? more of a spokes metaphor. get organized at voya.com. i might not think of visiting a museum is one of america's most popular past times and they make about 850 million museum visits every year and more than major league
8:22 am
>> this country has about 17,500 museums and some small and some quirky. peter greenberg, cbs's travel editor, is here with more. >> they are off beat and quirky. >> reporter: let's talk about the first one. when you think of museums you think of a place that stores the best of the best. >> right. >> there is a place that stores the worst of the worst. >> it's called the museum of bad art in summerville, mass. started in 1994. think you're a curator of that museum and having to tell somebody, i'm sorry, we can't take your work because it's not bad enough. the best story i got from this museum a couple of years after it opened an oil painting called eileen was stolen. they offered a e ward of $6.50! >> $6.50? >> it didn't come back. they increased the award to 36.73 and didn't come back and a few years later, somebody said i
8:23 am
pay me $5,000 and i'll return it. they didn't offer that and he returned it any way! look at it long enough, it's bad. >> a museum in new york on mathematics. >> that is not a museum i'd like to go to because i didn't math. great exhibits. it makes things understandable. great interactive stuff for not only the kids but their parents. the largest outdoor public demonstration of -- theory ever. >> what does that mean? >> why i failed math! >> let's talk about a museum for tow trucks. they have tow trucks and tow equipment dating back to 1960. >> this is in chattanooga,
8:24 am
first tow truck in 1916. amazing restored vehicles. in a more serious tone, the wall of the fallen celebrating the lives of 391 tow truck operators who died in the line of duty. real history we don't know about or pay much attention to. we think tow trucks are for illegal parkers or people broken down. they perform amazing service and these trucks are beautifully restored. >> evolution of these trucks as we look at the images. >> what were they using before tow trucks? call your buddy and said help me? >> i was surprised to see there was a whole museum to this. a national mustard museum? >> there is in middleton, wisconsin, outside of madison, wisconsin. they have mustard there from 50 different states and 70 different countries and 5,776 different kind of mustard in pots, tins, jars. everything. it's free. it's free to get in. >> can you sample anything? >> no! you're not going to do that! >> you're going to see it all.
8:25 am
amazing. sort of like my refrigerator! >> talk about how one man's hobby turned into a museum. talking about matchstick marvels. >> this is in gladbrook, iowa. imagine this. 4 million original wooden matchsticks used to make 65 of the most incredible models you've ever seen. things like the battle ship iowa which is 1 feet long. they even have hogwarts in there. this is intricate design. >> amazing. >> the "challenger" and world trade center. >> imagine miniature houses and structures and cathedral and kitchens and tiny. you need to take your time because it's going to take you a while to realize what went into each individual piece.
8:26 am
talking about the charles shultz mutual. >> the largest collection of peanuts art ever. the original comic strips and everything he has done. even the original snoopy dog house is there. i love museum there. >> these are great. coming up, want to be a movie star? here is your chance. henry is an action film that puts you in the role of an unstoppable sideboard.
8:27 am
that and more coming up. good morning, it's 8:27 on i'm janelle burrell. the nypd is searching for the slashing. police say a bicyclist believed to be a delivery man was stabbed and slashed by a pedestrian. it happened before 8:30 last night near 31st and 8th near madison square garden. investigators are not sure what led to the violence. the victim was treated at bellview hospital and is expected to survive. and police have released a sketch of a man they say slashed a woman in the neck in brooklyn. surveillance video shows the man police believe attacked the 53-year-old in dit husband park last -- ditmus park last thursday. she was looking at her text messages when the man approached her from behind,
8:28 am
she had to get 13 stitches to close the gash across her throat. the suspect left behind a knife and what appears to be an american flag bandana. and as of march 13th, there have been 809 slashings and stabbings in the city, a 20% increase from last year when there were 673 reported attacks. and now we turn to vanessa murdock with a check of the forecast. some snow on the way tomorrow. >> and it is on the way but will it get to us? it's looking less and less likely we're seeing significant snowfall tomorrow and most of us will get a trace to an inch. this morning, lovely skies and it will be more cloudy and 46 your high today. overnight, a few flakes to the south of the city and 32. tomorrow, the best chance of snow late afternoon and evening. a high of 39. janelle. and vanessa, thank you. we'll be back with another update in 30 minutes.
8:29 am
8:30 am
continues in just a moment. it started almost 30 years ago as a funky music festival in austin, texas. festival. >> it's underway with 150,000 attendees expected over ten days. the managing editor for fan dangle.com is here with us. >> good morning. >> this festival gets bigger every year. what sets it apart from others? i think the fact you have three festivals all happening at the same time with film, interactive, music. on the film side you have hollywood's best and brightest mingling with up and coming
8:31 am
entire movies on an iphone and it's a cool thing. that is in addition to some of the world's greatest creators and thinkers and leader. president obama was there and gave the keynote speech and went to a taco place to eat and is my favorite taco joint in austin so the president has good taste. >> i grot toot to ask you about the screening. the guy who -- the basic concept is $50 you can see a new movie in your house after you buy. >> for $150. it's a hot topic and espially as major filmmakers are coming out on opposite sides of the debae. i joked it reminds me of the cast america civil war but we have team steven spielberg and has a.j. abrams there. and team christopher nolan who is against it with james
8:32 am
nobody is asking do you want this in your life? i told people on twitter about 300 people were against it. >> you have a bunch of friends in the room. >> you can do it that way. you want movie theaters in your life, in my opinion. i like them. >> you got a chance to screen about 20 new films in austin the past week. talk about some of your favorites, first starting with the comedy don't think twice. >> this is my favorite film i saw in austin. it's a tiny movie and from a director who is a comedian. about new york city improv group and loyalties are testified when one snags a dream job on "saturday night live" show. they call it "weekend live."
8:33 am
the dream? i enjoyed it and key keep an eye out for "don't think twice. >> when i saw the preview for this, i thought it's not for kids. >> stay away from it, mom and dad! >> deranged matchup of "toy story" and lego movie and takes place in a supermarket. like a notch above south park bigger and longer and cut in terms of the filth factor. if you ever wanted to see your favorite food hanky-panky coming to theaters this august is awesome. >> sounds kinky there! tell us about "everybody wants some." >> i watched this film in college and i'll leave it at that. it takes place in the 1980s and hang out for these guys and in
8:34 am
and coming cast like "days confused." and i think it lives up to film. great sound track and takes place when music was converging on each other and i think the movie does a good job at examining fun stuff. >> tell us about hard-core henry. interesting way to shoot a movie. >> gamers are well versed in this foremat. call of duty but entire movie in the first person. a lot of crazy stuff and stunts and not crazy about the story. i think it's a little weak. but if you're into films that do something different, that take risks in the sorts of ways they present themselves to you, you have to see it. you know? the crowds i saw this movie with freaked out for. if you're going to see it, see it with a bunch of friends late night and it's cool. >> sci-fi fans talk about midnight special. >> comes out this weekend. it's pretty good.
8:35 am
of a boy who has special powers and they go on a road trip to escape the different groups who want to use his son for their own selfish purposes. spielberg and carpenter in it and i think speaks to the trend of emerging original sci-fi. i like the smaller intimate stories. blockbuster ideas like appetizers before the summer blockbuster season. >> do you need movie detox when
8:36 am
up next, the dish. patrick o'connell is one of the world's truly great chefs and brought us examples of what that means from his extravagant restaurant in virginia. (two text tones) now? (text tone) excuse me. (phone tone) again? be right back. always running to the bathroom because your bladder is calling the shots? (text tone) you may have oab. enough of this. we're going to the doctor. take charge and ask your doctor about myrbetriq. that's myr-be-triq, the first and only treatment... ...in its class for oab symptoms of urgency... ...frequency, and leakage. 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. if you experience... ...swelling of the face, lips, throat or tongue or difficulty breathing, stop taking myrbetriq and tell your doctor right away.
8:37 am
before taking myrbetriq... ...tell your doctor if you have liver or kidney problems. common side effects include increased blood pressure... ...common cold symptoms, urinary tract infection... ...and headache. it's time for you to make the calls, so call your doctor to see if ...myrbetriq may be right for you.
8:38 am
what brand of makeup is better for your skin than wearing no makeup at all? neutrogena cosmetics. with vitamins and antioxidants. now with foundations in shades
8:39 am
this morning, "the dish "" patrick o'connell. he is self-taught chef. he was strongly influenced as a child by his grandmother who seemed like a magician. >> he has a top ten restaurants in the entire world and dining there is called a life changing experience. we welcome chef patrick o'connell to "the dish." you're a fine chef but also a fine dresser. i've been talking about this blazer the past couple of minutes. tell us what we have here today. >> we have a little taste of the virginia countryside in the springtime.
8:40 am
are sort of our version of the truffle. this magical thing that appears only in the spring. these cone cal shaped mus roomshrooms and turnips and under here a little baked alaskan. so many come to celebrate the special occasions we make these for birthdays and anniversaries. we make it in a mixing bowl and dribble the sugar in and let it set and pop it out. >> i want to ask about your grandmother. we said magician but how do you remember her in the kitchen? >> she was able to make something out of nothing, which is really the transformative process that cooking is all about. >> the story of grandmother as well, right? >> yes. they do seem like magical people. there was always something wonderful to eat. she had a little apple tree outside and some strawberry
8:41 am
out, fill her apron and come back in and make a magical dinner for a huge number of people. >> you're self-taught. how do you find cooking? >> the first job i ever had was in a restaurant, mr. h. i was 15. hi a paper route. and i was bitten by a few too many dogs. and i rode my bike up to the back door and knocked on the job. you don't have to be normal to work in a restaurant. >> i think people look and say it's hard to think it started with one structure that used to be a garage? >> we rented half of a garage for $200 to start. >> the images and drapery, the colors. >> it's a work-in-progress for 38 years. day-by-day, little by little, moment-by-moment,
8:42 am
>> reporter: what is your secret to customer service? a lot of people from around the entire world have to go to this place and try the food out. what is your secret if you could share? >> it's creating a culture of service which is very, very simple. you simply have to be the guest. you have to get inside the guest's mind and feel as the guest feels. >> is it ever overwhelming? i would think cooking for queens and kings and presidents and staying at that level of success must sometimes be overwhelming. >> the pressure alone. >> there are a few sleep disorders that come with the job! but you get used to it. it's very -- it's a buzz. it's a constant hive. you feed off the adrenaline. it's andiction. >> you were interested in developing a regional cuisine. can you tell us about that? >> nothing was delivered there because no one knew where it was. the village has 133 people and it's called washington,
8:43 am
washington, d.c. knew of it. so no deliveries were coming there. we could only get milk to start. we had a little farm. then all of our neighbors grew things, which is what you do when you live in the country. so it was a little like stone soup. people started bringing things and i started organizing the menu around what i could get right there. not because it was chic or fashionable, but it worked. >> not only it worked, i feel like you have impacted really the entire nation in terms of that sense. >> well, we have really foraged and looked for what is right there. the idea is to give people something at any given moment they couldn't get anywhere else in the world at that time. >> as i hand this dish to you to get your signature on it, we want to ask if you could have this meal with anybody past or present, who would that be? >> i think i'd like to invite my grandmother back to she can see what seed she planted and she would have a few critical
8:44 am
>> i'm sure she would appreciate the magic you have created for us. thank you so much. for more, head to our website at cbs this morning.com. >> next up your "saturday sessions." pete yorn is coming up.
8:45 am
sponsored by emirates. this is the all-new 2016 chevy malibu. wow, it's nice. let's check it out. do any of you have kids? i do yes. this car has a feature built in called teen driver technology, which lets parent's see how their teens are driving. oh, that's smart. it even mutes the radio until the seat belt is fastened. will it keep track of how many boys get it in the car? (laughter) cause that could be useful. this is ahead of what my audi has for sure. wish my beamer had that. i didn't even know that technology existed. i'm not in the market for a car but now i may be. if you're looking to save money on your medicare part d prescriptions, walgreens says, carpe med diem. seize the day to get more out of life and medicare part d.
8:46 am
that'll be the highlight of your day. now preview the cost of your copay before you fill. you can even get one-dollar copays on select plans. hi i'm kristie and i'm jess and we are the bug chicks. we are a nano-business. windows 10 really helps us get the word out about how awesome bugs are. kids learn to be brave and curious and all kids speak the language of bug. "hey cortana, find my katydid video". oh! this is so good. (laughs) if you're trying to teach a kid about a proboscis just sketch it on the screen. i don't have a touch screen on my mac, i'm jealous of that. (laughs) you put a big bug in a kids hands and change their world view. (laughs) my opioid pain medication is slowing my insides to a crawl. that's opioid-induced constipation, oic, a different type of constipation. i'm really struggling to find relief... paint a different picture. talk to your doctor about oic
8:47 am
this morning, in our "saturday sessions." pete yorn from new jersey. he set up to become a lawyer but his fans can thank his brothers who talked him into pursuing music full-time. >> he received widespread critical acclaim with his debut album back in 2001. this month he released his seventh album. it is getting great reviews. here is pete yorn performing
8:48 am
is there anybody out there is there anybody waiting getting sick of your surrounding you want some attention you can tell the truth you can tell a lie say you want we just lost it is there anything to change pain is a new pain
8:49 am
never figure out where we come from you can tell the truth you can tell a lie wonder what anybody says it will be all right need another vacation straight out straight out had a long weekend
8:50 am
straight out straight out of straight out of the dressing room wear my new clothes fall down thinking about you straight out of the dressing room wear my new clothes fall down thinking about you straight out of the basement straight out of the basement straight out of the basement straight out of the same thing
8:51 am
need another vacation straight out straight out had a long weekend need another vacation straight out straight out of need another vacation straight out straight out straight out straight out of don't go away. we be lightright back with more music
8:52 am
are sponsored by blue buffalo. if you have moderate to severe ulcerative colitis or crohn's, and your symptoms have left you with the same view, it may be time for a different perspective. if other treatments haven't worked well enough, ask your doctor about entyvio, the only biologic developed and approved just for uc and crohn's. entyvio works by focusing right in the gi-tract to help control damaging inflammation and is clinically proven to begin helping many patients achieve both symptom relief as well as remission. infusion and serious allergic reactions can happen during or after treatment. entyvio may increase risk of infection, which can be serious. while not reported with entyvio, pml, a rare, serious brain infection caused by a virus may be possible. tell your doctor if you have an infection, experience frequent infections, or have flu-like symptoms, or sores. liver problems can occur with entyvio. if your uc or crohn's medication isn't working for you, ask your gastroenterologist about entyvio.
8:53 am
with ingredients like roasted hazelnuts and cocoa, the delicious taste of nutella takes pancakes to a whole new level. make any day a pancake day with nutella. spread the happy! want great whitening without the mess? think outside the box. colgate optic white toothbrush plus whitening pen for 5 shades whiter teeth. brush, whiten, go! no mess, no waiting, no rinsing.
8:54 am
plus whitening pen. what backache? what sore wrist? what headache? advil makes pain a distant memory. nothing works faster stronger or longer what pain?
8:55 am
monday on "cbs this morning" how air bnb is finding new success in cuba and what other u.s. companies with learn. have a great weekend, everybody. >> thank you for joining us. >> good to be with you. >> we leave you with more music from pete yorn. this is "she was weird"! in the time i got to know her
8:56 am
i was never trying to for real i told her in a conversation never win any way and i know it left her forever she don't care there was life big explosion we believe it was real then she died
8:57 am
. good morning. morning. i am janelle burrell. new this morning, police are searching for the driver of a yellow cab who struck and killed a woman in manhattan. it happened around 4 this morning in gramercy park. the woman was laying on the ground when that cab hit her at first avenue and east 17th street. the driver took off. the 44-year-old woman later died at bellevue hospital. and the city is now facing a $30 million lawsuit from massachusetts. a massachusetts man injured in last month's deadly crane collapse. the 73-year-old's thomas o'brien said he was sitting in his parked car when the crane's boom crashed down on the roof last month. the crane fell while being lowered in high winds. the suit claims -- claims the
8:58 am
monitoring the construction site. a spokesman for the city's law department said it will review o'brian's claim. and we turn to meteorologist vanessa murdock with a check on the forecast. >> and clouds are beginning to make their way in and note some precipitation to the west. we could see a few showers well south of the city today. southern ocean county might see some this afternoon. for most of us, it's a dry day, 46 degrees and below the norm. overnight fallling to freezing. mostly cloudy skies for many of us with snowflakes again south of the city. tomorrow, a high of 39. with that, we're looking at a possibility of wet snow and some rain mixing in close to the coast. most of us get about a trace to two inches of snow at most. it wraps up by monday morning. janelle, back to you. >> thank you, vanessa. and very much, our newscast is here at cbs 2 and we're always on cbsnew york.com.
8:59 am
it took joel silverman years to become a master dog trainer. but only a few commands to master depositing checks at chase atms. technology designed for you.
9:00 am
narrator: today on lucky dog, a seven-month-old puppy with a heart-wrenching tale... brandon: her sibling got adopted, leaving this little one all alone. narrator: ...and a dog lover on the hunt for a new concierge. debbie: he greets everyone. he snuggles with everyone, but he's getting older. brandon: basically you want jack to pass the torch. debbie: absolutely. narrator: but before jemma can take up the mantle, she'll need to check her immaturity at the door. brandon: ah-ah! [coins jingling] brandon: she's a seven-month-old puppy. what could possibly go wrong? i'm brandon mcmillan, and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are

91 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on