tv CBS This Morning CBS August 22, 2015 8:00am-10:01am EDT
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it's august 2 the 22nd, 2015. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." three americans traveling abroad are being called heroes this morning. they're credited with spoiling a gunman from launching an attack on a high-speed train. and wildfires continue to burn out of control in the west. we'll hear from the widow of one firefighter who gave his life trying to keep the flames in check. drama for dr. dre. why the rap legend felt a need to make a very public apology. and later what happens when you cross late-night tv with
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viral video stars. james corden found out. we have highlights of the groundbreaking episodes of "the late late show." >> but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> when that fire's coming tord you, i it's like armageddon. >> president obama declares an emergency as washington state burns. >> dry brush and windy conditions are a recipe for disaster. >> i've never seen anything like this ever. this looks like it's burning everything. >> 20,000 firefighters are trying to beat back about 100 monster fires in six states. >> a dramatic takedown on a train in france. >> i saw a guy entering a train with an ak and dispenser, looked over and sate, let's go. >> taking out the number two man in isis. >> wow, wow, wow. >> donald trump taking his campaign to the white house down to victory. >> if it rains, i'll take off my
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hat and prove once and for all that it's mine. okay? >> a mid summer nightmare on wall street. stock prices plunge. oil hits a six-year low. >> the neighbor is calling it the can opener bridge. >> all that -- >> in ohio a public art installation made an escape and was caught on camera. it even ran over parked cars. >> -- and all that matters. >> there it goes. a no-hitter. >> his first ever major league complete game, first win as an astro. >> -- on "cbs this morning: saturday." >> an interesting discovery in the midst of the ashley madison hack. >> josh duggar. he had two attempts. he was cheating on his wife and he was cheating on the woman he was cheating with. i say forget building a wall around mexico. build one around josh duggar.
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captioning funded by cbs and welcome to the weekend. we have a great show for your you this weekend. we're going to take you back in time to the roaring 20s. see a party a century in the makers with flappers, great gatesly and jazz. plus, rich baker spent years fine tuning the art of cooking. he'll join us on "the dish." >> and jason is bow's new song debuted on the top of the charts. he's a singer/songwriter with deep southern roots and a talent for putting truth to music. that will be in our "saturday session." we begin overnight with three americans who are hailed as heroes for foiling an attack on a high-speed train in europe. cell phone video shows them holding the suspect on the train with him tied up on the floor. the train was traveling between amsterdan and paris on friday.
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>> two of the americans who tackled and disarmed the gunman are military personnel. jonathan vigliotti is in our london bureau with the latest. good morning, jonathan. >> good morning. all three are childhood friends. one serves in the air force, another served in the national guard and the other studies physical therapy. their lives took different packets as adults but they were together on a train returning from holiday and officials say if not for them, last night could have been far more tragic. cell phone video shows the suspected gunman hog tied on the ground. the knots that hold him still the handiwork of the 22-year-old national guard and his two friends. >> i saw a guy entering thean ad i looked over at experience and said let's go. he jumped up. i followed him by about three
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seconds. spencer got to the suspect first. >> reporter: he got him by the neck and tackled him to the floor. the gun was fired but he tackled him. the third friend helped administer first aid to the injured passengers. >> we saw that a man's throat had been slit. he was bleeding profusely. >> reporter: officials say three people were injured including stone who is being treated with cuts to his hand. the arsenal recovered hints at what could have happened had the three friends not intervene. he had an assault weapon, handgun and knife along with a dozen magazine clips. the gunman has been identified at a 26-year-old moroccan who was known to intelligence services. over 500 people were on board the trail from amsterdam to paris including this chicago tourist who watched in shock as the friends sprung into action. >> they were asking people you
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do have a tie, a blanket, a scarf just to help stop the bleedi bleeding. >> reporter: france has been on high alert since the "charlie hebdo" attack. in june another terrorist beheaded his boss and attempted glow up the gas plant. yesterday france's interior minister thanks the americans saying without them the country could have faced a terrible tragedy. france's president is scheduled to meet with these heroes in the coming days. officials say the gunman is a known islamic extremist who has visited syria. he is currently in police custody being questioned. anthony. >> so fortunate they were on the train. jonathan vigliotti in london. thanks. also breaking news overnight, hope for the relief in the enormous battle of the wildfires in the drought-stricken west. over 45 fires are burning this morning in five states. in colorado smoke from wildfires is triggering a health advisory for the northern part of the state including the denver area.
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there are more large fires burning in idaho than any other state. a group of fires has destroyed at least 42 homes in the northern part of the state. washington state is especially hard hit where president obama has declared a state of emergency. more than 250 square miles are scorched and authorities say they have no idea how many homes have been destroyed. the situation there so chaotic about 200 volunteers are getting basic firefighting training to help keep the flames in check. >> there was somebody there for us when we neededed them and i feel the obligation to do the same thing. i'm ready to go to work. >> most of the destruction was in okanogan county in the n nor part of the state where at least ten fires are now burning. gusting winds are rapidly spreading the flames. thousands of firefighters are on the line. three died earlier this week in nortrth washington. carter evans spoke to the widow of one of those men.
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he's ee's there. >> reporter: good morning. investigators are still trying to determine what happened. we know rick wheeler was in a fire engine with two other firefighters when it crashed and flames overtook them. >> i heard on the news first about the three firefighterses be killed in the fire up in twisp and i had a gut feeling. >> it was the moment celeste wheeler's life changed forever. in the ten years her husband rick had been fighting fires there had never been bad news. >> i tried to call him a few times and i just knew that he would call me as soon as he could. >> and that call wasn't coming. >> that call wasn't coming, no. it didn't come. >> reporter: instead, two police officers came to the door. >> then i knew what had happened. >> reporter: celeste and rick had known each other in high school. when they started dating in college, rick had already found his calling. >> he's a fourth generation firefighter. >> so it's in his blood.
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>> it's in his blood. yeah. as soon as he started working he just loved it. >> reporter: an avid outdoorsman he loved to hunt and fish. he paid his way through college fighting fires in the summer. >> rick -- rick was good at it. he had that ability to think quickly on his feet. i feel like he was not afraid of anything. >> reporter: he often spent weeks on the fire line in remote areas with no cell service. celeste could go days without hearing from her husband. >> that must have been hard. it must be so hard. >> it was hard, yeah. but being with him was so worth the hardship. >> when you close your eyes is there one particular imyou see of him. >> just his smile. he was just so -- such a happy, happy person.
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he could brighten up my day any time. i'm going to miss that so much. >> where do you go from here? >> i really don't know. i never -- never thought this would happen. i don't know. i don't have any sort of idea what's going to happen next. >> reporter: it's important to keep in mind that rick wheeler is just one of more than 29,000 firefighters battling flames on the fire lines this morning across the west, vinita, each one of them with loved ones hanging on the news report. >> such a heartbreaking story. thank you so much. an estimated 20,000 turned out last night at the football stadium in alabama for donald trump. he did not disappoint the enthusiastic crowd.
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julianna goldman is in our washington room with more on that. good morning, julianna. >> good morning. last night's rally did fall short of the more than 30,000 that the campaign had predicted but it didn't seem to bother donald trump. he shows he plans to compete in the early stakes and he's in it for the long run. he arrived in mobile, alabama, and offered up some typical trump flair. >> you know, if it rains, i'll take off my hat and prove -- i'll prove -- i'll prove once and for all that it's mine, okay? my second favorite book of all time. what's my first favorite book. the bible. >> a special guest didn't even stump trump. >> donald, welcome to my hometown of mobile, alabama.
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>> reporter: senator jeff sessions who gave trump the hat gave him a ringing endorsement. >> the american people, these peopwale, nt somebody in the presidency to stand up for them. we welcome you here. thank you for the work you've put into the immigration issue. i'm really impressed with your plan. >> reporter: as a sitting u.s. senator and the head of an immigration subcommittee sessions' support gives weight to the republicans' front-runners rhetoric. >> i'm a proven conservative with a record. >> reporter: earlier this week jeb bush took on the businessman saying his plan wasn't conservative but also tried to jumen onto the trump wagon, calling immigrants anchor babies. >> you give me a better term and i'll use it, i'm serious. >> when jeb bush -- although now
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he is using anchor respect. i would never condone violence. anthony? >> julianna goldman in washington. thank you, julianna. for more on the campaign we're joined by michael regal. good morning. >> good morning. >> the poll had him up 21-17. is that why jeb bush is now on the offensive with donald trump?
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>> that and he's leading in texas. all i keep thinking about in this relationship, did you guys see "happy gilmore?" here's a rough hockey player who finds out he can hit a golf ball a mile, right. donald trump is a businessman and found out he can going on a political stump speech and hit a golf ball a mile. what happens in "happy gilmore," he starts winning. the establishment takes him but they realize the tv ratings are way up, they realize he's bringing this whole new crowd in to watch golf and eventually the leader of the tour starts imitating happy gilmore's stroke. i think there's a little bit of that with jeb bush. he realizes that. and the ontario candidates, they realize donald trump has patched into this sort of disgruntled nature, anti-establishment feeling that's pretty prevalent
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in the republican party. jeb bush, a pretty mild mannered guy is starting to emulate trump a little bit. >> you say mild mannered. we heard trump say low energy. that the people with him right now are sleeping. do you think those bauschinrbs starting to work? >> trump is one of the greatest insulters of our time. for jeb bush to start counteracting him and go after him it's almost like a rap battle between james taylor and eminem. >> you're just full of them. i love it. >> basically they feel ultimately the air will run out of this. are the pundits wrong? is there a chance he can win the nomination? >> you know, he's got this momentum that's not going away. the latest reuters poll had him at about 30% of all the
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candidates and jeb bush had 16%. you know, a month ago the same poll was about dead even. so, you know, the question is he peaking too early or can he keep going? what's amazing to me, here's a guy he gets a lot of money to spend on ads but he doesn't have to spend a dime on ads because the media has given up the prefix of equal time. they're like, look, this guy brings the ratings, we're going to air him. >> thank you so much. south korea and north korea are holding their first high-level talks in northeasterly a year this morning. the meeting is aimed at averting a possible military confrontation. the north says it's prepared to engage in all out war. the latest fight is over loud speakers constructed by the south used to announce north korea propaganda across the border. we have two big storms to
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talk about in the atlantic. hurricane danny has weakened from a category 3 to a category 2. it has maximum sustained winds of 100 miles an hour. it's more than 700 miles east of the leeward islands and it's expected to become a tropical storm by sunday. in the pacific storm tropical storm kilo could become a hurricane and hit hawaii early next week. kilo has sustained winds up to 40 miles an hour. it's 40 miles south and southeast of hawaii this morning. >> investors are licking their wounds this morning after a bruising week on wall street. stocks got crushed on friday with the dow losing more than 500 points. that made it a nearly 6% loss on monday, the worst week of the year. the s&p and nasdaq also took a beating losing more than 3% on friday. the market plunge was mostly about the flagging economy. let's talk about michael santoli, senior columnist for yahoo! finance. good morning. >> good morning. we've had a six-year market is
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it fair to say it's ending? >> it's a gut-wrenching sect. we were down last ochlkt emerging markets have been suffering for months. you've had this kind of slow motion crash in a lot of parts of the world. risky credits, all these things. u.s. stocks were hovering, kind of immune to it until the last couple of weeks. >> you said other parts of the world. let's talk about what happened in china. what led to them de valle ewing their currency? >> lots of things. they've had a slowdown in their own autonowe to economy for a w they've also had a lot of turmoil obviously. they've had a tremendous rise in the mainland market over the past year, year and half, which was explicitly encouraged by the authorities. they wanted to speculate and then tamped it down. it seems the pullback has gotten
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very vie lenl and out of the authority's control. all of these things are moving aurnld causing the rest of the world to say are we overreliant that china can go like clock work. >> and that china may be even weaker than we thought it was. the defensemen talking about they are prepared to raise the interest rate. is that going to challengnge? >> they believe it is. they call it the normalization process. we've been at zero percentage rauts for a long time. but i do think they're saying if this is all we got at this many years at zero percentage rates and they're prepared to change rates, is that going to be just another thing piled on. so this is all the things we're dealing with. i do think one of the positives here, as i said, everything else had sold off before big u.s.
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stocks did. so the sentiment is very negative and you do have the potential for look last october people to say, well, nothing really fundamental has changed about the u.s. economy. >> thank you so much. there are calls for justice this morning in charlotte, north carolina, after a mistrooil was declared in the case of a white police officer who shot and killed an unarmed black man. there were protested outside the court after a mistrial was held. they kol not reachh police. ferrell's family and attorney says there should be another trial. >> it was a hung jury. the case needs to be tried again until either there's a guilty verdict or an acquittal. so this case has to be tried again. >> prosecutors have not decided
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whether to retry the case. time to show you some of this morning's headlines. the washington paper "the hill" that the number two isis leader was killed in an air strike this week. the senior deputy of the terror group who was responsible for moving explosives, weapons, and people between iraq and syria was killed in a vehicle in northern iraq. the "washington post" says there's been hundreds of close calls between drones and commercial aircraft this year. statistics from the faa reveals nearly 700 incidents this year, which is three times the number recorded from all of last year. the findings were given to "the post" from a government official who objected to keeping the finalings secret. the faa had no comment. the so-called king of infe dilt is the father of two. he says he's never cheated on his wife. peterman is said to have a sign
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on his office wall reading, quote, life is short, have an affair. >> well, that's unlikely. the "chicago tribune" reports nba legend michael jordan can take his like ps to the bank along with a check for $8.9 million. 's what a chicago jury awarded the star after a now defunct grocery store chain used his name in an ad without his permission. he said he had afternon image t protect and it was not to make a quick buck. >> the money is not going to me. it's going to a charity. >> it included a $2 coupon. well, it's about 22 minutes after the hour and now here's a look at the weather for your weekend.
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\s 730am /e another no-hitter in baseball. the fifth of the major league season so far. houston's mike fiers pops his glove into the air after competing a 3-0 win over the dodgers. >> they lost three and struck out ten in only a third game since being acquired in the trade last month. he threw 134 pitches. imagine that. >> that's a lot of pitches. >> he said the exhaustion didn't hit him until he got the last ball out. they're leading the american league west. i have a feeling he's going to be pitching the entire game from here on out. >> i think he's very happy about that game right now. >> i think so. the top story, making
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history by toughing it out. this summer over 400 soldiers sought to prove themselves. >> on friday they graduated including the first two women ever to complete the grueling nine-week training. david martin has the story. then it was official. captain kristen griest and lieutenant shay haber became e shaye haver became the first. >> the women finished while ahead of some of the males and well ahead -- well ahead of 60 other men who didn't even complete their march. so right then and there is what validated them for me that, hey, these women are for real.
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>> reporter: but getting through ranger school is as much about mental tough ps as well as physical and both women thought about quitting. >> siously considered qttin if i didn't. but the ability to look around to my peers and see they were sucking just as bad kept me going. >> by not quitting they proved exactly what opening the course to woman was designed to test. >> i can handle things physically and mentally on the same level as men and deal with the same stresses in training that the men can. >> the men had been skeptical. once the training started. >> you are too tired to care. >> if shea had not helped michael carry his gear he wouldn't have made it. >> shea was the only one to volunteer to take that weight. she took the weight off and carried it the last half of that. literally saved me. >> griest did the same thing. >> nine guys were well, i'm too broken.
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i'm too tired. she just as broken and tired took it from me with like almost excitement. >> more women are scheduled to start ranger school in november and by this time next year, you can expect to see women trying out for that ultimate macho unit, the navy seals. for "cbs this morning: saturday", david martin, at fort benning, georgia. >> congratulations to all of them. a brutal test. coming up an online petition to have former daily show host jon stewart moderate a debate. he is qualified to grill contenders. here is a look at the weather. >> up intersection e medical
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news including the so-called libido pill to boost women's sex drivings. what does it do and what are the side effects? >> doctors on a new study showing a high risk of stroke among work-aholics. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." risks of a high-risk stroke floing work. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." [ female announcer ] the magic begins when jif fresh roasts peanuts to make peanut butter so deliciously creamy. ♪ it always makes the home team cheer. that's why choosy moms and dads choose jif. it always makes the home team cheer. soil is the foundation... for healthy plants. just like gums are the foundation for healthy teeth. new colgate total daily repair toothpaste. it helps remineralize enamel and fight plaque germs for healthier teeth and gums. strengthen the foundation for healthy teeth. new colgate total daily repair.
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time now for "morning rounds" with cbs dr. jon lapook and contributor dr. holly phillips. first up, jimmy carter explained his cancer diagnosis in a can dad news conference this week. he said after doctors removed the tumor from his liver they found four spots of melanoma on his brain. jon, how do they treat that? >> well, the four tiny spots they're going to treat with
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radiation and there's a new drug. cancer kinds of cloaks itself from the immune system. this uncloaks it. the doctors are being guarded. they're not saying specifics but in trial this drug has been helpful, at least in the first year or two. >> when i hear of melanoma, i think of skin cancer. don't most people? >> you should. vast majority of cancers originate in the skin as well as other parts of the body internally as the mucus membrane. we don't know if it started in the skin, but we do know it has spread. it has spread to the brain and the liver. >> it's unusual for a former president to come out and speak like this. >> what an example of grace under pressure. when i think about how open he was in discussing the specifics of the treatment of his problem. early fler my career we called
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it the "c" word. nobody wanted to say that. when you did that, you were cheating your friends and family of support. i found it so interesting that he said he was surprised he didn't feel despair or anger and i think part of the reason for that is he had the support of his faith, of his family, of his friends. what great national lesson this is. the first prescription drug to boost women's sex drive is set to be released this fall, addyi. it's designed for premenopausal women with a high powe active system. why is the third time the charm here? >> anthony, it's not clear whether the third time was the charm or the third time they wore them down. it was in 2010 and 2013 the fda declined to approve the medication really for two main
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issues. one the side effects were significant. it caused nausea, sleeplessness, even fajt when mixed with alcohol and there were questions about how effective the drug is. in clinical trials it only added up to one extra satisfying sexual event for month. but they launched a big p.r. campaign, it got a lot of public support, and possibly that played into the fda's decision. >> when i hear that laundry list of side effects it makes me wonder if the fda says here's what you have to put on the bottle. >> in fact they're putting on it about low blood pressure and fainting. people with taking certain medications. they have gone the extra step of saying the possibility of the side effects are so high that we want only certified health professionals and certified pharmacies to actually prescribe
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it and give it out. so side effects are a beg deal. well, new research found long days at the office could pose a huge risk to your health. new signs analogy finds people who work more than 55 hour as week have a higher risk of stroke. that's not good for all of us. >> let's just go home. >> this is where they combine a lot of other studies together. it's not a perfect study but what it found was if you work 41 to 48 hours your risk of stroke went up 10%. 49 to 54 hours went up 27% and 55 hours plus, all of us here, it went up 35%. who knows. it could be because of increased stress, high stress, physical inactivity, sitting around a can increase your risk. >> does it matter what you're doing or how you spread those hours out? >> it has a little bit less to do with what your work is but
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more about your relationship to your work. so people who feel like they have more control over their work and control in their workplace experience less stress and we know that stress plays a huge, huge role in stroke. it places pressure on blood pressure but as jon mentions there's actually stress to your work. if you're sitting down, more said entarks not getting exercise, cardiovascular health. >> there are way too many of these stories that seem to apply to the people at this table. here's one that doesn't apply to me. a new survey finds that contact lens wearers might be turning a blind eye to hygiene. more than 99% of reince users admit to one risky behavior in the survey. 82% say they wore them longer than recommended. 55% topped old solution with new
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solution and 50% wore them while sleeping. nearly one-third of the participants needed care of eye problems for one of those events. >> you're not guilty, but i am. i never heard of that. >> unless you totally end it, the schmutz that's in it, it's all in here. you have to empty it, clean it. >> it doesn't look like schmutz. that's all that matters. >> so many wear contacts so this is an important one. >> they're so comfortable you can fall asleep in them. i have done that. it turns out a friend with a smile and good mood can go a long way. they say happy healthy moods can help preeventual and treat depression in a person's social circle. >> what i find most significant about this is just to reiterate. depression is not contagious. you know, there's this sense to vournld yourself with positive people, dwroijt want to surround yourself with people going
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through a hard time. you can catch it. this shows the opposite. if you're up and they're not, you can help them and get value out of doing it. >> but you shouldn't be afraid of being around people who are depressed. you're going to bring them up. they another going to bring you down. this is why i like hanging around you people. >> especially near the commercial break. >> dr. jon lapook, dr. holly phillips, thank you so much. is the performance workplace dead? how places like g.e. and the gap are overhauling their operations. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." you wouldn't do half of your daily routine.
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wherever it is you want to go, all you need to see is the next 200 feet. that's how life unfolds. a leap of faith. [growl] even if you can't see it, your destination is out there. so just keep going. and you'll get there... ...200 feet at a time. the corolla. toyota. let's go places. my secret is the amope pedi perfect foot file. feet, its microlumina rotating head buffs away hard skin. even on those hard to reach spots. it's amazing, you can see it and feel it. for soft beautiful feet. amope pedi perfect, love every step. it's a highly thercontagious disease.here. it can be especially serious- even fatal to infants. unfortunately, many people who spread it may not know they have it. it's called whooping cough. and the cdc recommends everyone, including those around babies,
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make sure their whooping cough vaccination is up to date. understand the danger your new grandchild faces. talk to your doctor or pharmacist about you and your family getting a whooping cough vaccination today. it is a time honored practice in american business. the right of corporate passage disliked by corporate employees and managers alike but after 30
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years this may be the beginning of the end. more and more companies see the practice as out of step with the modern-day work-force. we're joined this morning. good morning. >> good morning. >> i heard someone say this is like hunger games for work and in some ways that's how people view these performance reviews. when's the history? when did it start? >> let me answer that question in one year. are you crazy? you've got to beevaluating people on a regular basis. why are these things there? because bureaucracies start doing something and it's hard for them to stop. they call it the corporate immune system. the reviews, they're going down. >> as much as everybody hates this, employees and employers as well, companies spend a fortune on these things. one number wi saw a company with 10,000 employees can spend as much as $35,000 a year on it. >> the problem is when something
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gets institutionalized it becomes big and bloated and loses the point. the annual review? you should be talking to people on a weekly or by weekly basis. >> why the sudden shift? it seems like this has been a dread and hated practice on both ends since it started in the '80s with g.e. and now they're saying it's time to consider a challenge. >> jack welsh put it on steroids and considered the stacked ranking. the stacked rating is every employee is rate and you fire the bottom people. let me describe this. the first prize, lincoln or cadillac el dorado, second place, steak knives, third place, you're fired. g. echlt brought up the phrase, brutal candor. if you want brutal candor, stop doing thing this way. >> is there an attitude shift
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going on and what role if any do millennial workers play? >> well, millennial workers don't respond well. there's an old quote in the military, the general always fights the last. the command control goes on. you inspire people. they're forcing corporations differently because they're not responding well to the old demand control mentality. >> i've seen there are apps where they're basically saying there's so much more available to a realtime assessment. what do you see as the future? there's still a lot of fortune 500 companies? >> the future is sitting down with people on a weekly or biweeklyasis talking about what's working or not working. here's the rule for you. 5-1. for every criticism you have to give five compliments. that's not kumbaya. that's not what the study is saying. if you want productivity, you still have to support them.
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>> if dwroijt do that what do you do? >> beyond prayer? ask what form is going to be used to evaluate me, ask for the form, fill out the form around in the performance review bring positive e-mails. don't be passive. beactive. >> it's funny. i all heard 5:1. i thought five compliments with one criticism. >> no, no. it's the other way around. coming up, can jon stewart moderate a presidential debate? would he want to? you're watching "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. i guess that's just how the cookie bundles.
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jon stewart signed off as host of the "the daily show" less than a month ago. >> is there a party or anything because i brought a lot of people from cbs and i told them that i know you. >> and all right many are hoping he'll take on a new job. thousands have signed a pe tension asking that sturtd be allowed to moderate a 2016 presidential debate. he's no stranger to political arguments. stewart spar with fox news host bill o'reilly during a debate in 2012. >> this whole idea is insanity. >> and took on countless politicians of "the daily show." >> so you believe that the bubbas are better than the bubbas. >> no. different. >> no. better. >> but as legendary cbs news man and veteran moderator bob schieffer put it, there's nothing quite like a presidential debate. >> for the first time in a long time i was nervous and i know
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that 51 million people, about a fifth of america's population would be tuning in i wouldn't have been nervous. i would have been terrified. >> leave it to him to just put it all out there. >> it's tomorrow the wwe summer wrestling slam event. i think that's the perfect place for a presidential event. >> body slam one, body slam the other. up next dr. dre comes clean. the rap mogul makes a public apology for something he did decades ago. for some of you your local news is next. for the rest of you stick around. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm anthony mason. >> and i'm vinita nair. coming up this half hour, online gambling is illegal in most cases but what about playing fantasy sports for cash. they promise big payouts and the games are more popular than ever, but websites have little oversight. we'll take a closer look. then cbs host james corden definitely believes if you can't beat them, joan them. so he did a special show from youtube headquarters in l.a. we'll tell you about that. >> and a bit of flapper, a bit of gatsby, and all that jazz. the party that twice a year
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takes over the island at a new york harbor. our top story this past hour breaking news overnight as three americans are hail as heroes for foiling an attack on a high-speed train in europe. two of the americans who tackle and disarmed the gunmen are military personnel. jonathan vigliotti is in our lawn bureau with the latest. good morning, jonathan. >> good morning. the three men are friends traveled around europe on vacation. among them a serviceman, a formal national guard. the video shows the results of their heroism. the suspected gunman hog tied on the ground. the 22-year-old said he and his friends saw the attacker enter the train with a gun and sprung into action tackling and disarming him. shots were reportedly fired. officials say three people were injured including his friend spencer stone, who is an active
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airman. >> he was there to do business, that's for sure. we were really lucky that his ak jammed or else i don't know how it would have turned out. >> their friend is recovering in the hospital. officials say the gunman was caught with an assault rifle, a handgun, a clip, and a knife. he's a 26-year-old moroccan who officials say has traveled to syria in the past. france's interior minister calls the americans heroes and without them the country could have faced a terrible strategy. anthony? >> jonathan vigliotti in london. thank you, jonathan. also breaking news overnight no letup in the devastating wildfires in the west. more than five are burning in five states. in colorado smoke from the wildfires is triggering a health advisory for the northern part of the state including the denver airy. >> there are more fires burning in idaho than any other state.
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it's destroy at least 42 homes in the northern part of the state. >> washington has been heavily hit. that's where president obama declared a state of emergency. more than 250 square miles are scorched and authorities say they have no idea how many homes have been destroyed. an estimate 20d,000 people went to a football stadium in mobile, alabama, friday night to hear front-runner donald trump. he used the rally to tell the crowd he would make america great again and he made promises about creating jobs. >> there's no spirit, there's no jo jobs, there's no anything. we're going take this country. i am going to be the greatest jobs president that god ever created. i will tell you that. i will tell you. trump told the crowd if he were president he would repeal obama care and replace the immigration
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program. tomorrow three candidates will be guests on "face the nation." dr. dre is one of the most well known rappers, producers, and businessmen of his generation, but he rarely talk ostown record, so dre made news on wednesday we he apologized to, quote, women i've heard. he's long kojed charges of violence against women from hisarily days as a rapper in kachlt alison harmelin reports. >> he's one of the greatest rags-to-riches stories of our time. andre young better nonas dr. dre has become the wealthiest hip-hop artist ever. ♪ >> i was dope. >> reporter: "straight out of compton" took $56 million last week. >> they really were ahead of
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their time. if you look at somebody like dr. dre starting with a groundbreaking group but then building that career. >> reporter: during decades of dre's rise, allegations of fiscal use on women fell on deaf years but on friday he apologized saying to "the new york times" saying 25 years ago i was a young man drinking too much with no roof over my head and no structure in my life. i apologize for what i did. >> in this day and age he's under a microscope and of course a lot of these stories are going to come out because people knew about them. >> dr. dre faced a lot of scrutiny. as the relief leece of the movie nears and interviews with some of his accusers last year began circulating online. last month the website gawker posted a title "remember when dr. dre bashed a female
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journalist's face against the wall? and in an interview. the singer was hit with a closed first. she said dr. dre punched her twice in the face at the grammys in 1999. >> he has to set an example. unfortunately for him he's on a big stage and what he does next people are going to look at. >> dr. dre says he's been married for 19 years and works hard every day to be a better man for his family. for "cbs this morning: saturday," alison harmelin, new york. the start of the 2015 nfl season is right around the corner and for many fans that means one thing, the return of fantasy football. but as millions across the nation get set to draft their teams, another type of fantasy sports league is exploding in popularity. >> the fantasy sports hall of fame presents former account derek bradley.
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draft king's one day took him from the guy with holes in his underpants. >> they're called daily fantasy websites such as draft kings and fan duel.com. such sites attract players by promising cash payouts. that raises a serious question. joining us mike mccarthy with sports news and a 25-year veteran of covering sports. good morning. >> good morning. >> how exactly are these different? >> well, back in the old days when you would play fantasy sports it would take an entire season to play out. you wouldn't get the players you want or if they got injured, you'd be out the money. now you get the players you want and get paid the same day. it's exciting and addictive. >> is there instant gratification? is that why there's a boon? >> it's like fantasy football on crack. you get instant gratification.
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players you want, you get paid the same day and you move on. >> they say, quote, surveys continue to show fantasy sports players do not show the negative compulsive behaviors associated with gal bling. when you look at this, it looks like gambling. >> to me it's splitting harris. if you bet on a sporting event, to me, that's betting. it's true you haven't seen the horror stories whose lives have been ruined by daily fantasy football. but basically it's about two years old. it's been around before that but that's when it took offer. it reminds me in the '90s when you had computer poker sites and kids in college were running up a $50,000 debt sitting around in a dorm room. if they don't watch themselves, it will happen here. >> you said poker. what i found is there's a notion. how is poker game gam bilk
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different than football gambling? >> congress became so upset that they passed law outlawing it in 2006 but within that law is a huge carveout for fantasy sports because they were defined as games of skill rather than chance. but the congressmen and senators who pass thad law really didn't have no idea and it didn't exist yet and if you talk to some of them now, it didn't apply to this new thick. some might believe it might still be illegal. >> almost all of the major sports leagues are pouring money into this. >> everybody except nfl. mlb, nba is an investor in draft kings. >> what do they get out of it? >> what they get out of it, they make fans more addictive to their product. you want to see ow how their play is. if it's a dog matchup on monday night, you're still going to watch the game because you've got a bet.
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>> where do you see this all five years from now. like you said, it's so new they haven't litigated it. but it's making so much money. >> i think some of these companies could be 5 and 10 million. but at the same time if you start to hear some of the stories like you heard with human poker, the feds could step in and regulate it. >> thanks so much for joining us. we appreciate it. >>ing their you. it's about ten minutes after the hour. now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. up next, we all know youtube for its countless animal videos, silly stunts an clips. but cbs host james corden turned
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for a special project of his own. >> reporter: more than 1 billion people now visit youtube every month. in the past decade it's become synonymous with felines, medicated minors, and biting brother. >> charlie, that really >> reporter: so to celebrate youtube's tenth birthday, the host of "the late late show" paid tribute. ♪ it's a never-ending spiral >> reporter: he's the first late-night host to broadcast his show from a 41,000 square foot complex to help now artists create content for the site. we visited the facility when it opened in 2012.
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when we came in, there was all sorts of random stuff going on. is this a normal day at youtube space? >> yes. last week, we had a baboon and a goat here. >> reporter: by his taking show there, cordon is acknowledging the important of the space to his success. he was a relative lu unknown british guy but has quickly become an online sensation. >> no crying in baseball! don't cry, shop girl. >> reporter: this clip racked up 13 million views and 32 million have watched his carpool karaoke with justin bieber.
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>> what's great about the world today is if you do something people like, they'll share it with their friends and it will have a wider reach. it's wonderful to make a show not constrained by time slot. come on. >> i'm not singing today. ♪ >> people watching us online on youtube, that's not lost on us. >> reporter: which is why choosing to do a traditional tv show at an internet studio is more than just ironic. i imagine this is not just about finding a cool place to do your show. how smart is this strategy to host a show there. >> i think the strategy is very smart. the currency of late-night television has shifted in the past few years. it's about owning the late-night conversation. now it's about owning the next-day conversation online. >> reporter: cordon used his time at youtube to feature a slew of internet stars.
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including the slo-mo guys who blow things up. a fashion and makeup blogger who helped him look a bit more barbie and the creator of epic rap battles of history. ♪ >> they want ratings and they want people to watch there. but they want people to talk about the shows and be in the national conversation. the way to do that these days is to own the internet. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning" saturday, ben tracy, los angeles. >> he's planning a crossover broadcast with stephen colbert when he goes on the air. >> so it will be two coasts. i have watched the majority of that show on youtube and he's genius. >> important part of the whole late-night battle now. >> certainly is. a quick programming reminder, stephen colbert's debut at the
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host of "the late show" here on cbs is tuesday september 8th. and we can't wait to see him. up next, a visit to the glamour of the jazz age. >> cars here. you have costumes. >> this is a v-12 cadillac. >> what year? >> 1931. >> wow. right in the heart of the jazz age. >> she's a beauty. all that jazz coming up. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." coming up, "all that jazz." you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". rheumatoid arthritis like me... and you're talking to a rheumatologist about a biologic, this is humira. this is humira helping to relieve my
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parasals and fans are in high fashion. what's the best part so far? >> dancing, the music. i feel like i literally stepped into a time machine. >> reporter: welcome to governor's island, a 200-year-old now abandoned military base just off manhattan. 2 time as year thousands flock for a chance to spend a day in the jazz age. how do you make people do that? >> that's the secret. i don't make them. they want to be a part of it. we just set the tone. >> reporter: michael arnell la is the mice stroe of the jazz age lawn party paying homage to the days of old between two world wars. >> what on earth got into you to create this? >> when was a small child, we never felt quite at home in the current times. >> do you feel like you were born out of time? >> i do. i feel like it's cyclical as we
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all step in and out of it at different points. ♪ >> reporter: back in 2005 arnell la was just a musician playing the party when it kicked off but organizers saw he was a natural and invited him to host. ♪ >> reporter: he's been inviting people ever since, leading his band the dreamland orchestra. >> thank you so very much, ladies and gentlemen. welcome. >> reporter: after ten years he still takes every detail of this event seriously. how much has this grown? it's grown exponentially year after year. we used to have 50 people. now over 500 a day. so over 20,000 for the summer. >> reporter: some have been coming from the very beginning. >> it was so much smaller and not as many people. they went all out. so many people are all out. it's so impressive.
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>> reporter: every once in a while you see somebody who's not committed and they break it for you. >> and they break it for you. but otherwise every wasnonce in while you can catch a pocket and feel like you're there. >> reporter: arnell la thinks people yearn for a simpler time. >> you can learn from the past. when young people came to a party, they would dance to a live band and dance often with strangers. that's how you met, on the dance floor. >> reporter: here there's plenty of opportunity. and for those that need a hand, there's roddy caravella. he's been teaching the charleston all ten years. roddy's dance troupe is called the canarsie wobblers. they're part of the act, and they're all in to the theme of
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arnell la's talent. >> i think it speaks to his talent and imagination. >> when i first read about him i thought, wow, he's li ee's magi living my dream. >> reporter: arnell lasse it's a party in the air. a party he hopes will travel around the world for years to come. for "cbs this morning: saturday," michelle miller, charleston. >> we ha governor's island. >> i have to congratulate michelle miller. she's all in. he said, i have to make a living, why not make a living doing what i love, playing music. >> 5,000 people. that's an achievement. >> field trip. >> there you go. up next, "the dish.
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few cities in the world have a more thriving restaurant scene than chicago. joining us this morning is rick bayless, one of the most prominent chefs. has so many awards you can't count them. >> rick bayless describes himself as a translator of mexican cooking and he's been doing just that in the windy city since 1987. he currently has three distinctive restaurants there. his original grill. the michelin star -- pronounce this for you, rick. thank you. offering his interpretation of mexican street food.
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chef rick bayless, welcome to "the dish." >> i'm so glad to be here. >> we've been trying to have you for years. >> and suddenly it worked. >> beautiful spread. >> thank you. >> tell us what we have here. >> this is all stuff from my newest book which is more mexican every day and we have a couple of taco fillings. the one in the mid sl my favorite. i love all kinds of mexican food. zucchini provolanos. this is a take on shrimp tacko with roasted herbs and garlic and green chili. we have a different sturdy one.
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not salad. this is a coconut bread pudding. >> the drink this morning? >> it's a margarita. more rustic cousin, shall we say, to tequila made with a little brandy. >> that smokiness is really nice. >> i love it. it's one of my favorite drinks. >> when you look at your background, it seems like you were born into a family of cooks. when did the interest of mexican cooking -- >> you know, i really got into cooking with mexican culture. i fell in love with mexico. fell in love all three high school. went there and studied. majored in spanish. that's what took me to mexico. then i realizeded at one point when i was deeply into the cultural thing i should put my
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love for food together with mention cal culture and really focus on the way mexico focuses its through its food. you know, you learn so much by a culture by just eating a meal. >> one thing that was so interesting that i read about you is you take your staff to mexico every year? >> more than once but it's a big management staff. we go to mexico, one region, and we really immerse ourselves in t it. i need them to talk to our guests the way we talk to our guests. >> didn't i read you spent six years in mexico just researching that first cookbook. >> yes. i did this program in anthropology and linguistics, and when i was doing that is correct i thought i was going to all in cultural studies and language studies and i thought i'm going to turn my interest into mexico, go there and learn the cuisine from the ground up.
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so i really spent like six years in mexico researching for my first book and that turned out to be my diser taugs if you will. i researched that just like i would have researched for my program. >> when you opening in chicago, you were really one of the transformative cultures in the city. did you think chicago would end up the way it is now? >> back in those days it was kind of a meat and potato crowds. not only that, there were a bunch of restaurants that were a little bit steamy. i didn't want to do either one of those things. i whammed to do a solid restaurant that reflected the culture of mexico. i had no idea whether it would fly or not. there were so many mexicans living in chicago. that means i had the accessibility to all the great ingredients. >> in a couple of weeks you have
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chicago gourmet coming up. >> we do. >> you have it coming up. >> it's our premier food event. it's so much fun. i do the big kickoff demo for it every year. i love the event because you get a chance to taste the food from all of the local chefs. we bring in foods from other parts of the states. it's so much fun. >> anthony can attest i've been so excited. you do amazing work helping farmers get financial assistance. i'm going to hand you this dish. i would ask if you could have this meal with any person past or prenl, who would it be? >> i had the opportunity to have a dinner with julia child and it was really transformative. i would do anything to go back and relive those moments with her. >> lots of butter. chef bayless, thank you so much. >> it's such a pleasure. ing that you so much.
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>> if you need more information to cbsnews.com. now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. up next our "sadr session wts with jason is bulls who debut album debuted at the top of three billboards charts. you'll not want to miss it. stay with us on "cbs this morning: saturday." imagine - she won't have to remember passwords.
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and wherever you are, is where the road begins. the camry. toyota. let's go places. in this morning's "saturday session" jason isbell, he's a 36-year-old singer/songwriter from greenville, alabama, just south of the tennessee line. his latest album out last month was number one on the rock, and country charts. heal perform two songs from that album in just a minute but first in an interview for "cbs sunday morning" i asked him and his mother about the emotional song he wrote for her, "children of children." >> at root what's that song about? >> the guilt that i've also felt, coming into the world when
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my parents were very young and not necessarily prepared for it. >> reporter: isbell's mom was just 17 when he was born. >> i feel like the first thing i did wrong was interrupt this woman's life. ♪ all the years you took from her just by being born ♪ >> she never mate me feel that way but the older i get, i think about it. >> what's your reaction to the song? >> i was just crying because that song -- >> you must think so much of his music. >> yeah. we have a joke in the family. watch what you say about him because it will end up in a song. >> his new album is titled " ""something more than free" and here's the song we spoke about.
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"children of children." ♪ ♪ pictures of the farm before us old men in a gospel sephia ♪ ♪ and saddle horses easy on the reins ♪ ♪ '81 a motor in your mama's 17 again ♪ ♪ she's squinting at the dusty and the anger of the plains ♪ ♪ ♪ you and i were almost nothing pray to god that god was bluffing ♪ ♪ 17 ain't old enough to reason
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♪ ♪ didn't mean to break the cycle at 17 i went by michael ♪ ♪ no one ever called me by my own name anyway ♪ ♪ half full generations living all those expectations ♪ ♪ giving way to one, late to have a baby on the way ♪ ♪ ♪ you were riding on your mother's hip ♪ ♪ she was shorter than the corn ♪ ♪ all the years you took from her just by being born ♪
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>> jason isbell and "children of children." don't go away. we'll have more in a moment. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." ry objects o. intimidating. doing something simple... meant enduring a lot of pain. if ra is changing your view of everyday things orencia may help. orencia works differently by targeting a source of ra early in the inflammation process. for many, orencia provides long-term relief of ra symptoms. it's helped new ra patients and those not helped enough by other treatments. do not take orencia with another biologic medicine for ra due to an increased risk of serious infection. serious side effects can occur including fatal infections. cases of lymphoma and lung cancer have been reported. tell your doctor if you're prone to or have any infection like an open sore, the flu, or a history of copd, a chronic lung disease. orencia may worsen your copd. if you're not getting the relief you need... ask your doctor about orencia.
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one of our -- aque psoriasis most of my life. my doctor told me about stelara® it helps keep my skin clearer. with only 4 doses a year after 2 starter doses... ...stelara® helps me be in season. stelara® may lower your ability to fight infections and increase your risk of infections. some serious infections require hospitalization. your doctor should test for tuberculosis. stelara® may increase your risk of cancer. always tell your doctor if you have any sign of infection, have had cancer, or if you develop any new skin growths. do not take stelara® if you are allergic to stelara® or any of its ingredients. alert your doctor of new or worsening problems including headaches, seizures, confusion and vision problems. these may be signs of a rare, potentially fatal brain condition. serious allergic reactions can occur. tell your doctor if you or anyone in your house needs or has recently received a vaccine. in a medical study, most stelara® patients saw at least 75% clearer skin
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and the majority were rated as cleared or minimal at 12 weeks. stelara® helps keep my skin clearer. ask your doctor about stelara®. go get help, boy. go get help. go get help! right now! if you're a cat, you ignore people. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. it's what you do. go on kitty, kitty... anything. anywhere. anytime.
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anyone. spread the delicious taste you know and love. hershey's is mine, yours, our chocolate spreads. i did it too... they took nature's bounty hair, skin and nails, it's a vitamin supplement that nourishes from the inside... with biotin for beautiful hair and strong nails. and vitamin c and e for vibrant skin. give it a month, if your hair, skin and nails don't look and feel more beautiful, we'll give you your money back. i did it... and i feel beautiful. take the nature's bounty hair, skin and nails challenge, visit naturesbounty.com for details. in delicious gummies too!
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monday on "cbs this morning" he's been called the indiana jones of the digital rare. meet the man using the latest technology to redefine exploration of this world. that's monday on "cbs this morning." >> have a wonderful weekend, everybody. there's ooh two weeks to labor day so get out there and enjoy summer and wear white. there's still time to do it. >> we leave you now with one more song from jason isbell. here he is performing "something more than free" from his new album.
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♪ whelp i get home from work i'll call up all my friends ♪ ♪ and we'll go bust up something beautiful we'll have to build again ♪ ♪ when i get home from work i'll wrestle off my clothes ♪ ♪ and leave them right inside the front door ♪ ♪ because nobody's home to know ♪ ♪ you see a hammer finds a nail and a freight train needs the rails ♪ ♪ and i'm doing what i'm on this earth to do ♪ ♪ and i don't think on why i'm here where it hurts ♪ ♪ i'm just lucky to have the work ♪ ♪ sunday morning i'm too tired go to church but i thank god for the work ♪
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♪ i thank god for the work ♪ ♪ when i get my reward my work will all be done ♪ ♪ and i will sit back in my chair beside the father and the son ♪ ♪ no more holes to fill and no more rocks to break ♪ ♪ and no more loading boxes on the trucks for someone else's sake ♪ ♪ because a hammer needs a nail and the poor man's up for sale ♪ ♪ guess i'm doing what i'm on this earth to do ♪ ♪ and i don't think on why i'm here where it hurts ♪ ♪ i'm just lucky to have the work ♪ ♪ and every night i dream
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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. i guess that's just how the cookie bundles. now, you're gonna have two bundles of joy! i'm not pregnant. i'm gonna go. [ tapping, cash register dings ] there you go. [ buzzing ] bundle bee coming! it was worth it! saving you a bundle when you bundle -- now, that's progressive.
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narrator: today on lucky dog... brandon: can you sit? narrator: kobe's training should be a slam dunk. brandon: you got a "stay?" narrator: but this tiny terrier mix is creating matchup problems for brandon. brandon: muthee loves skateboarding. off. now, the average person would say this dog is untrainable, because he is putting me to the test. narrator: with draft day approaching, he'll need to embrace the fundamentals... brandon: no. narrator: ...and keep his head in the game... brandon: stay with me. narrator: ...before time runs out. brandon: i'm brandon mcmillan, and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are living without hope. my mission to make sure these amazing animals
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