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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  September 12, 2015 8:00am-10:01am EDT

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monday on the late show. good morning. it's september 12th, 2015. welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." the republican field starts to narrow as rick perry drops out. a parting shot at the front-runner. is it a sign of things to come? a state of emergency in california as wild fires spread. >> serena williams misses her chance at history. meet the little known italian who took down the titan of tennis. death for the dance floor.
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half of london's nightclubs have shut down. >> we begin with a look at eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. >> i'm suspending my campaign. >> rick y perr ahits dead end on the crowded republican road to the white house. >> by a lot. >> have you ever apologized? >> thank you very much. >> ever? >> i think apologizing is a great thing but you have to be wrong. they wanted me -- >> another fast moving wild fire has proved busy in california, the butte fire threatens the town of san andreas. fo the death toll rising llowing a crane collapse at mecca's grand mosque. 107 are dead. >> disturbing video from a camp in hungary that shows guards tossing bags of food i an crowd. >> some of them say they were treated like animals. >> is phoenix law enforcement on the eralt. a person of interest is in
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custody in connection with the shootings. >> surveillance video shows the violent takedown and wrongful arrest of james blake. look at that. it's crazy. >> the three men whopp stoed a terror attack in france honored with a parade in sacramento. >> all that close encounter, a friend wiped out. >> and all that matters. >> italy's roberta vinci ends serena wilsliam run. >> "cbs this morning: saturday." >> still slipping in presidential polls. >> clinton has dropped ten points in a month. >> as one put it the same force and energy that is giving a lift to donald trump is dooming hillary clinton and that is authenticity. if only there was some way to get a glimpse in the private side of hillary clinton. read her e-mails or something.
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>> and welcome to the weekend. we also have some great guests for you today. >> including a chat with tony gonzalez and bart scott. we'll get their take on the first weekend of the nfl season and the latest controversy surrounding the patriots. >> plus, they have written the only self help book whose title we can't show or say on television. psychiatrist michael bennett and his daughter sarah are here to tell us why you shouldn't always trust your gut and why most feelings are useless. >> also the chef next to them, worked for seven years under one of the greatest chefs. how he is snghapi up the twin cities in the dish. >> is and gary clark jr.'s considered one of the best guitarists of his generation. he played with eric clapton, jeff beck, and the "rolling stone"s. hear him perform from his new
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album, number 2 on amazon ahead. our top story, after what seemed like an end hearsay expansion the republican field is narrowing. former texas governor rick perry has become the first republican candidate to drop out of the campaign for president. it's the second time perry has withdrawn from a presidential race and he sharply criticized at least one of his 16 rivals without mentioning donald trump by name, perry left no doubt who he was talking about. >> the conservative movement has always been about principles, not about personalities. our nominee should embody those principles. he or she must make the case for the cause of conservatism more than the cause of their own celebrity. >> perry's parting shot didn't seem to affect donald trump who is still the front-runner in the
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polls. last night trump went head to head with jimmy fallon on "the tonight show", fallon dressed up as trump and appeared to be asking himself questions. >> how are you going to create jobs in this country? >> i'm just going to do it. >> right. right. but how? >> by doing it. it just happens. just by doing it. >> genius. >> good impression. after they sat down and got more serious. fallon asked trump what he was doing on the campaign trail to win support of voters. >> i think they want our country to be respected again. i think they feel if i'm president i will do some great things for our country. we're g gointo be respected again. there is a movement going on that's amazing to watch. >> i have to ask, i was thinking
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about this, have yveou er apologized? ever? in your lifetime? >> i think apologizing is a great thing but youe havto be wrong. they wanted me -- i will absolutely apologize sometime in the hopefully distant future if i'm ever wrong. >> joining us with more is senior political editor, steve, he is in our washington bureau. what do you think happened with rick perry? >> little went right i can tell you that. he tried to reset after his 2012 run. he never got traction in the polls. couldn't raise money. like most of the other 16 republicans he was drowned out. the gop is looking for an outsider to shake things up. based on the polls perry wasn't the guy. >> steve, the second gop debate is on tap next week. seems to have the same problem lurks for all of the republican candidates, how do you deal with donald trump?
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you think that strategies are changing at this point? >> i think you're going to -- first of all trump's harshest critics won't be there. trump's harshest critics won't be there like rick perry, lindsey graham. i think bush will wind up promoting his conservative record, he'll likely remind people of trump's pro-democratic past. but people like carly fee or reny who are going to be on the stage for first time or who are down in their polls are going to be looking for their strengths. there are 11 people on stage. there aren't a lot of opportunities to break out here, so you'll see them look for that one moment. >> steve, while you were talking, we put up the latest poll numbers. you see ben carson has had a surge in the recent weeks. what do you think voters are connecting with when it comes to this candidate? >> in a lot of ways, it's like trump. voters are drawn to this outside
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political candidate. this trump/carson boom has people like bush, walker, rubio, and others hoping that history will repeat itself and whether republicans will focus on establishing the choices but it's all about that right now. >> you've got bernie sanders surging and hillary clinton. is there something more here? >> there's definitely something more. the sanders surge is really about sanders. it's a slice of democrats who love what he's saying about liberal issues. wall street, campaign reform. it's not that democrats dislike hillary. she still has high approval numbers but they're finding they're passionate about it. >> what do you think is happening with joe biden right now. after everyone saw him on the colbert show, it was really hard for him not to connect with what he was going through personally,
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but do you think he's -- >> biden supporters are telling me he's concluded he's the right person plittic will toy do it but as biden said twice he's not there emotionally after the death of his son. the emotion is so raw. we watch him publicly grieve. the first debate is october 15th. he's going want to be there if he's going to run. >> steve, thank you very much for being with us. there'll be plenty more tomorrow morning on "face the nation." his political guests, donald trump and ben carson. there's breaking news. the fires are in six states, idaho, utah, montana, oregon, and california chld california governor jerry brown has declared a state of emergency for the northern part of the state. but one of the largest fires grew from about one square mile on thursday to more than a
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hundred square miles today. the residents of the town of san andreas, southeast of sacramento were told to evacuate on friday but that was called off when the fear changed direction. police in arizona have arrested a person of interest in a series of freeway shootings in phoenix. a 19-year-old man is under arrest after officers picked him up at a gas station. police will not say how he might be connected to the shootings. 11 vehicles have been shot at since august 29th. eight were hit by bullets and three with projectiles that could include beebes bbs or pe els. more that 100 were killed and 200 injure when a crane collapsed at a hole kr site. a video shows the crane toppling during a powerful rainstorm. a saudi official blamed the high
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winds. the damage is extensive. millions will converge on mecca in the next two weeks on the annual huj pilgrimage. they spent hours in heat debate before rejected the proposed treaty. it was too little too late following senate action. julianna goldman is in our washington bureau with more on that. julianna, good morning. >> good morning. that senate vote earlier in the week means the president won't even have to be put in a position vetoing the bill that's approving the deal and they can implement this historic accord without congress interfering, but fights are sure to continue. >> our fight to stop this bad deal, frankly, is just beginning. >> house speaker john boehner denounced the iran deal friday and said republicans are exploring a range of options to to stop the agreement. >> this deal is far worse than anything i could have imagined. why? because the president and his negotiators broke every one of
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theirs promises. >> but without the vote to stop the implementation. >> the motion is not agreed to. >> the white house and dep carats hailed the senate vote as a victory for diplomacy. >> i've always had confidence in that we would sustain the president's veto if that would be the vote. >> the focus now turns into the nitty-gritty of the deal actually going into effect. they must still vote to approve the accord. the country's supreme leader made a threat over twitter. he tweeted if samgss are not removed, there will be no deal. >> there's no denying that there are many, many, many important steps ahead. surely ensuring that iran both politically and technically begins to move forward with
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implementing the agreement. >> before any sanctions are lifted, iran will have to adhere to several agreed upon action including destroying its plutonium reactor and destroying its centrifuges and shipping out its uranium, all materials used to make a bomb. it will take several months for iran to do the several necessary steps. with israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu against the deal. >> thank you. austria and hungary are at odds on what do with the flood of migrants streaming through their countries. >> awe strie ya's leader said there should be no quotas while 00 grary's leader takes a much harder line. at the same time germany is
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expected to welcome another 40,000 migrants just this weekend. charlie d'agata is in 00 gra hu this morning. >> reporter: good morning. they're building more camps to handle the influx of migrants and if the government makes good on its crackdown next week, things are about to get must worse. desperate or not, to 00 grary's hard liners, they're all criminals and anyone crossing the border illegally will be locked up, meaning all of them. the government has sent troop reinforcements to the border to back up the threat and they've included prisoners to complete the razor wire fence. this family made it this far but they were surprised to see police herds migrants on buses up ahead. >> do you know what's going happen here? >> i don't know but i know
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they're going to put our fingers in the printers. we don't want these, but it's hart, no? >> they insist they be finger print and registered at the reception centers. migrants fear they'll be trap and mistreated. police are looking at cell phone video where they're tossing food at the mime grants like they're caged humans. >> we feel like this is like animals, not humans. the dogs are on the other side, no? >> reporter: across the border we saw migrants doing just that, they met smugglers. when they saw us, they scattered and the smugglers made haste.
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they're easy enough for us to find but the police haven't shown much interest in shutting this down. this morning the prime minister said yorba should give $3.5 million to syrian neighbors to stop the flow of migrants here but they say they do not want to stay in any refugee camps there. they've come to europe. anthony and vinita? >> thank you. the u.n. refugee agency says that 10,000 refugees that president obama wants to admit to this country just aren't enough. margaret brennan is at the white house. >> the united states needs to do our share. >> reporter: president obama bowed to international pressure and decided this week that the u.s. will take in around 10,000 refugees from war-torn syria over the next year. >> the refugee crisis is not
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just a european problem. it's a world problem. >> reporter: hundreds of thousands are flooding into europe. germany is expected to take in 800,000 by year's end. he said the white house number falls short. >> it won't be adequate to the scale of the problem which demand as global response on a far more effective scale. >> reporter: the policy challenge came after public outcry over the inl of a 3-year-old syrian refugee whose body recently washed up on turkish shores. over the past 4 1/2 years of war they have shouldered much of it. during that same time the u.s. only accepted 1,500 syrians. the slow rate has to do with
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intense vetting. >> our main goal is to protect the united states. >> reporter: congressman king of new york says american safety has to be our main concern. >> reporter: the white house insists no corners will be cut when it comes to security and the u.s. officials have already selected the group of refugees who will come here to the u.s. after they're processed, they'll be resettled in communities across the country starting sometime after october 1st. for "cbs this morning: saturday," i'm margaret brennan at the white house. now to u.s. open tennis where the great serena williams was expected to score a historic grand slam but it was not to be. williams lost in a huge semifinals upset to a little known italian player. here is marlie hall with more on that. good morning. >> good morning. williams was trying to become the first player since steffi graf in 1988 to earn all four
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grand slam titles in a single season but her tennis dreams were dashed, at least for now. >> she's done it. it was one of the biggest upsets in tennis history. undefeat undefeated italian vinci went in against tennis superstar serena williams. >> how do you describe it? >> it's an incredible moment for me. it's like a dream, you know. i'm in the final. i beat serena. i'm sorry, guys. sorry. >> the match started off with an easy first set win for williams. >> and serena has the first set.
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>> but just as the game started to unfold as expected, vinci clinched the second set, tying the match. >> in my mind, put the ball on the court. don't think about serena. >> her strategy worked as she stunned serena on the third set with a couple of breaks while urging a packed stadium to root for her. eventually vinci sealed the win with a soft forehand half volley winner. >> she's done it. >> for williams, the loss ended a 33-match winning streak, meaning no chance of a historic grand slam. williams was visibly upset as she left the court and made a brief appearance during the post match news conference. >> i think she played literally out of her mind.
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more unforced errors than i normally would make, but i think she just played really well. she did not want to lose today, and neither did i incidentally. >> vinci apologized to the crowd after the game. >> for the american people, for serena, for the grand slam, and everything, but today's my day. sorry, guys. >> and it was a day that made history. her win sets up an all-italian u.s. open final, anthony, vinita? >> wasn't that heartbreaking to watch. >> she was very endearing. >> you notice on her arm she has a tattoo. it says how do i best get up the mountain. just climb and don't think about it. certainly that's what she did. >> she did. >> she played a great game. >> and serena has had a remarkable year. thanks so much. time to show you some of this morning's headlines. the "chicago tribune" says the
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subway chain was alerted to a complaint about its spokesman jared fogle back in 2011. they revealed concerns expressed by a florida woman that she was working with the fbi and reporting fogle's interest in having sex with minors. he pleaded guilty last month and allegations he paid to have sex with minors. the cuban government is granting pardons to about 3,500 prisoners. the announcement comes ahead of pope francis's visit to cuba later this month. the visit's expected in the nex three days and includes those with no criminal record. they're asked to condemn private property known as area 51. this comes after the owners refused to accept the government's 5 milli yuion acre
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four miles west of las vegas. the site has been used for decades as a restricted test side for planes and jets. the tesla will be going urban. garcetti stressed the move will save taxpayers money. the mayor wants it to mack up 780% of the city's fleet by 2025. it's about 23 after the hour. now here's look at the weather for your weekend. coming up, el nino is coming, anepd dngendi on where you are, that could be very good or really bad. we'll barack it down. and later does microsoft
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have to give u.s. investigators the e-mails it stores in servers in ireland? a major online privacy question ahead on "cbs this morning: saturday." tt0w!tx#hó!!%4@-j]
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it was captured by the space agency's satellite. >> it may have been 43,000 miles high and five times the diameter of the earth. it's estimated the temperatures reached about 5 million degrees which appears dark in the ultraviolet light. this was about 40 hours long and my first thought was this must be so rare. apparently it's not that rare. they capture images like that quite often. >> the images are amazing. scientists say there's a 95% that a strong el nino weather condition is forming in the
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pacific ocean and will continue through the winter. >> that could bring much needed rain to the drought-ravaged west. but as we're shown there will be winter winners and losers. >> this used to reach all the way to the treeline but the golden state reservoirs are running on empty. they've lost 6 trillion gallons on water during four years of punishing drought but wild wet winter weather is now in the forecast to california thanks to the intense warming of the pacific ocean near the equator known as el nino. >> don't count your raindrops yet. >> reporter: bill pet ta is an oceanographer. even heavy rain in southern california is not a drought-buster. the area's engineered with
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concrete basins to capture water to spreenlt homes from flooding. >> we decided many years ago to turn our great rivers into flood control channels. remember, there's only one thing more important in california than water. real estate. >> reporter: the state's largest reservoirs are in northern california where el nino storms are much less likely to hit. pacific ocean temperatures are also so warm nasa hydrologist james famlietti is afraid they'll get rain more than snow. >> why is snow more important than rain? >> think of it as a state wide freezer. it freezes and thousands down into the reservoirs. without the snow, there's nothing to melt. >> that could leave the reservoirs low and dry. for "cbs this morning:
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saturday," ben tracy, los angeles. coming up, boxing champ ray floyd may weather says tonight's fight may be his last but not even believes it. now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. up next, medical news in our "morning rounds" include california's legislature's bill that gives patients the right to end their life with the help of doctors. dr. holly phillips and dr. jon lapooked on chain restaurants posting salt. that's next on "cbs this morning: saturday."
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made a simple tripvere chto the grocery storeis anything but simple. so finally, i had an important conversation with my dermatologist about humira. he explained that humira works inside my body to target and help block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to my symptoms. in clinical trials, most adults saw 75% skin clearance. and the majority were clear or almost clear in just 4 months. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. ask your dermatologist about humira. because with humira clearer skin is possible.
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time now for "morning rounds" with chief medical correspondent dr. jon lapook and cbs contributor dr. holly phillips. first up, california legislature passed a bill that grants permission for patients to end their lives with a doctor's help. it goes ahead for signature. it's based on an oregon law which authorizes doctors to prescribe a lethal dose of medication to patients who are expected to have less than six months to live. jon takes a closer look. >> after four years of radiation, chemotherapy and multiple surgeries, 51-year-old elizabeth wall never is still fighting cancer that has invaded her colon, lungs, and live. >> i call it whack a mole-cancer because we beat it and it pops up somewhere else. >> i've experienced just unimaginable pain and fear and i
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don't see any value in my last days being spent gasping for breath or writhing in pain. >> and that one, of course, is from our wedding day. >> that is a fear that dan diaz knows well. last year diaz years wife brittany maynard became the face of the right to die debate. she was diagnosed with brain cancer at the age of 29 and then moved with her husband from california to oregon. >> how dare the government make decisions or limit options for terminally ill people like me. >> she was simply saying it's ridiculous as californians we have to leave home, drive 600 miles north, in the middle of her being told that she's dieing from a brain tumor? nobody should have to do that. >> reporter: just weeks before she ended her life, diaz made his wife a promise. >> see if we can get legislation passed so that nobody else has to go through what she went through. >> what did you say to her? >> the answer is yeah. >> reporter: he quit his job to
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work with the advocacy group on choices. in oregon from 2008 to 2014 more than 125,000 patients died from cancer. 668 took a physician-prescribed lethal dose of medication. >> you apply for the medication, you secure it, put it in the cupboard and you keep fighting. you have it there as a last resort. >> reporter: marilyn golden is part of the religious group who opposes the bill. >> if an insurer either denies or delays someone's life-sustaining treatment, they're being steered toward hastening their death. do we really think insurers will do the right thing or the cheap thing? >> i'm keeping my promise to brittany and fulfilling that promise but it certainly is bittersweet. >> jon, this is a highly and
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controversial issue. where does i got from here? >> he's continuing to work with the right-to-die advocacy group, compassion and choices. he wants to see this throughout the country for anybody who has ne terminal disease. there are people who feel just as strongly on the other side of this issue, so we've certainly not heard the end thof debate. well, next up this morning, new york will soon become the first american city to require salt warnings on chain restaurant menus. the mare will put a salt shaker symbol on the menu for dishes that have more than 2,300 milligra milligrams. that's one teaspoon. that doesn't seem like a whole lot of salt. >> no. but new york's move is completely in line with the direction we see going across the nation. that direction is to give
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consumers more information about what's in the food that we buy. it's about transparency. these new rules do not limit our access to the food at all. it doesn't police it. it doesn't say you can't have a certain amount. rather it gives you information about how much salt is in it. particularly when it comes to salt and sodium content, that's important. when you think about it. only 10% comes from our salt shaker. more than 75% is essentially hidden. it's in processed foods and in restaurant foods. a lot of those foods don't taste salty. you have tgi fridays crispy finge fingers. that's more in one dish than anyone should be having in an entire day. >> the salt institute does not like these new rules. i say, quote, this is another
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example of the government being involved in outdated guidelines some of what do we -- what do we do here? >> right. you can debate. you can talk about exactly how many milligrams any one person has or what's optimal. you have to put it in context. the problem is we have a national high blood pressure. only about half of them are under control. so this is a big problem. we know that as you inclees sal intake it can raise high blood pressure and especially for certain groups like african-americans, people with certain underlying conditions have to be particularly conditioned. so what they're saying here as holly is poibltsing out. they're not saying you can't havist. they're saying transparency, that when you go into a restaurant, 2,300 milligrams for a normal person and if you have one of these problems like high blood pressure, even 1,500
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should be the limit. and you should see the shake fehr you eat something that has more than 2,100 in it. the researchers asked people questions on science topics. they got about two-thirds of the answers right. only 6% got a perfect score. that's not so good. >> they did terribly on the question where does water boil lower? >> they t answer is in denver or you can boil the water there. i'm not sure you need to know that. >> i thought it was interesting. the older they got, the worse they did on the test. my science is being refreshed by reading it with my first graders. >> i think that happens to most people. >> 74% knew that overuse of antibiot antibiotics leads to antibiotic resistance which i attribute to us talking about it.
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if you think this is your team's year prepare to be disappointed. fans appear to be overly optimistic when they predict how many games their team will win and reporters covered the same will make the same mistake. they'll win more than it actually does. that hope springs eternal. it costs a lot of money. >> thank for being with us. coming up we have the new host of "nfl today" and talking about super bowl 50. can surfers cross international borders. it could reach your i'm. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." ♪ every insurance policy has a number. but not every insurance company understands the life behind it. for those who've served
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court to overturn a federal judge's order issued last year to hand over e-mails stored on microsoft servers in ireland. >> drug investigators obtained a search warrant for the e-mails. the second circuit court of appeals must decide whether a warrant here in the u.s. can reach data stored in another country. cbs news justice reporter paula reid is following the case. good morning. >> good morning. >> this is regarding an e-mail account stored on a server in ireland. motte says the justice department is exceeding its authority. so what's at stake here? >> what's at stake is the privacy and protect of our most personal communications and e-mails. they argue if the u.s. tmt of justice can reach into another country and get access to this kind of information, then other governments, friend or faux, could reach into the yus and get
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information in the u.s. >> i thought they were saying these are old laws and what we don't realize is there is not a lot governing ooechls because the laws were written before that. >> they all agree this law is antiquated and it's ill-equipped to handle modern technology and concerns. >> there's a lot going on regarding encryption protections. what's going on? why are law enforcement so against encryption? >> they argue that the messages become scramble md and unless you have a key you can't an says that information. say it makes it difficult to track suspects. but privacy advocates say they haven't been able to put forth a single case where but for encryption they would have been able to get their man or their
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woman. so at this point it still seems hypothetical. >> i think is on the surface they think this is so technical, there's nothing about this that will affect me. but the reality is about who owns all of our ooerms in the cloud some of how could this ruling really affect us? >> it could affect the u.s., but especially the u.s. technology companies. there's a lot of money at stake. not only could foreign governments potentially access your information, but u.s. stek that's currently dominant took a hit at the student disclosures when they see u.s. tech is not quite as secure. so a win for the government here could amplify the concerns and u.s. text could take a big hit. >> it seems like a double-edged sword. on the one hand we want the privacy protect bud on the other hand we want them to track terrorists if they noe what they're looking for. the i feel like we're caught in the middle. is there a middle ground? >> there isn't because what
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sounds good on principle doesn't work. so far there's no solution that will give law enforcement access to the information that won't at the same time give hackers access to the personal information. >> so when do you think a ruling could come down in this case and is it good enough it could go to the supreme court? >> we're expect being a decision early next month or next year and i would anticipate whichever side loses will seek more. >> what happens if microsoft loses again? if they lose again, it's a real hit for the u.s. it amplifies these concerns that if your inform something's stored with a u.s. tech company, ilts's not secure, especially ins government. >> coming up. being a guest on the late night show a private gig. why did stephen colbert invite an unknown tribute band on air. you'll see why.
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...you need the power of... new theraflu expressmax. new theraflu expressmax. the power to feel better. thank for being here, they played last summer and i thought sounded great. troubled waters everybody. >> i wanted to do the whistling solo to me and hulio down by the school yard. i called paul simon or somebody call his person. i don't know him.
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ani said could i do that. he said i will not do that with yo i wish we had paul simon. i thank you for being here to step in. >> thank you, mr. colbert. ♪ >> the group troubled waters, a paul simon cover band, the lead singer introduced as allan. he asked if he could call him al. it was a surprise appearance. many wondered why he scheduled an unknown cover band to wrap the week. we know. >> he did a great job keeping a straight face. big guests. amy schumer, george clooney, the biden interview. >> moving visit there. up next, after a violent takedown by a new york city police officer, tennis star james blake gets a different reception at the u.s. open. for some of you your local news is next. the rest of you stick around. you're watching "cbs this
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now, that's an awesome view. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm anthony mason. >> and i'm vinita nair. coming up this half hour, the nfl is back. to visit the set of "nfl today" talk to tony gonzalez and bart scott about sunday's matchup and the march to super bowl 50. fi it's supposedly his last ght. if he wins he'll match the greatest boxing event in history j and feeling down, maybe out of sorts, we'll tell you about a new self-help book that's so tough we can't even say the title on tv. but first or top story this half hour, the republican presidential field gets small
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ir. former texas governor rick perry has become the first republican candidate to drop out of the campaign for president. >> as perry ended his campaign, he blasted onef ohis rivals. without mentioning donald trump by name, perry left little doubt who he was talking about. >> the conservative movement has always been about principles, not about personalities. our nominee should embody those principles. he osh she should make the case of the cause more than their personal celebrity. >> trump still the front runner in the polls. last night he went head to head with fallon on the tonight snow. he told fallon he's doing well because people want to be respected around the world.
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a 19-year-old man has been arrested over the highway sheetings in phoenix. it's not clear what his role was. he was taken into custody at a convenience store. eight were hidden with bullet and three with projectiles. >> a plane working with tom cruise crashed in colombia in bad weather. cruise was thought on the plane. it killed the pilot who was an american and a third was injured. were working on a movie. sacramento, california, gave quite a welcome to three hometown heroes. they were celebrated for stopping an attack on a high-speed train last month by tackling a herbally armed
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gunman. anthony sadler, alex skarlatos. last night blake got an an ovation. he stood up and said, thank you, new york. new sur valance of blake showed him outside a hotel on wednesday when a plainclothes officer grabbed him by the arm, tackled him, and then handcuffed him. it was a case of mistaken identity. the officer who has been under several previous complaints is now on devg duty. the national football league has reportedly cleared the team of audio interference allegations which surfaced during thursday night's season opener with the minnesota steelers. the league says an electrical issue is to blame for rendering the headsets of the pittsburgh coaching staff useless during the first quarter. the patriots won the game, 28-21. after a very long and active long season, a new season starts
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tomorrow all leading up to super bowl 50 which will be right here on cbs. as always sports coverage will kick off. on friday in between meetings and rehearsals, we caught up with two members of the nfl team. tony gonzalez and bart scott. thank you so much for joining us. you're in the middle of rehearsals right now. mist be fun to be back in the studio. >> we're so happy. for eight months we sit around doing nothing. i watch baseball. i love when football comes. i feel the humidity going down, fresh air, grass is green and the kids are back to school. it's time for football. >> for both of us, we were rookies. now for me this is my whole season. i got my rookie year done last ye year. no nerves. i'm ready to talk. >> already we've got to another
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controversy with the patriot and steelers about the head sed. >> i'm not saying but i'm just saying. it's always something. football keeps on giving. i'm sure we'll get to the bottom of it. i've experienced it when playing new england. you prepare yourself for everything. >> he was saying before we came out here, the night before the game he was in the team hotel the fire alarm would always go off when they play, roughly around 3:00 or 4:00. c come on. >> let's look at the season, last season. we ended up with the seattle seahawks in a nasty defeat and since 1993 no team that's been on the super bowl and lost is back in there the next year, but can they do it? >> i believe so. they upgraded to tony's favorite position, tight end. jimmy graham is going to get some red zone presence. he's going to take off some
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pressure from marshawn lynch and open up the battery box. >> they have the opportunity to have the greatest defense in the league. >> so peyton manning, 39 years old, a lot of people saying this could be his swan song season. do you think he has more in the tank? >> i think we're going to get more from peyton manning by are ye requiring less. i'm expired about watching this team under wade phillips and what he can do on the defensive side of the ball. we all know offense wins games but defense wins champions. most come down to stop fourth and one or in the case of the preefs super bowl can you get first and goal or stop first and goal. >> i've known peyton for a long time. i've got an enormous amount of rocky mountains for him. he's one of the best quarterbacks ever but i do believe this is probably going
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to be his left year. he's still got juice left in the tank. he's going to have a good year but is he going to be the rushmore four in the nfl, doing know if that's going to happen. i think one of the reasons he came back, a lot of people aren't talking about, he's 2,200 yards, somewhere around there, the all-time passing record and i think that had to factor in for him to try to get in one more season, plus they've got a good football season. >> what about adrian peterson. can he be a tough running back? >> can he. whenever a great player gets a chip. it's already tough. you talk about the sixth round draft pick bchlt u but now you're giving him a chip. you have to pick your poison. are you going to stack the box or play coverage and i think they have a great team. i think every one of they're team, minnesota that is, is going surprise a lot of people. >> 2,000 yards.
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do you think he can? >> many pick him always their number one draft pick. >> he's my number one. i'll tell you what. we know he's fresh. he's going to be running angry. he said he didn't know why he can't get 2,5 hurricane. he averages 600 yards a game. >> there's been a rule change this year, moving the extra point line from the 2 yard line to 15 yard line. impact? >> we've seen it. now it puts the coach in a dilemma. do i put it in a two-point conversion? i'm excited to see more two-point conversions and i would like to see them narrow the goal post and make it harpder. we all watch the kijers. the kickers are over there playing video games and eating i cream. i want to see them earning a little more. >> i don't know. the weather's great. you might as well kick it. it's not that hard of a kick.
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any kicker worth salt should be able to. but late when you get into the snowy games, windy game, cold games, the coach is going to have to make a decision. >> super bowl 50 is going to be right here on cbs. who do you think will make the big game? >> super bowl pall. >> i was good on the xs. >> what are your predictions? don't avoid the question, gentlemen. >> you'll have to tune in on sunday. >> a little tease. >> ywe'll definitely discuss it. that's going to be on this weekend. >> thank you, tony and bart. we look forward to the weekend. >> me too. >> "nfl today" returns tomorrow here on cbs. >> weren't they such nice guys? >> they came from across the
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hall. >> they went right from rehearsal to us and now back across the hall. >> it's about nine after. now here's a look at the weather for the weekend. jup next, even if he finishes undefeated tonight, will the boston career of the great floyd mayweather jr. end in more of a whimper than a bang. we have the inside story. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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he is considered one of the greatest boxers of all time, but it looks like his career is just about over. the undefeated floyd mayweather may have his last. carter evans has the story. >> reporter: tonight could be the last time the fighting public has to listen to floyd
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mayweather brag about how great he is. >> no fighter in history has beaten more chinas than i beat. >> reporter: or how much he makes. but if the flamboyant money may weather was looking to go out with a bang, this fight doesn't seem to pack as much of a punch. as of last night tickets for last night were still available and pay-per-view numbers are way down. that's quite a bit different when his fight with manny pacquiao was sold out and shattered prior records. >> andre ber toe is a big underdog in this fight and some people were disappointed with him. >> reporter: that disappointment won't stop mayweather. >> reporter: good fight or not it would make hit 49-0 tying rocky marciano's undefeated
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record. he's known for his defensive skills and movement. >> he thinks quicker than most people h reacts earthquaker than most people. and at the end f the day he's outboxed everybody he's faced. >> reporter: meanwhile outside the ring the fielter has made headlines for his bouts with the law. he ooh been arrested or cite for violence against women seven times nchl 2012 mayweather served two months in a las vegas jail for his attack on a long-time girlfriend. >> much of what's happened outside the ring in addition to what's happened inside and been judged mostly on what e's done in the ring. >> reporter: but love him or hate him, floyd mayweather jr. has been the biggest ticket in boxing in the last decade. in his 19-year career, he's earned five championship titles, fame, and for tup.
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in 2014 "forbes" named floyd mayweather the highest paid athlete in the world. despite all the money he's made in his career, not everyone's convinced he's hanging up this gloves for good. >> he has claimed it is but each he's left some wiggle room. >> reporter: whether he decides to retire or fight again, one thing tees for certain. he's left his mark on the sport. >> i think his legacy will be that he's the best fighter thof generation and he once of the best that the sport has seen. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning: saturday," carter evans, los angeles that and you can watch the mayweather ber toe fight tonight at 8:00 p.m. eastern, 5:00 p.m. pacific. showtime is on -- some think he may be 50-0 which would bank
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rocky marciano's record. >> i hope this is different. there was so much hype behind manny pacquiao. >> ahead, feeling, meet the new self-help book that people are ignoring to solve live's problems. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". we stop arthritis pain,
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if you're among the millions of americans who turn to self-help books for a solution to life's problems or the type of person who hates self-help books, this might be for you. we can't say the title of this book sore let's say forget feelings. it's published by simon &
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schuster, a division of cbs. >> good morning to you both. >> good morning. >> and congratulations because i understand you're number one on the best list having deliberately written a nonself-help book. >> why not. >> that tees point here. i like the title here because the sub tight sl one shrink's practical advice for managing all of life's problems. you don't say solving but managing. >> you've got. >> it what is managing. >> figuring out what you can't do, what's not going change, what you have to accept about your relationship, your habits, your biology, the back luck, the situation you're in, a bad job. what you have to accept and then decide according to your values how to make the best of it going forward. if you're committed to doing good things and you're ready to accept that life sucks sometimes, then youan really do more.
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so we think actually releases some creativity, some positive approaches, but it does it by first obliging you do accept that some things are horrible and they're not personal, they're not your fault, but they're not going get better for a long time. >> the book is really kind of tough love. i read "the new york times" says it's an ice bucket book. it shakes people. when you got involved, sarah, what was your thought on this? >> my father is very funny. a lot of his working with people is making them laugh. usually when they go to a shrink, no one wants to hear them. their friends can't help them, family, clergy don't have it. they have a preposterous goal. it's a wish. ice not going to come true. if you haven't gotten along with your mother for 30 year and groirl is to have a loving relationship where you bake cookies together, no wonder they
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can't help you achieve that. so finally you walk up a long flight of stairs and say this is what you wanted, you say something like forget your feelings or that's a stupid idea. >> you're saying it's not the origin. gets to the origin is not the goal here. it's accepting it. >> yes. very often trying to get at the origin is a way of accepting things. you keep looking for a cause. why is this happening to me? you wind of wining, you wind up on the day of reckoning and it kills your creativity, your ability to really tap into a practical side of yourself. >> you say feel is a four-letter word. how do you mean that? >> well, a paetsch imt will say i'm feeling this, feeling that and they expect me to say tell me more or how do you feel about that. i'm much more likely to say,
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that's terrible. what's your goal about that. what are you going to do with that. it doesn't look like you're going to challenge it. you can evaluate and decide how to manage them. management is a very business-like concept and involves relatively simple procedures. ing iffing out what you can do, the risks t benefits, how it fits with your priorities and you go ahead. >> a lot of common sense. >> and sanity. >> the book is -- we call it forget feelings. one shrink's practical advice. michael and sarah bennett. ing their you both for being here. >> thank you. coming up, can the british nightclub be saved. hundreds of bands start up at the clubs and more and more of them are shutting down. we tell you why. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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ten americans in five kayaks are busy paddling this morning. they left havana, cuba on friday heading for key west, florida, 100 miles away. the team led by team leader soulja kobe hopes to make it in 30 hours. their adventure is all about diploma diplomacy. repairing diplomatic relations between cuba and the u.s. >> i hope they have a safe journey. clubs have been the wellspring of british rock going all the way back to the beatles, but they've been failing iffer years now. here's jonathan vigliotti in
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london. >> reporter: getting past the bouncer into the nightclub has been a saturday night mission for generations. from new york's famed studio 54, the blueprint for modern clubbing to today's super clubs. noere else exist as place where alcohol, dancing, love, but mostly lust fuse together for one night out. in the uk, nightclubs have given birth to some of the greatest music teams. london's night scene gave the world punk, the sex pistols, and the clash. duran duran and span dell ballet were known as the blitz kids. after the new romantics club and the husband canada in manchester ushered in the area.
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now there's a concern that the british night life is flat lining. a string of high-profile clubs have shuttered their doors. there were over 3,000 clubs the uk a decade ago. it's now nearly half of that. teen historic scene is about to be redeveloped which begs the question, where has all the music gone. in london -- ♪ a city with some of the most expensive real estate on the planet. new high-rises are going up and pushing clubs and creativity out. know smoking in bars are taking a toll. michelle denton said everything is about online profile. >> now you can look online, see people's behaviors in the minute so you can pack up and go to
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where everyone is. you don't have to feel like you're missing out. you don't have to preplan. and this means that your behaviors can be much more responsive, immediate, and interesting. >> reporter: this british deejay dave haslem has been looking at what people do with their friday nights out. >> what always intrigues me is we think we invented going out. >> we didn't? >> we didn't. in fact, our grandparents didn't. but they thought they did as well. >> reporter: haslem says what's happening to british clubs is a generational shift. >> night life is always evolving. that's what gives you energy. it severtays the same. >> reporter: super clubs like ministry of sound are still going strong. smaller clubs are moving out. in every city they're in a cheap part of the town and they help re-energize that part of the town and eventually the money man move in and the big business moves in and it becomes dentry
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feed and homogeneous and boring. the people move somewhere else. >> reporter: where people are going is to music festivals in huge numbers to stunning set piece spectacles like aiarcad only held a few time as year. antad s hyingome as the website boiler room allows anyone to stream the best deejay sets at anywhere in the world any time to straight in their living room. all that, says haslem, may be killing off the traditional nightclub scene but will never disturin give any generation's need to party. >> it hasn't replaced the feeling of being on the dance floor with a thousand other people. hearing amazing music, feeling connecting with everyone else, catching everyone else's eye and saying we're having great moment. it's saturday night and we're alive. >> reporter: for "cbs this
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morning: saturday," jonathan vigliotti, london. >> having spent some time in studio 54 back in the day, i will say nothing could ever replace that. >> are there images? >> no. they've been shredded. >> i'd like to see that. >> for a lot of money. now here's look at your weather for the weekend. up next in the dish. duck and more, gavin caussin in from the twin cities. anthony, that looks like a cosmo. >> yay. >> i'm awake now. this is "cbs this morning: saturday." did you know that good nutrition
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he landed a position in san diego where he was named one of "food & wine" magazine's best. >> he returned home to the twin cities in 2014 to open his own restaurant, spoon and stable. it received a james beard nomination for best few restaurant and was recently named one of five of the best restaurants in the country by "food & wine." welcome to "the dish". >> thank you. >> and you've brought duck. >> we get this duck from northern minnesota. comes from brainerd. the company is called wild acres. and the gentleman we work with, pat, he's really worked with us on the duck. it's great for us to get back into minnesota and just see all these roots of all the farmers and what they come up with. it's really beautiful. >> walk us through the table. there are so many wonderful things. >> this is the cosmo. this is called nancy's cosmo,
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named after my mother. she loves the cosmo. when we opened the restaurant, i said, i'm naming a drink after you. when i took it off the menu for a brief moment, she said, put it back on. >> cheese kurds, duck with plums, kolrabi and mustard greens. spaghetti are muscles. and this is a honey and cream cake. we use dairy and grains and things like that. that's where we focus a lot of it on right now. >> i want to hear more about your beginnings at subway. >> sure. i had a gentleman come in, his name is george sarah. he eats at my restaurant every wednesday at 6:00 p.m. and he came in every saturday and ordered this four-inch tuna fish sandwich on a round bun. and he'd walk out and throw it away. and i asked him about it.
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and he said, i watched your interactions with the guests. and i memorized what they would get. >> he was studying you. >> yes. i didn't realize i had this hospitality niche inside of me. and that's what he saw. so i started to work for him. it was a lot of fun. >> what a great story. >> it all starts at subway. >> certified sandwich artist. i still have the certificate. >> this man hires you and he had a restaurant. >> he did. it was next door. he offered me a dollar more an hour. so i went over with him and i started to work for him. and he just taught me about the business and the passion and the industry and what it meant to be a part of cooking and this whole world. and it's amazing to see where it is now. >> on paper, i think people would see that you worked with daniel for years in new york. but you decided to go to new york. a lot of chefs come to new york, learn the craft and go back to their hometown. >> for me, i spent almost nine
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yeth daniel. and he's my mentor. and it was one of the best experiences in my life for my cooking career. but it was also a time for me to reflect and say, i'm 36 years old -- i was 35 at the time. and say, what do i want to do next that's impactful for this industry? i have a 3-year-old and a 6-year-old. my wife and i can be ampbd fami around family. and that had a lot of impact on that decision. >> this whole spirit of mentorship continues. you were the head coach to a cooking team and you took on the silver medal in this contest. >> the executive chef, we took second. we'll spend the next year
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training that individual. >> we're glad you got that subway job. >> me, too. >> as we get your signature on this dish, if you could have this meal with any person past or present, who would that person be? >> because of how amazing she ws yesterday, i want to cook for the italian tennis player who beat serena -- she's incredible. i have pasta for her. if she wants to show up, i'm ready. i can recharge her batteries. >> chef, thank you so much. for more, head to our website. up next, our saturday session with one of the world's most acclaimed blues rockers and a terrific guitarist, gary clark jr. she stopped by studio 57 to share some of his brand-new album with us. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." brand-new album with us. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." ♪i'm going down to the land of wonder ♪
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medications you are taking, and if you have kidney or liver problems. using invokana® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase risk of low blood sugar. it's time. lower your blood sugar with invokana®. imagine loving your numbers. there's only one invokana®. ask your doctor about it by name.
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starring in this morning's "saturday session" gary clark jr. clark is a singer/songwriter, an extraordinary blues rock guitarist who has been thrilling audiences often the world with his blistering playing for years. >> he shared the stone with paul mccartney, rolling stone, and eric clapton. he's currently with the foo fighters hchl's out with his second full length album. the story sonny boy slam was released yesterday. this is "the healing." ♪ ♪ i've got something in motion something you can't see ♪
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♪ it requires devotion from those who truly believe ♪ ♪ this is something you can't crush this is something you feel ♪ ♪ for some people it's too much for some people it heals ♪ ♪ this music is my healing this music is my healing oh, no, not just healing ♪ ♪ when this world upsets you this music sets me free ♪ ♪
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♪ they compile information to try to make us believe ♪ ♪ there is something we can't touch something we'll never feel the musical will always be ♪ ♪ this is our healing this music is our healing ♪ ♪ oh, lord, we need some healing
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when this music upsets me it will set me ♪ ♪ god only knows who will save us who will save us now ♪ ♪ i sit back and watch the flowers turn to stone, yeah ♪ ♪ we've got this music healing ♪ ♪ yeah, we've got this music healing ♪ ♪ yeah, we've got this music healing ♪ ♪ we've got this music, yeah, yeah, we've got this ♪ ♪
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♪ >> the outstanding gary clark jr. he'll be back in a moment with more. stay with us. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." i try hard to get a great shape. this... i can do easily. new benefiber healthy shape helps curb cravings. it's a clear, taste-free daily supplement that's clinically proven to help keep me fuller longer. new benefiber healthy shape. this, i can do. that just tastes better. with 10 times more vitamin e.
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and twice the omega 3s. because why have ordinary when you can have the best. only eggland's best. better taste. better nutrition. better eggs. and it's also like... [ laughs ] [ engine revs ] it's amazing what a little cran can do. it's tough, but i've managed. crohn's disease. but managing my symptoms was all i was doing. so when i finally told my doctor, he said humira is for adults like me who have tried other medications but still experience the symptoms of moderate to severe crohn's disease. and that in clinical studies, the majority of patients on humira
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saw significant symptom relief. and many achieved remission. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. if you're still just managing your symptoms, ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, remission is possible. flonthis changes everything. spray. flonase is the 24 hour relief that outperforms the #1 non-drowsy allergy pill. when we breathe in allergens, our bodies react by over-producing six key inflammatory substances that cause our symptoms. most allergy pills only control one substance, flonase controls six. and six is greater than one. so go ahead, inhale life,
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excite your senses, seize the day and the night. flonase. six is greater than one. this changes everything. ♪ the winning streak never ends ♪ tomorrow on cbs sunday morning the return of duran duran. i got together with them to
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learn about their brand-new album and to look back at their ups and downs of their more than 30-year career. and then monday on "cbs this morning" world champion swirm katy la deky, why some consider her at just 18 years old the world's greatest athlete. that's monday on "cbs this morning." also welcome to our buffalo station. thank you for join ugg us on "cbs this morning: saturday." have a wonderful weekend, everyone. we leave you now with more from gary clark jr. this is his song from from his new album "grinder." ♪
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♪ i've been thinking too much i've been thinking too much ♪ ♪ everybody's thinking about money i've got to get me some ♪ ♪ my baby's cryin' so now my baby's crying ♪ ♪ we always fighting for money but, girl, ain't got the time ♪ ♪
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okay. so everyone is saying, "hey! you gotta get fios!" but why? why fios? well, fios is a 100 percent fiber optic network to the home,
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narrator: today on lucky dog, this german shepherd doesn't just need a home. she needs a purpose. brandon: german shepherds are eager to please. they love to work. narrator: but will shelby's disregard for personal space... brandon: hey, excuse me. narrator: ...trip up her chance at a forever home? shannon: i'm carrying her everywhere, so the dog would need to be able to stay away from my feet. brandon: i obviously have a lot of work ahead of me. i'm brandon mcmillan, and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are living without hope. my mission is to make sure these amazing

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