tv CBS This Morning CBS February 25, 2017 8:00am-9:59am EST
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♪ good morning. it's february 25th, 2017. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." president trump uses a love fest to launch more hate on the news media. hear why his own sta iffs contradicting the message. and extreme weather across america from a flood of rain to a deadly snowstorm. details on more trouble this weekend. borderline outrage. a u.s. agent on american soil shoots a teen on the mexican side of the border. the case is now at the supreme court. and swapping their oscar party for a protest. why one of hollywood's biggest ta
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money to a different kind of hollywood gathering. but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye owner," your world in 90 ses.cond >>ar we e fighting the fake news, it's phony, it's fake. they are the enemy of the people. president trump escalates his attack on the media. >> it's not just counter-punching, this is not just letting off steam. >> the president here who is tebiing g lies. >> it is impossibly boring. he's playing the same record so many times. iraqi forces push into mosul. isis fighters have unleashed a new weapon from an armed drone. flooding in peru sent a bus into a raging river forcing passengers to escape through the windows. heavy snow falling in the midwest friday. ofme areas getting up to 2 feet white. >> we broke 68 record high temperatures on friday and there's more heat to come.
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a familiar face made a risurpse appearance on fifth avenue. people got a little excited. a man dragged by a car in victorville. the driver had stolen that man's puppy. he reportedly was trying to drag the pitbull out of the car when the driver took off. a century-old power p ilantn cleveland is demolished, brought down with 200 pounds of explosives. a wildchair-throwing brawl breaks out at a new york eatery. all that -- >> this is baby zao-zu from china. >> -- and all that matters. >> that is straight out of the movies. look at that. >> up and over. >> huge cr aasht the end on the final lap. >> -- on "cbs this morning: saturday." the oscars are taking place in hollywood on sunday. a recent poll showed 60% of americans
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picture nominee. so #oscarssowhite has become #oscarssowhat. welcome to the weekend, everyone. i'm anthony mason along with alex wagner. we have a great lineup for you this morning, including the oscar weekend. a conversation with the man behind the film tied for the most nominations ever. "la la land" director damien chazelle is known for being a hollywood obsessive, so we got him to break down his favorite moments if film history. and it's the 75th anniversary of "casablanca." we'll look at the groundbreaking aspects of the production, including a cast made up entirely of almost immigrants. and find out the back story behind some of the movie's most famous lines. and we begin with this morning's top stories, president trump fires a new
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mr. trump used his address at the annual conservative political action congress in maryland friday to intensify his attacks on certain journalists. specifically for their use of anonymous sources. hours earlier members of his own staff insisted on briefing reporters only on the condition that their names are not made public. mr. trump also lashed out at what he described as fake news, but he did not expand on which organizations he was referring to. >> the president followed up the attack with a late-night tweet reading, fake news media knowingly doesn't tell the truth. a great danger to our country. errol barnett is in our washington bureau with the latest. errol, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, yes, president trump basked in his success at cpac friday ascending to the pinnacle of gop influence after being shunned by the establishment for years. but before he detailed his agenda, he took aim at the press and those in the intelligence community leaking
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>> i've been with cpac for a long time, all of these years we have been together, and now you finally have a president, finally. -- >> addressing an adoring conference on friday, president trump redle in returning as a victor to a group that favored other presidential candidates last year. >> i love this place. love you people. >> reporter: but he began his 50-minute speech by angrily criticizing the mainstream media. >> a few days ago i called the fake news the enemy of the people. and they are. they are the enemy of the people. >> reporter: the president is frustrated by a cnn story claiming the fbi rejected a request by his administration to publicly denounce a new york times report that the agency is investigating possible coordination between the trump campaign and russia during the election. >> i find this, a lot of this offensive. when you talk abouts
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back on something that doesn't exist. >> reporter: cnn and other news outlets were denied access to an off-camera briefing on friday. their white house spokesman sean spicer clarified that chief of staff reince priebus stoke to the fbi director andrew mccabe and was told "the new york times" story is inaccurate. priebus requested that be said publicly but mccabe declined. >> what were we supposed to do when presented by information by them? sit back and do nothing? >> reporter: the fbi is not commenting, but any communication by the white house to the bureau regarding ongoing investigations would be a violation of the justice department procedures. >> i saw one story recently where they said nine people have confirmed, there are no nine people. >> reporter: mr. trump complained on twitter early friday that the fbi is totally unable to stop the national security leakers, adding it, quote, could have a devastating
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>> they shouldn't be allowed to use sources unless they use somebody's name. let their name be put out there. >> reporter: now, despite complaining about fake news, it was president trump himself who repeated inaccuracies during his cpac address. for example, he complained obamacare covers very few people, even though it extended health care to 22 million additional americans. and he said u.s. borders are, quote, wide open, anyone can come in, despite the fact that more than 400,000 people are apprehended along the sovereign border, southern border, from 2016 alone. >> errol, thank you. the department of homeland security is channeling claims made by the white house about citizens from the seven countries affected by the trump administration's travel ban. the report concludes citizenship from the countries is unlikely to be a factor in whether a person poses a terror threat to the u.s. >> it also finds that of the 82
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by a foreign terror group, only 8 were citizens of those countries while more than half were born in the u.s. a homeland security spokeswoman says the report is not complete. for more on what's happening in politics, we're joined by aaron zitner, national politics editor for "the wall street journal." aaron, good morning. >> good morning. >> so much to talk about here. we'll start first with the relationship between the trump white house and the intelligence community. on one hand, the president has a very combative relationship with the intelligence community. on the other hand, we're learning this week that the chief of staff reince priebus made outreach to the fbi trying to get the agency to rebut certain reports about connections between the trump administration and russia. that extended to other intelligence officials reporting to "the washington post." what is the calculation here? >> well, this is really pretty problematic. there are leaks on all kinds of
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and what's been hanging out there is how official washington will investigate this. the fbi is investigating and congress is investigating. but if the white house tries to clean up leaks, as it seems to be, by asking the fbi and the very lawmakers in congress who are running these investigations to rebut the allegations and talk to the media, that will create pressure for independent prosecutor and what mitch mcconnell in the senate has been holding off on, a special committee, perhaps a house senate committee to investigate the claims more in the open. that's the danger here for the white house. >> what is -- how much pressure is there at this point for an independent prosecutor? >> well, it's very heavy coming from democrats. and -- >> is there any appetite for it on the republican side? >> you're starting to see a little bit. not enough to be meaningful. and the guy to watch is mitch mcconnell, to see whether he'll
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darrell issa, well-known republican, he's in a swing district. went on tv and said, not only that, he seemed to be saying the special prosecutor law should be invoked, but he said that jeff sessions, the attorney general, should reuse himself from participating in the investigation because he was part of the trump campaign. >> all right, aaron, speaking of adversarial relationships, yesterday certain news media outlets including cnn, the l.a. times and politico were shut out of the white house briefing known as a gaggle. again, what is this with the trump administration having a combative relationship with the news media? >> this is problematic. we'll see if it's a one-time thing or whether it's a sign that the white house is trying to shut out news organizations whose reporting it doesn't like. that's the fear here. there's a lot of atmospheric
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when he tried to influence the moderators in the debates, who was going to be on the stage, i think the moment to look for now is tuesday night. that's when he addresses a joint session of congress. it's a quasi state of the union address. that's where the rubber meets the road in washington. all the stuff we're talking about with the press and leaks, the real game is two things that the republican party wants. they want a tax bill. and they want to deal with obamacare, repeal and replace. that's what is holding the party together right now. a lot of people in the party don't agree with trump's attacks on the media. they don't agree with him on trade. they don't agree with him on immigration, but they are holding together because mostly they want the tax bill. and congress is stuck on those two issues. they don't have a path forward. tuesday night he goes to congress, let's see what he says. is it trump in campaign mode? or is it trump in governing mode, laying out a plan for how to move forward on thehi
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about. >> all right, aaron zitner, thank you for coming in this morning. >> thank you for having me. tomorrow morning on "face the nation" here on cnbc, john dickerson's guest will include former cia director john brennan. and on tuesday, cbs news will bring you president trump's first address to a joint session of congress. live coverage begins at 9:00 p.m. eastern. >> lots to see there. after suffering huge election losses last november, democrats will vote today in atlanta on a new national party chair. we'll be tasked rebuilding the struggling party. the candidates include minnesota congressman keith ellison, former labor secretary tom perez and peter buttigieg, the mayor of south bend, indiana. the candidates promise an aggressive counter to the trump administration. the saturated west is seeing a fcoldront expected to bring more rain this weekend. heavy rain and lightning moved through western michigan overnight unleashing pea-sized hail. >> around omaha, nebraska, snow
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and heavy winds made travel treacherous as cars skidded off highways. and beach-friendly 70-degree temperatures in parts of the east are about to plunge. let's bring in meteorologist ed curran of our chicago station wbbm tv. ed, tell us the good news or the bad news. >> or both. >> unfortunately for the east coast, it's the bad news as temperatures will plunge after that 70-degrees you saw yesterday in new york. this is the system moving off to the northeast that brought all that snow yesterday to areas. up to two feet of snow continues to move to the east. futurecast shows you this afternoon we have some pretty heavy storms that set up from this. and we could see some severe weather as this cold front continues to push through. so this afternoon, this evening, what we're looking at is a slight chance for severe storms in the area that's yellow here. and a marginal chance, a lower chance in the green. the yellow area could see damaging wind, large hail and
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can't be ruled out. 70 yesterday in new york. 58 today. d.c. will see 70 degrees today. but tomorrow, they will only see 48. and new york, you will only see 46 tomorrow. alex? >> back to february motivated. dean reynolds has our report. >> two down, one shot in the chest. i have a third with a wound to the hip. >> reporter: telling kansas police wednesday night, a man yelled, get out of my country at two customers before opening fire and fleeing the scene. >> it looks like a white male with a scarf on his neck and medals on his chest. >> reporter: five hours later and 70 miles away in missouri, police arrested a
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51-year-old adam purinton. purnton disclosed to a bartender he shot two middle eastern men. but they weren't middle eastern. they were indian hindus here on work visas for jobs on high-tech. the 30-year-old was killed and the 32-year-old was wounded. a third man of grand view, missouri, was also shot after he tried to intervene. >> i was just doing what anyone should have done for another human being. it's not -- it's not about where he's from or his ethnicity, we're all humans. >> reporter: the one man will be buried in india where his family directed their anger at donald trump. but sean spicer said any attempt to connect the president's rhetoric on immigrants to the tragedy in kansas would be
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for cbs this morning: saturday, dean reynolds, olathe, kansas. seven people have been arrested in connection with a deadly fire that engulfed a high-rise hotel in eastern china. at least ten people were killed and more than a dozen others injured. about 300 guests fled to safety. firefighters are searching for people believed to be trapped in the building's upper floors. and there are new developments this morning in the bizarre story of the murder of kim jong-nam in malaysia. he was, of course, the half-brother of north korean dictator kim jong u.n.-. the woman was paid $90 to use the nerve agent vx. she was duped into thinking it was a prank. in syria this morning, at least 32eo
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killed at government security offices in the west city of homs. al qaeda claimed responsibility for the attack, some carried out by suicide bombers. the violence comes as u.s. advisers turned their attention to isis strongholds in syria. david martin is several camps run by u.s. special forces to train syrian fighters. part of a force of about 15,000 being assembled to assault raqqah. many of them are raw recruits who volunteered to fight after their villages were liberated from isis. others like nazi hassan are prisoners from kobani, the first city liberated from isis with the help of air strikes. shot ten times and left for dead, she is known as the undead martyr of kobani. after 20 days of trai
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ak-47 rifle and a belt of ammunition and head for the front. general joseph votel says the fighters need to be supplied with more powerful weapons before they can retake raqqah, which has been heavily fortified by isis. >> we obviously want the people that are fighting here to have, or fighting against isis, to have the equipment they need to be successful. >> reporter: the weapons would be flown into the dirt airstrip built by a syrian engineer who lost his family to isis. we landed in an ospry aircraft, but soon it will be able to handle planes from the u.s. what is at stake is heading off terrorist attacks already in the works. >> there are threat streams, there are external operations emanating from raqqah right now. most of tm
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honestly at europe. >> reporter: if the pentagon's plan to accelerate the campaign against isis is approved by president trump, this base is likely to get bigger and busier. anthony? >> david martin, thanks, david. time to show you some of this morning's headlines. the courier journal of louisville, kentucky, says the son of the late boxer mohommad ali was detained at a florida airport after arriving from jamaica this month. a family friend says mohommad ali jr. was pulled aside because of his arabic-sounding name. he was questioned for at least two hours and was asked if, quote, he was muslim. officials with immigrations and customs enforcement are not commenting. and "the wall street journal" says jcpenney is slimming down. the retailers says it will close 140 stores and offer buy-outs to at least 6,000 employees by june. the cost-cutting moves come as customer shopping trends shift away from traditional department stores. sears and macy'sre
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closing stores. and the dallas morning news says a high school wrestler's success is being question in a dallas area tournament because he is transgender. mack beggs is taking testosterone to transition to becoming a male. this is a banned substance in the league. he would like to be wrestling boys but is competing in girls tournaments who says eligibility is determined by the gender listed on a person's birth certificate. thousands of trump-branded products have been dropped from online stores. new organized protests known as #grabyourwallet started several weeks after president trump was elected in november. the movement urges consumers not to purchase items designed or marketed by the president's family. and the journal news of hudson valley reports two grenades have been safely removed after being discover in the refrigerator of a 91-year-old nursing home resident.
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facility on friday. the resident was at a doctor's appointment at the time. it's not clear how he came into contact with the world war ii era devices. and "the new york times" reports on an athlete known as the world's worst skier. adrian zolano went through at the nordic championships this week. he fell nearly out of the gate. he didn't get much better throughout the competition. he fell a number of times and needed assistance with ski poles and had a lot of trouble going uphill. he only completed 3.5 kilometers of the 10-kilometer race. but he does have a good excuse. before wednesday's event, he never set foot on or had even seen snow. solano did complete the shorter race where he came in, surprise, last. you know, this is what i look like on the slopes, and i'm glad that i have company. >> i applaudim
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nerve to even try. >> yes. coming up, frightening moments for passengers after their bus is carried away by a rain-swollen river. we'll have details on their rescue. and later, when seconds count, but this isn't the cpr class, this is war zone training. why it's being used in some of our nation's cities. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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good samaritans jumped into a fast-moving river in peru to rescue passen injures trapped after their bus was swallowed by floodwaters saturday. heavy rains washed out the road pushing the bus into the river. there were no injuries. the flooding has claimed the lives of at least two dozen people in peru this year. >> wow. >> unbelievable video. >> just incredible. >> very good no one was hurt. still ahead, shopping under surveillance. we're yursused to hearing our b behaviors are being tracked online, but brick and mortar stores are doing the same thing, more than you realize. and we'll talk to "la la land" director damien chazelle, including his own favorite movie time moments. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning: saturday." we begin this half hour with the city of philadelphia's extraordinary step to save the lives of gun violence victims. this year the city has already seen nearly four dozen murders. that is a 38% increase from this time last year. >> now philadelphia plans to get ahead of its first responders in a race against time. here's michelle miller. >> reporter: at this north philadelphia church, this isn't just role play. >> it's not tight. i mean, it is constant. >> reporter: 60-year-old veronica daniel and the rest of the residents here are learning to set a tourniquet. the goal? to prevent a gunshot victim from bleeding to death before help
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arrives. >> so you've become the first responder? >> i don't know. i hope so. i hope i'm brave enough to do that. >> reporter: in philadelphia it takes an ambulance six-and-a-half minutes to arrive at a crime scene. every second a victim lays unattended could be a death sentence. daniel learned the importance of survival when her brother was shot 30 years ago. >> in my brother's instance, the gunshot wound brought him home so we were able to talk to him. it gave him an opportunity to look at life differently and to touch his family again. >> reporter: the workshop is called fighting chance, it was started by temple university hospital. >> it is real quick triage. >> reporter: scott charles is the hospital's trauma outreach coordinator. >> unfortunately, gun homicide is the leading death for young black men between the ages of 15 and 24. and we think we owe it to them to give them a fighting chance to survive those injuries. and if we only save two or three, it's worth it to us. >> repte
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taught by hospital trauma nurses and e.r. doctors. participants learn to stop blood flow at artery pressure points. >> you can push right here to stop -- >> reporter: and how to move the wounded out of harm's way. but scott charles says the larger point to all of this is to prevent more gun violence in the first place. >> if they die, the assumption is among their friends that they have to avenge this shooting. and so if we can save more lives directly, there's going to be a downstream effect. i absolutely believe that. >> reporter: because success here is measured not in mastering the skills, but having to never
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up next, medical news in our morning rounds, including rare diseases. each one affects relatively few people, but taken together they affect millions. plus, dr. jon lapook and tara narula on children's eating habits. many aren't sure how to shape them. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." don't ever let anyone tell you you can't change. that is what life is. change. it's not some magic trick. it's your will.
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sting roll. so keep on hugging... and playing... keep on awesoming. with 1000 sheets, we'll keep on going, too. time now for morning rounds with cbs news chief medical correspondent john lapook and dr. tara narula. it is rare disease day meant to raise awareness of serious medical conditions. observation of the day
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europe in 2008 and a year later the event started to be marked in the u.s. >> rare diseases in the u.s. are defined as those that affect fewer than 200,000 people. estimates by the national center for advancing translational sciences show an estimated 25 million americans are affected by rare diseases. there are over 6500 different types. and fewer than 5% actually have treatments. so, john, i think what might surprise folks is that some of the diseases and conditions called rare are actually sort of well-known. what do we mean when we say rare diseases? >> for example, cystic fibrosis, muscular dystrophies, als, also called lou gehrig's disease, people who have them feel isolated because they are not one of the diseases that has so many people that a ton of money has been poured into it. and it's really a problem, half of the cancers are considered rare, too. >> wow. >> the theme of the day
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what are the challengers researchers face? >> research holds the key to giving hope to patients who feel isolated, frustrated and confuses as to having no answers, as to, what do i have? what is my prognosis? is there a cure? but there are challenges, so you're putting together trials of a group of patients that is very small in many cases. and diagnosing the cases is small, so studying them is going to be very difficult. in addition, there's a geographic call spread. so patients may be located in different parts of the world or the country. in addition, there's a perceived high risk of failure. so if i invest in research studies, it's likely, unlikely i'm going to find a treatment or cure. do i really want to do that? and then there's a lack of natural history studies where we follow patients, a group of patients with a condition over a period of time. >> jon, how is the government taking steps to address this? >> the national institutes of health is all over this. if there was ever a reason to understand why to support basic research, it's this.
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yeah, you have all the different types of rare cancers, but maybe they share underlying metabolic defects, problems within the cell. if we can study inside the cell and figure out how cells normally work, when they go wrong, maybe we can figure out treatments. that's exactly what they're doing. there's something called the orphan drug act passed in 1983 to speed along development of new treatments for rare diseases. and since then, more than 575 new types of treatments have been developed. in the past year alone, the very first drug for muscular dystrophy has been developed. so the punch line here is, when you're thinking of cutting research funding, think about the fact that what they are discovering today may help cure a rare disease or other disease for a loved one in ten years. >> there's encouraging news in there, too. you learn all sorts of stuff in morning rounds. next up, healthy
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children. parents and care givers strive to keep their children fit and healthy. and what their children is a big part of that. a new poll was studied this week by mott's hospital. many parents were looked at for providing a healthy diet for their children. 100% of the parents said their healthy eating habits has a life-long impact on their health. but only 30% were confident in shaping the habits. we'll start with the whole concept of whether the parents surveyed felt their child were getting a healthy diet. >> the answer is most of them did not. and this is a huge struggle for me. i'm a cardiologist, i'm a mother. i teach my child to read the nutrition facts and it is still hard. in this survey they found only 17% of parents felt their children were eating very healthy. 56% said mostly healthy. and 27% said somewhat or not so healthy. >> so, jon, do most parents
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lead to healthy eating? >> they actually do, but maybe surprisingly, 21% thought it was either only somewhat important or not important to limit junk food or fast food. and that same, 16%, had a similar sentiment for sugary drinks. and i think one of the problems is that you have to almost brainwash kids into thinking, well, fruits and vegetables are fun. and there was a chef who told me once in the '60s it kind of got goofed up because everybody kind of thought of health food as steamed broccoli and alfalfa sprouts. but now the drive now is to show kids you can cook, it's delicious, grow your own gardens, pick things, eat them off the vine. and i think that is kind of the way to go, make them think it is fun to eat well. >> eat certain things off the vine. >> not everything. not the fermented grapes. >> and insects are known for their ability to spread disease. all over the world vaccines are
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used to target mosquito-borne viruses, but a new vaccine takes a different approach. they have launched a clinical trial for an investigational vaccine called agsv. the goal is to provide wide protection against a number of mosquito-transmitted diseases like zika and west nile virus. tara, this seems like a great sort of innovative approach here. >> it is huge. we just don't think about the threat, the public health threat mosquitoes pose, so to knock out several diseases in a vaccine would be a big advance. >> i was with a doctor who said this could be a treatment, imagine a treatment for malaria. >> focus on the transmission rather than the virus. good to talk to you. a mexican teenager on
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mexican soil was shot dead by a border patrol agent here in the u.s. the boy's family wants to sue. and now the u.s. supreme court will decide if they can. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." so sorry, excuse me. just get through here, sorry. oh, wow, quite a turnout. tami. marcus. okay, ahem! other unlimited data plans haven't lived up to the name. but today, unlimited gets the network it deserves. and so do you. verizon. (cheering and applause) (mic thuds, feedback) (man) you the man! uh, sorry... you need more information. it's unlimited the verizon way, without compromising reliability, on the largest, most advanced 4g lte network in america. (mic thuds) uh, s-s... sorry, last thing. it's just $45 per line.
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♪ executive actions by the trump administration have put the focus on the constitutional rights of noncitizens. and this week the u.s. supreme court agreed to hear a case with life and death implications. back in 2010, a u.s. border patrol agent shot and killed a mexican teenager. the agent was in the u.s. the boy was 60 feet away in mexico. >> now the boy's family wants to sue, saying the agent violated their son's constitutional rights. cbs news legal analyst rikki klieman has been following the case and is here with more. good morning. >> good morning. >> what exactly is the question before the court here? >> the question is whether or not this dead boy's family
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right to sue at all in a u.s. court for wrongful death that is excessive force under the fourth amendment. and due process rights under the fifth amendment. but what it really is all about is, a young boy is, i'm going to give you only the worst case scenario, this doesn't mean it's the truth, it's just how the government looks at it. and the worst case scenario, a group of boys were throwing rocks. and as they were throwing rocks at this border patrol agent, he went and shot and he hits this young boy in the head and kills him. the boy is on the mexico side. the shooter, the agent, is on the u.s. side. and so the obvious argument from the conservative point of view is, look, you have a noncitizen in another country who cannot possibly sue for constitutional rights in the united states of america. now, the liberal point of view is quite different. the liberal point o
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wait a minute, if he was 60 feet closer, obviously, he had a right to sue. and after all, the agent is on u.s. soil using u.s. equipment and taking the life of a child. >> so, rikki, the lawyer for the victim's family is seeing a narrow ruling. what does that mean and why is that significant? >> well, i think this is his only way to be able to try to persuade the united states supreme court that they should rule in a precedent-setting case. you have to understand that when this case is decided, it could make a big difference to others who may follow in various situations, whether it's a shot across the border or whether it's somebody in nevada who's operating a drone that goes off and kills someone in some other country. so the quote/unquote narrow ruling is really wrapped around the facts of this case, that is, the mexican government is not upset if they go forward with this suit. there was a life
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it really was conduct which occurred in the u.s. and you don't have a military situation here. but that's too simple. >> the u.s. justice department looked at this case and decided not to prosecute the border agent. >> yes, but that's a whole different story. we have to look, anthony, the family, it appears, doesn't have a remedy. however, in the state of arizona, in the ninth circuit, here in texas we're in the fifth circuit, there's also another case pending that is very similar where the judge started to let the case go forward. that case is on hold. so you have, also, a contrast between the circuits. when it comes to disciplining the agent, that would have been a different remedy, but they didn't discipline this agent. so you have a family that feels that their rights have been violated, or they have no rights. they just absolutely have no rights, their son's rights were violated, but he's not a citizen and it happened in mexico. and you also have, what are the
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are there disciplinary proceedings within this service? of course there are with customs and border patrol. this agent apparently was not disciplined. others might be in the future. but really, isn't the answer to use less lethal force? to be able to use things like rubber bullets or other things, because kids are always throwing rocks at the border. so there are ways around this. it's not going to help this family is the problem. our sympathies have got to go out to this family, with human beings, but we can't forget that the fact that a border is a border. we have them for a good reason. >> what a puzzling case this is. >> well, and it's going to be very important when we see if this court comes out for and for, which means the decision below stands, which means no lawsuit. >> all right, rikki klieman, thank you very much. up next, a hamptons home with a legendary past. grey gardens was the unlikely setting
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the film follows big and little ede beale. a mother and daughter who live together in a decaying mansion. the film gained such a following that it was adapted into a tony-award winning musical and hbo movie. >> oh, god, these chairs. are they dead, these chairs? we can sit on paper. >> "grey gardens" fell into such disrep disrepair that it fell into several health issues. that's when jackie onassis and her sister worked to repair the del delapitated mansion and its grounds. the home was eventually sold in
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ben bradley and his wife author sally quinn. now nearly 40 years later, grey gardens is fully restored and back on the market. the 6,000 living space has nine bedrooms, six baths and a heated pool. the asking price for the once crumbling manner that sold for $220,000 in 1979 is now a shade under $20 million. in addition to the history, it's a really nice piece of property that they have done a lot of work to. >> a little appreciation on the real estate value there. >> definitely. still ahead, under surveillance, the stores you shop in may be watching your every move. looking to learn your buying habits and sometimes even change the prices you'll be charged. a brave new world of retailing ahead. for some of you, your local news is next. for the rest, 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 alex wagner. coming up, as the plan to build a wall with mexico gains steam, local officers are being pressured to enforce immigration laws. we'll ride along to see their changing role. and then politics is most certainly on the program at tomorrow night's academy awards, but we'll show you how one group of actors got started early. and speaking of hollywood, 75 years after its release, we'll go inside the classic film "casablanca." the incredible thing you didn't know about the groundbreaking production.
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controversial attack line on the topic. >> a few days ago i called the fake news the enemy of the people, and they are, they are the enemy of the people. >> later that night the president tweeted that the fake news media knowingly doesn't tell the truth. and he called them a great danger to our country. president trump says the plan to build a wall along the border with mexico will start soon and is ahead of schedule. the customs and border protection agency says it plans to start awarding construction contracts by the middle of april. meanwhile, the mexican government is rejecting a trump administration proposal to send deportees from the third countries to mexico while their
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in the u.s. as the white house ratchets up these new immigration policies, in many cases, it's being left to local police to enforce the federal law. carter evans got a first-hand look at this in arizona. >> reporter: it happened suddenly. a man desperate for help in the harsh arizona desert. after he got some water from pima county sheriff's deputy karl woolridge, we learn that jesus gonzalez had been wandering for several days near the border 60 miles away. is this unusual? >> not at all. >> reporter: now the department of homeland security would like local officers like deputy woolridge take on a new role so they can act as immigration officers. if you had to put those people in your jails, would there be enough room? >> no, we are right at capacity. we don't have the panpowero
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enforce. >> reporter: even if jesus broke a federal law -- >> my responsibility is public safety in this county. that's my responsibility. >> reporter: pima county's newly-elected sheriff mark napier has 500 sworn officers who protect roughly a million residents across 9,000 square miles along the southern border. if your deputies are viewed as immigration enforcers, how does that impact their ability to do their job? >> we wouldn't get a lot of the calls that we get. i mean, where people witness crimes or victims of crime out of fear to lead to deportation. >> reporter: so deputy woolridge didn't detain jesus. instead, he called the nearby border patrol agent who took him into custody. what happens now? >> i really don't know. >> reporter: this is where your job ends. >> this is it. >> reporter: the sheriff welcomes president trump's plan to immediately hire 5,000 new border patrol agents because he says he needs the federal help.
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saturday," carter evans, tucson. and ahead of tomorrow night's academy awards ceremony, on friday night the six directors from nighted for best foreign language film issued a statement decrying what they call a climate of fascism in the united states. meanwhile, the associated press is reporting the department of homeland security won't allow into the u.s. a syrian filmmaker who worked on the oscar-nominated documentary "white helmets." jai jaime yuccas reports on this. >> reporter: another gathering down the street on friday brought out celebrities with politics on their mind. >> this is our time to resist. >> reporter: around a thousand people rallied in beverly hills outside the headquarters of hollywood power broker united talent agency. they railed against president trump'
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restrictions on seven muslim majority countries. >> i send you my warmest regards from tehran. >> reporter: one of those most impacted by the proposed ban, oscar-winning iranian filmmaker asghar farhadi. he decided to boycott sunday's ceremony in protest even though he's nominated for best foreign language film this year. >> i hope this unity will continue and spread the fight to other injustices. >> reporter: the event was sponsored by uta as a substitute for the pre-oscar party held each year during the most glamorous movie weekend. >> what is going on in the world, this is a time to take our resources and time and our influence and talk about what is going on in the world. >> reporter: along with all the talk of civil rights and artistic expression, the event was an attempt to grab the world's attention on the one
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weekend it's collective gaze is focused on hollywood. >> let's get out there. let's make some noise. throw our arms around our very own community and show the world what we're made of. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning: saturday," jaime yuccas. >> there are sure to be a lot of protests tomorrow night from the oscars, but president trump is unlikely to be watching the ceremony. >> so we are told. the four seasons of weather across much of the nation is about to change. and the already-soaked west, a cold front moving through is expected to bring more rain this weekend. heavy rain and lightning crossed western michigan overnight unleashing pea-sized hail. around omaha, nebraska, snow and heavy winds made travel treacherous as cars skidded off the highways. and the summer-like 70-degree temperatures in parts of the east are expected to plunge. former president barack obama gave his regards to broadway last night. the 44th president and his daughter malia attended the arthur miller play
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the president and first lady michelle obama made frequent visits to see new york theater during their time at the white house. it still ahead, it's not paranoia. you really have being watched by retail stores looking to learn your shopping habits and profit from the knowledge. we'll look at the privacy concerns being raised and how it could cost you money at the checkout. this is "cbs this morning: saturday." ♪
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hello, mr. yakamoto. welcome back to the gap. how did the tank tops work out for you? >> that's actor tom hanks from the film that took place back in the '90s. >> now brick and mortar merchants are using the similar tactics spying on consumers and using the information to their advantage. the practice is detailed in the new book "the aisles have eyes: how retailers track your shopping, strip your privacy and define your power." we welcome the author joseph turow. good morning. >> good morning. >> i'm totally terrified here. is this
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catching up with online or what is going on? >> it's part of that, and it's part of moving the offline with the online. it start in 2011 for good, which was in 201 is amazon did something to freak stores out. they said to people before christmas, go into a store and if you like something, scan it with your phone and we'll give you a discount. so people were doing this. and not only were they doing it, but amazon was getting prices from all over the united states. >> so they got a lot of information. >> so stores began to try to make stores like the internet, to be able to track people, define people, know who they are, when they walk into the store. >> how exactly are they tracking this? >> lots of ways. the main way is through beacons, which are the bluetooth devices that will move with you. they follow you through the store, depending on where the devices are, but there are lights that do it, there are inaudible sounds that do it, there are lots of ways,
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and moving into facial recognition. and stores -- >> minority report, basically. >> that kind of thing. now, much of that part is still anonymous, but in some countries it's not. in some countries they know your name when they see your face. >> this is all centered around the smartphone. that's the vehicle of communication. >> a smartphone is a marketing device. smartphones are filled with marketing characteristics. there's even use of the ax axelerometor to know what floor you are on. to know where you are. >> if you don't want to be tracked, is there some way to block it? >> you can go off the grid. you can stop your wi-fi, make sure your bluetooth is off, shut down all the apps. a lot of people don't realize apps are on when you don't think they are. so make sure they are really off. and don't use the shopper card. that's really hard for people to do. people want to go into stores and compare prices. they w
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shopper cards. it's really hard to go off the grid. >> what about sort of legislatively, is this a violation of any privacy laws? >> absolutely not. it's totally above board. if you look at the apps, nobody reads the privacy policies. nobody reads the privacy policies online either. they tell you what is going on in the broadways. it's really hard to figure out, the jargon is impossible. lawyers who write the things are said they are made not to be understood by real people because they are contracts. so it is impossible to read privacy policies, but if you read them, you get a sense of what is going on. and when you think a store is doing nothing, they follow you all over the place. they buy stuff about you. they look at what you say online about them. and all that gets together in profiles. >> and retailers are teaching americans daily that giving up data is a good thing. >> yeah. and they want to do it in a slow way to figure out that you will accept it as natural. i was in a conference one time
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frog in boiling water. the myth is, and he was being nice about it, but the myth he said, he thought it was true, if you put a frog slowly in water, it will not realize that it's being boiled. and so the notion is, we have to get the public used to this slowly, not give them, change prices right away. because the idea is people would freak out if they keep getting all these things. >> it doesn't end so well with the frog. >> it ends up getting boiled is what you say. >> next time i go to the store, i'm paying in cash and leaving my phone at home. how about that? >> a fascinating book, "the aisles have eyes." >> thank you for joining us. still ahead, it remains a beloved film, even as time goes by. 75 years later "casablanca" is one of the best movies ever made, including a cast made up entirely of immigrants. we'll go inside the history
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you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." thoris ption sponsored by toyota, let's go places. ♪ ♪ [beeping] ♪ the 2017 rav4 with toyota safety sense, standard. toyota. let's go places. hi, i'm frank. i take movantik for oic, opioid-induced constipation. had a bad back injury, my doctor prescribed opioids which helped with the chronic pain,
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what about us? >> we'll always have a paris. we will have casablanca. we got it back last night. >> and i said i would never leave you. >> the scene from "casablanca." in 1943 it won three academy awards including the oscar for best picture. today 75 years after its release, "casablanca" is still considered a classic. ♪ you must remember this on warner bros back lot in may of 1942, the first day of shooting for the new film "casablanca," the production schedule called
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bogart, ingrid bergman and dooley wilson. "casablanca" has been seen more times than any movie in history. in cambridge, massachusetts, it's still shown every valentine's day. won the world. t romantic >> if that plane leaves the ground and you're not with him, you'll regret it. maybe not today but soon and for the rest of your life. >> "casablanca's" moments remain a moment of our have to cvocabu. noah eisrg
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new school in new york, is author of the new book "we'll always have casablanca." >> to this day, it's probably the most widely taught screenplay. it is extraordinary. >> released in 1942, "casablanca" was a war-time romance, but it was a subtly political movie from warner bros. the same studio that made the first anti-nazi film in 1939, "confessions of a nazi spy." >> i hired a nazi spy. >> this is the studio with guts. >> there was fear within this very strong isolationist fraction in congress that what was happening in hollywood, specifically under warner
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it was a threat to peace. >> in "casablanca" rick embodies that isolationism, as many flee to his cafe. but it feels strikingly urgent, perhaps because nearly all the 75 actors in this film were immigrants themselves. peter laurie from hungary. paul henreid from austria. >> now you are subject of the human right. >> reporter: even the gustapo major was a silent film star in germany, but fled his home country with his jewish wife. the jewish question is never addressed in the movie. >> no. >> but it's really kind of everywhere in the film. >> it's -- yeah, it's latent. it percolates like a number of
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surface. >> one of the few american-borne actors in the film, dooley wilson plays sam, the piano player in rick's cafe, who has no last name but a pivotal role. in his own way, sam is also a very bold character for his time. >> yes, rick's best friend, his travel companion, his confident, and that was extraordinary. >> she checked out of the hotel. >> in reviewing the film in 1943, the amsterdam news, the african-american newspaper, said the movie is one every colored person should make it his business to see, since nothing has given such prominence to a negro character. >> sing it, sam. ♪ you must be remember this >> as p
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time goes by" becomes the most enduring torch song. ♪ the fundamental things apply as time goes by ♪ >> in johnny depp's words, the national anthem for broken-hearted lovers. sam's piano from rick's cafe sold at auction in 2014 for $3.4 million. ironically, dooley wilson didn't actually play the piano. humphrey bogart, 42 when he took the part, was known for tough guy characters, but this transformed him into a romantic league and the highest paid actor. for ingrid bergman, it was also a breakout role. >> but off screen, bergman and bogart didn't have much chemistry at all. >> bergman often said, i kissed him but never
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>> that was a famous quote and it's a wonderful one that says a lot. >> the writers won an oscar for their screenplay, but they had some help. here's looking at you, kid, was not in the script. >> no. as far as we know, that was a line that bogart liked, perhaps one that he used off screen. and to this day, it's a tribute to him. >> here's looking at you, kid. >> another memorable line was not in the original script. after shooting wrapped, hal wallace was unhappy with the ending. three weeks later in a memo, wallace wrote two alternative last lines. >> and he brought bogart and claude rains back in to do voice-over in the last sequence of the film. >> they would choose the second one. >> louis, i think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship. >> it's one of the most famous lines in the history of motion pictures.
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♪ >> amazing the lengths this movie has had. >> no time like the present to re-watch it. >> and when they made that film, they were making five other movies on the same lot at the same time. there was nothing special about it, but here we are all these years later, as is often said, you can't see this movie enough times. >> you can't. the classic of cinema. >> it really is. speaking of cinema classics, up next, director damien chazelle made record with a record number of nominations for his film "la la land." we'll talk with the hollywood obsessive about his own favorite movie moments. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." ♪
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♪ that's the scene from "la la land" up for a record-tying 14 oscars at tomorrow night's academy award ceremony. >> the adoring reception for the filment has brought acclaim to the director damien chazelle. i sat down to him to ask what movie moments mean the most to him. ♪ city of stars are you shining just for me ♪ >> when did you know you wanted to make movies? >> i have never wanted to do anything else. i can't remember ever wanting to do anything else. >> in almost every one of his
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musical "la la land" you can see damien chazelle has a lifelong love affair with film. so we asked the 32-year-old director for some of his favorite film moments. five quick questions. favorite film of all time. >> the umbrellas of chergorg. ♪ >> the 1964 french musical made katherine denev an international star, directed by jack deme, chazelle says it was principal inspiration for "la la land." because -- >> i had to describe what this thing is called century ma. i think that's a movie that doesn't make sense on paper because it is opera but not
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opera, it is real but completely fake. it's happy but heartbreaking. just doesn't make sense unless you see it as a movie. and it's the most shattering trae transporting work of art i've seen in a movie. >> favorite song in a film. >> favorite song in a film "as time goes by," "casablanca." ♪ you must remember this a kiss is just a kiss ♪ ♪ a sigh is just a sigh >> easy choice. >> yeah. >> number three -- favorite line in a movie? do you have one? >> a little depressing, but forget it, jake, it's chinatown. >> it's said by a cop to a private eye played by jack nicholson at the end of the 1974 movie chinatown to suggest they're strangers in a strange land. >> forget it, kid. get to chinatown. >> there's no better closing
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>> favorite ending to a film. >> "city of lights," chaplin needs to have a place in that cop universe. >> at the end of charlie chaplin's 1931 silent classic, his enduring trump is finally recognized by a blind flower girl who needed help to recover. >> it's just extraordinary. again, it's something only movies can do. only movies can make that movie sublime. >> and finally, favorite scene in a movie. >> when fred estare and ginger rogers dance to "cheek to chek." ♪ i'm in heaven >> and the 1935 film is a comedy of mistaken identities. >> when they start dancing and singing, you're not just seeing
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but you're seeing something that has as much depth as a painting by da vinci and it is art with a capital a. >> some really great choices there. but i think he could come up with a completely different list if you asked him up next, "the dish." extraordinary chicago restaurants that have earned this man the title "the next best chef."
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but then at the height of his game, he stepped away to become a stay-at-home dad. last summer he returned with a bang opening "giant" in chicago. chef jason vincent, good morning. we are glad you're back, let's put it that way. with this table in front of us. >> thank you so much. i appreciate you saying so. >> what have you brought for us today? >> it's a cross-section of what "giant" does. we do normal food. if that makes any -- >> normal delicious looking food. >> i don't think this is quite normal. >> that's technical. that's the crux. we as cooks, we as restaurant people want to make it difficult, but we don't want you to see that part, you know what i mean? it's onion rings, but the onion rings are complicated. it's ribs but the ribs are complica complicated. but you shouldn't know it. >> what kind of ribs are we talking about here? >> it is like normal ribs. i mean, when you order ribs at a restaurant, you have something in your head. and if that
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plate, you're bummed. >> right. right. what else do we have with the ribs? >> so baked beans, we do a vegetarian baked bean, vegetarian isn't the selling point by any means. biscuits. our friend, molly hayward, who used to work with us at our last place, this is her biscuit recipe. >> they are delicious. i'm eating one right now. >> they are delicious. >> so did this really all start in a pizza parlor for you? >> it did. and it's odd because it's like, it's parallel lives. it's do i like being in a kitchen? and do i like being a chef? and those things, fortunately, intersected for me. but when i'm 15, it's, you know, i really like being in a kitchen. i kind of like the comraderie and the anarchy, to be honest. and then i became more mature. and i'm kind of a good cook. and everything is where it is
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you guys. >> you were in new orleans at a legendary restaurant. what was that like? >> it was the craziest experience of my life. >> is it true you actually, on a mother's day, you made meals for 1,400 people? >> they made meals for 1,400 people. i cut onions and garlic. >> you cut a lot of onions and garlic. >> correct. >> with all the enthusiasm and energy and acclaim, you took two years off to be a stay-at-home dad. tell us about that decision-making process. >> well, it was the fair and right thing to do. my wife is a champion. we knew she was pregnant and we were doing pretty good. but it's like, if i'm not helping her, like, where does it go? >> was it a difficult decision for you? >> of course, yeah, of course. >> and what ultimately led you back? >> her. ironically. >> good for your wife. >> yeah.
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rock of my life, but at the same time, way more level-headed than i am. >> well, and now you're back with giant, smashing success. they are calling you chef of the year. chef, i'll ask you to sign this dish, as i do all the chefs on this program. >> really? >> yes. >> i'm like, really? >> yes. we put it in the gallery. if you could share this meal with anybody past or present, who would it be? >> barack obama. >> well, he's a chicago guy, so, you know, chances are, who knows? >> i would like to talk to him. >> i'm sure there will be lots to discuss. jason vincent, thank you. for more on jason vincent and "the dish," head to cbsthismorning.com. up next, our saturday morning session with the 97's. they will perform from their old
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album and you don't want to miss it on "cbs this morning: saturday." that is what life is. change. it's not some magic trick. it's your will. your thoughts become your words become your actions become your reality. change is your destiny. now go chase it. hang in there. thanks. kleenex. someone needs one. when it comes toor hospital romances, the more complicated, the better. i love you. but i love him. i love him, too. so do i.
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i'm good with god ♪ ♪ i'm not afraid i got no regrets i paid my dues i paid my debts ♪ ♪ i mailed a mess but it's my bed no regrets no regrets ♪ ♪ goodness knows i've done you wrong i'm not too gone to see ♪ ♪ all's i know is i'm good with god i wonder how she feels about me i wonder how she feels about me ♪ ♪ you should be scared i'm not so nice many a man has paid the price ♪ ♪ you're pretty thick so i'll tell y t
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i'm not so nice i'm not so nice ♪ ♪ i made you up and i'll break you down i'll do it slow how does that sound ♪ ♪ you're just a joke that's going round ♪ ♪ goodness knows you've done me wrong i'm not too blind to see notice ♪ you might think you're good with god but i guess you'll have to wait and see i'll guess we have to wait and see ♪ ♪ oh hell no say it ain't so is it too late
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>> how about that? don't go away, we'll be right back with more music from the old 97's. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> saturday sessions are sponsored by blue buffalo. you love your pets like family. so feed them like family. with blue. now that karen's taking osteo bi-flex, she's noticing a real difference in her joint comfort... "she's single." ...and high levels of humiliation in her daughter. in just 7 days, your joint comfort can be your kid's discomfort. osteo bi-flex. made to move.
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♪ ♪ [beeping] ♪ the 2017 rav4 with toyota safety sense, standard. toyota. let's go places. rightabreva can heal itold sore, in as few as two and a half days en wh used at the first sign. without it the virus spreads from cell to cell. only abreva penetrates deep and starts to work immediately to block the virus and protect healthy cells. you could heal your cold sore, fast, as fast as two and a half days when used at the first sign. learn how abreva starts to work immediately at abreva.com don't tough it out, knock it out, fast. with abreva.
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♪ with ingredients like roasted hazelnuts and cocoa, the delicious taste of nutella takes pancakes to a whole new level. make any day a pancake day with nutella- spread the happy! for great skin, you don't have ...just go to bed. new aveeno®... ...positively radiant® overnight facial. get the benefits of a spa facial... ...overnight. aveeno® naturally beautiful results® it can seem like triggers pop up everywhere. luckily there's powerful, 24-hour, non-drowsy claritin. it provides relief of symptoms that can be triggered by over 200 different allergens. live claritin clear.
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♪ i must strike out in the darkness buy some time both new and used ♪ ♪ time to wander through the arches time to wander at the ruins ♪ ♪ time to figure out exactly what the hell i'm doin ♪ ♪ all who wander are not lost just me just me ♪ ♪ signals and wires both get crossed ♪ ♪ oh remember back when you got lost with me ♪ ♪ i mus
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kills me i must lose my heart's desire ♪ ♪ i must wind up warm and wasted with a flat screen for a fire ♪ ♪ will the stories make me happy some facsimile thereof ♪ ♪ will they give directions that will lead me back to love ♪ ♪ all who wander are not lost just me just me ♪ ♪ signals and wires both get
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narrator: today, on "lucky dog", narrator: an adorable spaniel mix has all the right looks. brandon: even a tilt, i love it. that's gangster. narrator: but training this poster boy to bring out the best in an aspiring photographer... brandon: he's still a jumper. narrator: ...is going to be a heart-pounding race to the finish. brandon: 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 animals find a purpose, a family, and a place to call home.
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