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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  August 12, 2017 8:00am-9:59am EDT

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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it's august 12th, 2017. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturda saturday". avoiding a nuclear nightmare. new signs the president may be trying to de-escalate the north korea crisis. plus violence breaks out as torch-carrying white nationalists carry out a rally in virginia. taylor swift. the case isn't over yet. and from using a hammer and saw to playing with fire. the push for these
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kids can do anything and sometimes pay the price. but we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >>an if ything happens to guam, there's going to be big,ig b trouble in north korea. >> the president's new warning as the world holds its breath. >> this man will not get away with what he's doing, believe me. >> he's playing a game of chicken. >> he's playing his game. he's a real estate tycoon in manhattan. i antony think kim knows what he's getting into. >> as well as a mess. the people are suffering and they're days. we have many options including a possible military option. >> all white demonstrators get together. >> they're tupseha tt a statue of robert e. lee will be ke
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down. >> swift justice in denver for singer taylor swift. a judge has ruled in her favor by tloeg out a case brought by former deejay. >> the dallas cowboys suspended ezekiel elliott for six games. >> he beat up a woman. we have to look at him differently. >> a painfwhat ryu r you going >> and all that matters. >> what aca tch. >> oh, my good finance. >> -- on "cbs this morning." >> on tuesday it was fire and fury. today it was locked and loaded. >> only donald trump could start world war iii while he's on vacation. it's easy to forget that all this saber rat
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from a golf club. it's caddyshack meets apocalypse now. and welcome to the weekend. i'm anthony mason along with dana jacobson in for alex wagner. we begin this morning with it. they said they're both committed to denuclearizing peninsula. >> he's not ruling out military action in south america. he declined to talk by phone with venezuela's president until democracy is restored there. the president is also continuing his vacation at his golf resort in new jersey. that's where we finder roll bar net traveling with the president. errol, good morning. as reporter: good morning.
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united states and north korea, president trump has made himself more available to questions from the media. he's taken reporters' questions on five separate occasions, voicing only harsh language for one of the world's most unpredictable threats. >> if anything happens to guam, there's going to be bug, big trouble in north korea. >> reporter: president trump's repeated warnings to kim jong-un has defined his messaging for the past few days app his twitter feed. friday he noted the u.s. is locked and loaded. when asked the germany would stand by in case of an attack, chancellor angela merkel said she didn't see a military solution. president trump said she did not speak for the u.s. >> my critics are only saying that, it's because it's me. if somebody else uttered the
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words, they'd say what a great -- >> reporter: secretary of state rex tillerson and u.s. ambassador to the u.n., nikki haley met with the president in bedminster yesterday as they tried to reassure allies that diplomacy is the first option. >> i think what the president is trying to do is support our efforts, but i'm sure north korea understands what the stakes are. >> reporter: the u.s. has been ready in the northern past fk years with 6,000 stationed in south korea and 3,000 more expected in the coming days. the governor of guam posted this video to facebook friday evening showing president trump reassuring him that americans there will be safe. >> i'm glad you're holding the helm, sir. >> we're going to do a great job. don't worry about a thing very now late friday president trump also spoke with
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president xi jinping. and according to state media he urged both sidesout the ongoing anti-government unrest and the crackdown on opposition leaders. ances the reporters' questions, the president talked about possible military intervention. >> we have troops all over the world in places that are very, very far away. venezuela is not very far away, and the people are suffering and we have many options for venezuela, including a possible military option if necessary. venezuela's defense minister called president trump's threat of military force, quote, an act of craziness. venezuela sits on some of the largest oil reserves in the world, but falling oil prices have pushed the country
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collapse. for more on the escalating tension on the korean peninsula and with venezuela, we're joined from our washington bureau by douglas ol i van. he's a senior fellow at numeric foundation and a former director at the national security council. we heard the president say we're locked and loaded. have we been locked and loaded for a while when it comes to north korea. >> absolutely. the united states in particular has been on hair trigger alert on that border for over 60 years now. so if there's a fight tomorrow, the ultimate outcome is not in any serious doubt. the united states and their south korean allies will win that fight. but the level of collateral damage and civilian devastation would be huge. >> the pentagon says that it's going to go ahead in south korea with military exercises that were planned. what's the impact that that might have? >> i'm sure the north koreans will be unhappy with it, but ths
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prepared to fight tonight or tomorrow. you have to do these exercises. you have to make sure that the two allies know how to fight together, that everyone is prepared. we have one of our best generals there in theater, vince brooks, the four star is the real deal, one of the smartest generals the army has. he does know what he's doing. this exercise needs to happen. >> doug, just how effective is our missile defense system? how accurate is it? and what are potential draw backs if we have to use it? >> reporter: well, the thaad system did have a very successful test this summer. it is accurate, but on the other hand, it's not something you want to bet the farm on if there's a nuclear missile coming. it is accurate, but it is not fool proof. and if several missiles are coming, at some point the system gets overwhelmed. >> doug, we also heard from the president on venezuela, not ruling out a military option. i don't know how else to ask this other than what was the president thinking? >> reporter: i think he's giving
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everyone in the region remembers that almost 30 years ago we did overthrow a government in the region in panama. this is not unheard of for the united states to intervene in the region. now, on the other hand, we have much less success with, you know, nicaragua and cuba so our record in the region is mixed, butter i think the president is reminding in an increasingly unstable situation, venezuela is clearly on a downward spiral, that this is the united states' backyard, and we have very real interests in the region. >> thank you, doug. >> my pleasure. >> tomorrow morning on face the nation, here on cbs john dickerson's guests will include cia director miami pompeo along with former secretary of defense leon pan et at that. >> president trump is getting push back from members of his own party for his criticisms of senate majority leader mitch mcconnell. on friday a number of republican senators took to twitter to express their
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the president has turned the heat up on the senate majority leader after senate republicans failed to deliver on a bill to repeal and replace obamacare. but on friday the president continued his criticism. >> what happened, in my opinion, last week is unacceptable. people have been talking about repeal and replace for seven years, long before i ever decided to be doing what i'm doing. seven years they've been talking repeal and replace, and it didn't happen. and not only it didn't happen, it was a surprise, and it was a horrible surprise. >> the president added he thinks mcconnell can still deliver on republican promises on tax reform. for more on all of this, we are joined by leslie sanchez, a cbs news political contributor and republican strategist. >> good morning. >> the president's credit sim of mim, wise move? doesn't that just sort of pull the party apart by doing that?
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it, while mitch mcconnell may not be the most popular person on capitol hill, it's built an allegiance around him and for his colleagues and his members just like we saw when jeff sessions was under attack, to ral lie behind him just shows how far and how exhausted republican legislators are getting with this back and forth and really no agenda moving forward. >> so let's get into that a little more. how is the president's relationship with congress at this point? >> well, i think one person made a very pointed remark, a colleague who has been there for about 25 years said the president couldn't deliver a pizza right now. they're so extremely frustrated. to build an allegiance and a coalition to move massive reform, tax reform, healthcare reform, they have to take a lot of political capital. if you look at the house, they felt they walked out on a limb for a peels of legislation that the president ultimately called mean, you're looking at pay lot at house members who see the
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them taking a vote of something that's undermining medicaid, medicare and seniors. it's not anywhere they want to be and that's the type of political price they don't want to take again. >> it's interesting when you look at the president he doesn't seem to want to take direction from others, so he continues his push for health care regardless. >> and that's true. and that has so much more to do with the president autos style. he's someone who ne really had a board of directors to manage over him. his style is to make the decisions and let them figure it out. if he doesn't like it he has these vicious attacks. it's a tropical storm, gail force winds until he finds its next target. the problem is there's a long memory in washington. it's want the way the game is played. and the term that they use most often is they're getting exhausted. necessity don't want to see this pattern continue. >> well, it's interesting because the president doesn't want to seem to leave healthcare reform behind, at least even for the moment. but he kind of keeps putting it back in congress's court as if he isn't willing to t
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responsibility for it. >> right. that's true. we know what the sentiment is on the house side. on the senate side when thrp trying to move through the skinny reform, he still called them a bunch of losers when they were not able to get that piece done. >> which is essentially what he's been calling mcconnell now. >> exact am. the pattern the last six months is that this too shall pass, but the memory issue, the enact that these members feel they're going to take the political heat for measures that the president is not willing to defend himself. and if you look at the base of support, his base does not have long coattails. they're basically every man for themselves. man and woman for themselves. and with respect to that, that's not a cohesive republican conference, and it's not something that's going to make this passage any easier. >> to the russia investigation no you, we heard this week suddenly from the president support of roblt mueller, which is a very different story. what can we make of that? >> i think overall folks are feeling that this should have been the tone from the beginning, that it
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out, give is it its due time and process. we have faith that there will be no wrongdoing here. and i think as the pressure is heating up and you have the new chief of staff, it's a very astute politically smart move, especially as things get more precarious in washington. >> impact from general kelly there. >> very much so. >> leasely sanchez, thanks for being with us this morning. several people were injured and at least one person was arrested during a demonstration by white nationalists at the youth of virginia in charlottesville last night. hurnds of marchers carried torches and chanted before fights broke out near a statue of thomas jefferson. they were proest at the e teing the planned removal of a confederate monument from a city park. police used pepper spray to control the crowd. nearly a thousand officers will be on hand for today's unite the right rally, which is expected to draw thousands of white
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see and far right political groups along with counter protestors. a judge has granted taylor swift a partial victory at her civil trial in colorado by to saying the claim she cost former radio host his job. >>reporter: friday's ruling comes as the singer alleges he groemd her during a photo on the part. he's also filing a suit against members of her team. >> good morning. taylor swift was visibly relooed after the judge read his decision and she appeared emotional in court. at one point even turning to hug her lawyers. ♪ >> reporter: in the end the colorado judge ruled that there was no way to prove taylor swift cost david mueller his job. the former denver radio dj sued swift, her mother and her radio liaison for up to $3 million. he argued the graem
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falsely accusing him of groemg her bear backside during this 2013 meet and greet. the judge riled there wasn't sufficient evidence to show that swift acted improperly when she reported the alleged incident. swift's attorney. >> i couldn't be more proud to represent somebody like taylor swift, who is willing to stipulate up in a situation like this. >> reporter: earlier this week swift spent nearly an hour on the witness stand recounting what she called a despicable and horrifying and shocking encounter. it was a definite grab, she added, a very long grab. mueller insisted he didn't do anything inappropriate, testifying his hand was on her rib cage. swift counter sued for sexual assault, seeking a symbolic one dollar. while the singer song writer has not been seen outside the courthouse, her fans turned out to show they are support. >> it's embarrassing. you feel ashamed. you feel like it's your fault and no one should feel
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>> mueller's case against her mom and radio liaison still stands as well as the counter lawsuit. closing arguments are set for monday. and we reached out to mueller's attorney for comment and did not hear back. >> thanks. the argument to require police officers to wear body cameras while on duty was strength end this week by a jury in south carolina. the panel was shown video of a robbery suspect shooting a police officer at point-blank range. mark strauss man has the story. >> reporter: new year's day 2016, officer convincey smith responded to a call about a suspicious person inest el, south carolina. >> stop. stop. >> this video was recorded by the officer's camera glasses that he bought himself on amazon for $30. >> if you don't stop, i'm going to takes you. >> reporter: as officer smith approached the suspect, ea
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nine millimeter handgun from his pocket and openedir fe. >> take your hands out ofou yr pocket. shots fired. >> reporter: or fired eight times. half the shots wounded smith in his arm, neck and torso. a year and a half later, officer smith recalled the terror of that moment. >> the first shot hit me in the neck and it felt like something flicked me in my neck. it was enough force to knock me on my back. >> reporter: the officer retreated to his cruiser to call for back up. i thought i was going to die right then and i told dispatch tell my family i love them because i didn't think i was going to match it. >> zmach, please tell my family i love them. >> reporter: responding officers arrested moor. >> that's not the moor -- he attempted to kill this officer and almost did with malice. >> reporter: this week that video helped convict
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he received the maximum sentence of 35 years in prison. for cbs this morning saturday s mark straussburg. chilling video there. the southwest is praising for another round of heavy downpours this weekend after officials warned drivers to steer clear of flooded roads in arizona friday. swollen kreeks over flowed in buckeye. that's about 40 miles west of phoenix, making highway travel impasseable. showers and thunderstorms are expected in the northeast and in parts of the southern planes plains and mid-atlantic states. >> time to show you some of this morning's headlines. the san diego tribune reports the first female u.s. navy seal trainee has dropped out of the program. it's believed she made it hoof wade through the rig russ three week before calling it weeks. navy seal training has a high drop out rate. about 75% of the men who zbinl the program don't finish it. >> the guardian of
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reports an amateur on suspicion of murder after a journalist who joined him for the maiden voyage disappeared. peter madison denies killing the woman and says he dropped her off on an island shortly before the submarine sank off denmark on thursday. the woman's boyfriend alerted authorities that the sub had not returned promptly a search. the new york daily news reports an american investment banker accused of pushing a woman into the path of a london bus this spring says he didn't do it. attorneys for eric bell quist maintain they have irreif you tellable proof that he was in the u.s. at the time of the incident. the push was caught on surveillance tape. the woman suffered back pain and bruising after being knocked into the bus. bell quist was arrested in south london on thursday and released pending further investigation. "the dallas morning news" reports dallas cowboys running back ezekiel elliott is stress expressing his disappointment to over the nfl's decision to
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the ruling follows accusations elliott used physical force against a woman in ohio last july. elliott apologized to fans, his family and teammates on twitter last night. he was never charged. elliott plans to appeal the ruling. national geographic reports a christmastime staple has indeed with stood theest it of time. researchers have found a fruit cake claimed to be a hundred years old in ant arc at that and in excellent condition. the fruit cake was wrapped in paper. the crew is that discovered it did not taste it. they said it looks and smells almost edible. it's believed british explorer robert fal con scott may have left the cake during his expi addition of 1910 to 1913. boy, it's not the typical fruit cake story. they never actually ate it. >> right. i'm just worried that they considered it. >> it's still available for regifting this year. >> please don't give it to me. and usa today reports there's just
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one of the biggest mega millions drawings ever. a single winning ticket was solid in pals heights illinois for last night's drawing. 23, 33, 53, 56, 58. the mega ball 6. the estimated jackpot, $393 million. that could buy you a lot of fruit cake. it is the fifth biggest in mega millions history. >> you can have that or the fruit ache. it's about 22 after the hour
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welcome back to cbs this morning saturday, coming up this hour, there was a time when the local factory offered a reliable route to employment. now it's the neighborhood restaurant. we'll look at an extraordinary shift underway in the american economy. also, it's a creature so massive it had to duck to fit into the museum. we'll hear about the thrilling dinosaur discovery that may rewrite the record books. that's ahead. tomorrow president trump is expected to make his first trip back to trump tower since inauguration. since taking officials he's been criticized for not have i vesting the assets from his real estate empire. the president has given the day to day operations of his businesses to his
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>> one of those businesses is the trump hotel in washington, which leases the space from the federal government and is a very profitable piece of real estate. goldman has more. >> this is a gorgeous room. a total jeanous must have built this place. >> reporter: in the first four of the months the trump international hotel beat its own projections by nearly 200%, turning a $1.97 million profit. this was despite occupancy below 50%. it was largely because of some of the highest room rates in the nation's capital, which increased monthly after mr. trump took office. february's average, $491. march, $550. april, 600. the numbers would dlat any hotel executive, except that in the president's case, they come from private internal doimts that the general services administration says were posted inadvertently. the gsa took them down, b
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had secured the documents. the president still owns and profits from his company. the hotel which he's visited five times since becoming president, is just blocks from the white house. and it has been the center piece of criticism leveled by ethics experts like walter shaub who resigned the the government's watchdog expert after he said the white house ignored his advice. >> why is it problematic for the president to go down to the street to the old post office to his hotel. >> well, first of all, it gives the appearance that you're favoring your own properties. you're using the presidency to profit. >> the president has spent roughly one-third of his time in office at trump properties, including his current working vacation in bedminster, new jersey, and 25 days at my mar-a-lago resort where membership fees from doubled to $2 hundred,000 since he took off. this hotel has become a gathering spot for republicans here in washington. some tourists even book rooms here on the chance that they'll get to see the president. and some members of
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cabinet have even lived here, paying full price. for cbs this morning saturday, julian agoldman in washington. it's the slesal event that's eclipsing our usual summer travel plans. still ahead, we'll see how this month's total eclipse of the sun has made cities and towns along its path prime locations for su weekend. it's a potentially deadly disease claiming r younger lives. up next, doctor tar awith a surprising and disturbing study on colon cancer. why it's want as
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time now for "morning rounds" and we begin with the surprising rise in colon cancer death rates among younger americans. a new research letter examined mortality rates for those aged 20 to 54. >> the major finding from 2004 to 2014, the colon cancer death rate for white americans increased by around 14% or roughly 1.4% annual increase. statistics on african-americans actually showed a decline. here to discuss the research is cbs contributor dr. tara narula. >> this is very important for people to understand. it's a very common cancer, the third leading cause ofce
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death in women, second in member. while many times it can remain asymptomatic there are things you can look for. if you know it bright red blood or change where it's darker, you have change in your bowel habits, diarrhea, constipation, belly pain, weakness, loss of appeti appetite, and then anemia, sometimes that's the only sign that will pick up something is wrong. now, there are certain conditions that can predispose you genetically if you have a strong family history or genetic conditions and inflammatory bowel disease. but most important is there are lifestyle and risk factors rngs things you can do yourself to prevent or help prevent the risk. diabetes, heavy alcohol use, smoking, people who eat a diet in red or processioned meat, who don't exercise or are obese, all willnc
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>> as dana mentioned the rate declined with african-americans. do we know why it affects some groups versus others? >> we don't. one of the theories has come is the idea that the microbium might have an effect. it's the trillions of bacterium that live in our gut and somehow through our change in diets and exposure we're altering our microbium. it may be affecting us in different ways. certain bacteria may actually promote the development of cancer. but important to understand from the study, we talk about african-americans. in general, they're actuallied a highest risk of developing colon cancer, highest risk of dying from it. it can be right-sided, younger ages. they consider african-americans consider being screened as early
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as 45. our next topic, stroke. according to the centers for disease control someone from the united states surfer as stroke every 40 seconds. >> a new study found that while stroke rates are going down for men, that might not be the case for women. c b c cbs chief medical correspondent dr. jon lapook takes a look. >> she was 30 years old, a vegetarian, nonsmoker, surfer, and picture of health up till she had a stroke. >> the paralysis ended up seeping down from my arm to my leg leaving the whole right side of my body basically immobile. i thought maybe i'm becoming paralyzed or potentially seeing death. >> that had to be a terrifying feel. >> it was terrifying. >> hardeman is an example of a puzzling and concerning trend. this week's 1999 to
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while they continued to drop for men, they stayed the same for women. dr. katherine rexroad from briggman hospital says risk factors such as obesity, high blood pressure and irregularity heart beat may for some reason affect women different than men. >> diabetes is a strong risk factor for stroke in men and women but for women it's 26% higher than in men. >> reporter: hardeman recovered and went back to her gourmet business. but last june she had a second stroke. >> i had to stop being a ceo of my ice cream business and start being a ceo of my health. >> reporter: this time they found the cause. a small hole in her heart. >> when i was told i had a stroke, i always
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with the elderly, something your grandmother has, never thought it would be something that happens to me. >> i think a lot of people would feel that way. surprising to read cdc kills twice as many women as breast cancer. >> it's something that needs to be on women's radar. they're unaware this is the third leading cause for death of women. one out of five women will have a stroke in hair lifetime and more women than men are affected by stroke. as you saw, it is debilitating when you suddenly cannot see, cannot walk, cannot move part of your body, can't speak. this is life altering. so we're just starting to understand more about this. in 2014 is when the first guidelines were published about women and stroke and we learned there are risk factors that tend to affect women, for example, hypertension or migraine with aura, depression and anxiety and
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stress, more prevalent in women. then there are sex specific factors like pregnancy, gestational diabetes, preeclampsia, all of these raising the risk of stroke. so really important for women to not only recognize the risk but realize that 80% of strokes are preventible by looking at their lifestyle. improving things like exercise, diet, not smoking, monitoring their blood pressure, checking cholesterol. there's lots we can do. >> totally unaware of that. i'm stunned by those numbers. finally the ongoing battle between antibiotic resistant bacteria. they showed the development of a test that helps doctors better treat your infection and the test only takes around a half hour to produce your result. >> this is really great. yo go to the doctor. yo have
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the test to see if it's rye sis tanlt takes one to two days. this would shorten that time to ten to 30 minutes. while in the office they can test your urine and tell you here's the perfect antibiotic and you then avoid the resistant antibiotic that you don't really need. >> dr. tara narula, thank you. turns out the local restaurant is more than a place to dine. it's fast becoming the pillar of economy. why some restaurants are playing the role that american factories once didn't you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." discover card. hey. what can you tell me about
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the nation's jobless picture is looking brighter. it dropped 3.4% in july, a 16-year low. if you're wondering where the jobs are coming from, look no further than your local dining establishment. >> jobs in the restaurant industry are now growing. the trend is the topic of the current article in the atlantic and we're joined by its author, senior editor derek thompson. good morning. >> good morning. >> it's important. you say it's happening all over the country from cleveland to new orleans. a third of the jobs have come from restaurants. >> that's right. it might be one of the most underrated stories. what are the sectors. it's the manufacturing economy and then retail and health care, but now restaurants are going faster than all of those. in three years at current rates there will be more employees in
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manufacturing, in factories. >> is it as simple as we all have to eat? >> we all have to eat. we have a choice. we can eat at home or out of home nchl the 1950s. 25% of our food budget went to restaurants. today is 50%. the share has doubled. the's a huge story. the second is look at factories. they've changed a lot. you look at retail, it's changed a lot. how much has restaurants changed. it's not much at all. going to the restaurant in 2017 is basically the same as 1957. you still need just as many people to service. as a result they have more labor. >> right. jobs are jobs. they're good, but they don't pay as much. >> they pay half the national average and that's a problem. yo don't want to have a high wage manufacturingec
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replaced with low wage sector. it's true. jobs are jobs. they are the kind of work people move through. they start working at restaurants or fast food being a host or such and then they move into a white collar job. >> was there a specific point where we saw it start to take off? >> it's definitely taken off in the last 30 years. just 30 years ago, there were three times as many manufacturing jobs, three times. and they're about to meet in two years. now that's partially due to the declieb in manufacturing jobs but also because you've seen this enormous run-up as people have been more likely to eat out. >> or busier. >> and you can have delivery as well. >> despite this, we see 150 applebee's and ihops are going to be closing. what does that mean. >> you have a lot
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the bottom in fast food, a lot of growth at the top saying nice high dining hawaiian, vietnamese, interesting new places in new york, austin, and nashville, but the middle, the casual, applebee's, i hosp, they've struggled recently as it's moved to either end. >> sustainable many. >> sustainable. we still have to eat. but it's possible some of these fast food restaurants are going to experiment with automation. >> we have to eat but we don't want to cook that thank you for saying it. >> take thompson, thank you. what's the largest creature f to have walked the earth? we'll hear about the dinosaur discovery that's rewriting the prehistoric past. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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when dinosaurs ruled the architect, the tyrannosaurus rex was roaming the earth. it may not have been the biggest beast. this is by far the largest species of dinosaur. >> there's money advantages to being big. it helps them avoid predators. predators don't attack you if you're that big. >> the pat a gortaten reached 120 feet from head to tail and weighed in at 72 tons, about as much as ten african elephants. a fossil was first it is
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in patagonia, argentina. part of its name was named after the land on which it was developed and the skeleton has been in the natural history of museum last year. ite so big the head can't fit into the museum. >> it was not done fully growingle weer not sure how much bigger they would have gotten. still. this is not the full-size. >> large and in charge right there. >> i love the name titanosaur. >> the interesting thing, t-rex and this one did not live at the same time. >> speaking of big, they scale the highest skyscrapers in search of high paychecks. a picture perfect way to tell
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♪ ♪ welcome to cbs this morning saturday. i'm anthony mason. >> and i'm dana jacobson. coming up this hour, it's just nine days away, the summer's hottest ticket is a date with the sun and the moon. we'll see why this month's total eclipse is a must-see event for many and find out how you can join in the fun. plus, it's a playground, hardly the kind we're used to. where kids can run wild. where advocates can say a little risk is part of the reward. and fleetwood at 50. the legendary rock group celebrates its golden anniversary this very weekend. we'll talk them about
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magical journey began. concerns remain high in the north korea crisis. while still delivering tough talk, president trump left open the door to diplomacy. after a phone call friday, both china and mr. trump said they want to denuclearize the peninsula. errol barn seth traveling with the president. good morning. >> reporter: president trump continues to stand by his strong language for kim jong-un despite north korea's unpredictable behavior. in fact, mr. trump said perhaps his words haven't harsh enough. and defended them by saying he's the messenger. >> someone else uttered the exact same words they utter they would say what a great statement. >> reporter: still ongoing efforts to reach a diplomatic solution to the heated
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and nikki haley were with the president in bedminster talking about their efforts. according to china state media president xi urged both sides to use restraint. president trump also called the governor of guam to reassure him that there's nolgz to worry about. e the president joked that guam could get a boost from all this attention. for more on north korea, we're joined by a senior fellow at the atlantic council. we just heard in the reporting the president had a conversation with president xi ginping yesterday. what can we expect from china. >> i don't know if we can expect so much. because the united states' foreign policy is chaotic.
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undermining our alliances. this sense we're moving in so many different directions. china has real reasons to be concerned about what's happening. not just because the level of rhetoric is getting so high and the tensions are increasing. but also, there's a cost to china of this destable -- destabilizing north korea and so for the chinese, what i hope they'll come to understand is that this kind of nuclear, hostile north korea harms their interest. >> we learned friday there are some diplomatic back channels that have been essentially in effect for a few months now, how effective do we think they are? >> probably not very effective. very often some kind of diplomatic context. with the north koreans. lot of it is happening through new york. with the americans being held in
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a rapid deterioration of the already-trouble relationships between the united states and the north korea. >> we heard from secretary of state rex tillerson and he talked about this combined message, trump was sort of the force and the idea of diplomacy, that's necessary to get north korea to move at all, is that accurate? >> i feel so great if i could discern any coherent strategy coming out of this administration. they're trying to put together a strategy and the president seemingly on a whim will something crazy . yesterday, he said we're preparing military options for venezuela. no one else in the
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preparing military options for invading venezuela. what do you do? every day people in the administration we don't know what the president is talking about. what does that say? that touches a bigger problem we're facing here. everyone is looking. because we expect some kind of strategy, some kind of coherence to come out of the white house. but the underlining stability and mental state of the president could be an issue that's maybe even bigger and broader than north korea. >> thank you so much for being with us this morning. 93-year-old veteran who served in the marines during world war ii is in japan this weekend, marvin of montana is returning a japanese flag that he found near a dead soldier. the flags were considered a good luck symbol. he's making the 10,000-mile journey out of a sense closure and knowing how much the flag
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means to the soldier's family. dare devils scaling some of the world's tallest buildings often with no safety equipment or permission and they're called roof toppers. we caught up with these thrill seekers who are also chasing social media glory. >> reporter: victor thomas is a 25-year-old college dropout who just a few years ago was your typical young photographer. posting street scenes in his hometown hoping some people would notice. his social media feed was fighting with something different. soaring images. captured on top of some of the tallest buildings in the world.
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defying gravity. and posting online to a global audience of millions. videos like these inspired victor to become vic invades. now he's one of so-called urban explorers. >> some amazing pictures there. you can see all of tony's report on the next edition of cbs on assignment this monday night 10:00/9:00 central. 7 minutes off the
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how's this for risky business? a playground hardly the kind we're used to. up next, a place where kids can do whatever they want. some parents think it's the best thing for them. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." caress, with floral fusion oil is more than one thing. it's soft skin and fine fragrance. discover more than one thing with caress. soft skin, fine fragrance. caress. depression is a tangle of multiple symptoms. ♪ that's why there's trintellix,
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would you let your 6-year-old start a fire or use a hammer and
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children free rein. >> now it's slowly spreading in the united states. brook silva-braga has more and is here with what he saw. brook. swings, these conventional playgrounds can be shocking. there's usually no normal playground equipment, not many rules, no direction on what to do. organizers say they would like to see a bunch more of these open across the u.s., but that will take some thinking about what play grounds and childhood are supposed to look like. while some kids hammers and others sawed, jonah swartz got an idea. >> i decided this was getting crowded. >> that's true. >> and so the 11-year-old started to build on. >> there's a
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do not need suggestions. >> do you think this going to hold? >> it might, one or two kids. >> reporter: this is playground nyc. 50,000 square feet of dirt where the boundaries of childhood can be drawn. >> this is a place where children can make their own decisions about what quo quote/unquote. >> they're being invited to make mud. >> you're trawly making mud. >> we are. we're making mud. >> the staff called playworkers aurs some supervision but very little direction. adventure playgrounds first blossomed in the uk after world war ii thanks to this woman marjorie allen. she turned london bomb sites into places kid cause do what they wanted that i was always
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people lived and their viernd, especially children. i think they get a raw deal. we give them a square playground with a few pieces of mechanical equipment. it's not good enough. >> reporter: her alternative caught on and hundreds of adventure playgrounds opened up. one is here in london. >> do what you want. it's a free place. you can't do anything. they'll say no, you can't do it. you're just free. >> reporter: well, how free? after taking a sledgehammer to these wood pallets, we watched these kids pile the boards up and set them on fire. the workers here think it's a positive. >> they're perfectly capable of but we as
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not because it's uncomfortable. >> reporter: there's been pushback and some have changed or closed in part over changing concerns. in u.s. 61 pages of federal guidelines warn everything from grass and dirt to rope swings. that's why playground nyc isn't actually in new york city but on governor's island. >> governor's island unique, different rules that don't apply to a city. >> it's like an consider. >> reporter: even here we saw where we're not quite ready. parents here are required to sign a legal release. not so in uk. and adults are not allowed inside. why? we asked play worker root sutton. >> do you notice a difference in kids? >> no. play's universal. >> same
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>> yeah. >> do you notice the difference between parents? >> parents here lean against the fence and tell the kid as what to do and how as though they're not capable. >> she said they're not kept out for children's sake but to retrain the parents to leave their kids alone. >> you cringe a little bit. you want to know your kids are safe but you want them to figure it out. >> she stepped on a nail. >> she's going to be okay. >> it may be easy in theory, but what happens when someone steps on a nail. when it happened to addison block, we noticed her mother jill went in and let her daughter keep playing. >> we know you could go in and would you bring them back. >> play work on the human level it's a direct challenge to
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paradigm, meaning that children are weak, children are incapable and protected and held and sheltered from the fears and the if they were true, we would have gone extinct long ago. >> the head play worker said he blamed himself for aidson stepping on that nail. there are risks and hazards and it's his job to eliminate hazar hazards. >> you could even step on a nail on a regular playground. >> i'm done it. accidents are no more common at these playgrounds than ordinary playgrou playgrounds. there are play workers there all the time. one of the reasons these playgrounds are expensive to maintain. it's led to some closure because it ee's hard to afford.
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this reminds me of the kind of free childhood that i have that has become increasingly uncommon. brooks, thank you. members of the legendary rock group fleetwood mac may have gone their own way in recent years but they're still thinking about tomorrow. they're planning a 50th anniversary tour and we'll talk about the band's earliest days. you're watching cbs this morning saturday. ♪ ♪ you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> announcer: this portion sponsored by toyota. let's go places. during toyota's national clearance event, we've got the last of the 2017s... ...and super-low apr financing. maybe that's why they go so fast. ok. that's got to be a record. at toyota's national clearance event, you could get 0% apr
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upset stomach, diarrhea!♪ ♪nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea!♪ here's pepto bismol! ah. ♪nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea!♪ ♪ 50 years ago tomorrow, in windsor, england a brand-new banged took the stage for the first time at a jazz festival. they didn't have a
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and a name -- fleetwood mac. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: they sold more than 100 million records since 1967. their sound has changed, so have the band members. but the chain has never been broken. ♪ ♪ you'll never let me in >> reporter: fleetwood mac will mark its 50th anniversary tomorrow. >> i was always look at that and that date's been worth a damn. >> reporter: mick fleetwood has been from the very beginning. the drummer recounts the early days of the band in his new book "love that burns." a chronicle of fleetwood mac. a story that almost took a very different course.
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fleetwood mac -- >> the phone ring in my flat and it's jeff and he said i'm thinking about putting a band together. i said i just committed. >> reporter: the jeff beck group would feature a young singer named rod stewart. >> like two days. >> reporter: instead he joined another band of blues musicians. >> the name was really kind of an accident in the middle of a recording session. >> correct. ♪ >> after they laid down this instrumental, their first unofficial track together, the engineer asked -- >> what are we going to put on the box? >> what's the name of it? >> fleetwood mac, john will make a play on that. >> reporter: green a guitar god who replacedc
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blues breaker, would write the band's first british hit. >> he had no interest in being a solo creature. >> he didn't even want to be a frontman, did he? >> no. >> solo number. >> he called fleetwood mac for a reason. >> which was interesting because he wouldn't put his name on it. in 1970, green did leave. >> when we survived peter leaving, in my mind, i would always go back and say, well, that was the most devastating thing that ever happened to me. >> if you could survive that you could survive anything. >> for better or worse. this weird survival story, all the love affairs -- you're kidding me how would they ever -- ♪
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>> reporter: their biggest album 1977's rumors, which sold 40 million copies was the soundtrack of their breakup. ♪ go your own way >> reporter: guitarist splitting with stevie nicks. yet the band endured, reaching for what fleetwood's call the elusive it. why are you still together? >> got a megadose of "it." which is challenging to be able to obtain that with this gloriously dysfunctional story. ♪ don't stop >> reporter: when they're
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always come first. ♪ yesterday's gone >> that's the only way to be in a band, you know, all you're going to have, no more. >> they're still here. it's amazing i mean, the "it" is perfect. >> great dose of it, his book love that burns, which is a big book in both size and price, is a whole lot of fun. comes out in september. on monday on cbs evening news i'll have more of my conversation with mick fleetwood remembering the early years. summer vacationers go in search of the sun, this year many are going to places where it will totally disappear. you're watching cbs this morning saturday. plans. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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decemberty nation may be this long. that's when we'll experience total darkness during total eclipse. >> here to talk about the eclipse skpen expeditions many are taking brian kelly travel expert and the points guy founder. brian, good morning. >> thanks for having me. >> there are some who planned vacations. some haven't. what are the last-minute tips? >> there's a lot of parties going on. almost total darkness for two minutes. the swath of the country, it starts in portland oregon all the way down. you know, you can still book flights. t
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sold out -- if you got hotel elite status, you can get rooms. >> it starts on the west coast. what's a good flas to go on the with k? >> the party starts -- portland, oregon, is a great place if you've never been. good craft beer culture, music festival. it starts just after 10:00 a.m. and they have really good public transportation. portland, it's easy to get around. >> if you're down south, where might that be? >> the carolinas are going get a good view of the eclipse. i recommend going to national parks. get outside to see the eclipse. the national park has a science and shadows program or take your kids to the zoo, to the greenville zoo in south carolina. they're doing a viewing for the first 3,000 people. >> you mentioned calling up
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nashville. >> nash vegas. there's the smoky mountains if you don't want to party at a live music place. nashville is probably the hot spot for the eclipse. >> nebraska may not be the destination everybody thinks of. >> nebraska is going to be it. for a full 50 minutes. spring creek prairie park which ily will be the ultimate place. yep, if nebraska is not on your list, you should add it. >> it's not too late to book flights. you've got to be tricky. >> guess what? some airls are doing eclipse flights. they're going to give out free sunglasses and cosmic cocktails and they leave portland and go for full eclipse watching. go be on the flight while that's
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>> what a great place to watch it. >> i really like that. brian kelly, thanks so much. we'll have live coverage of the eclipse next monday, august 21st philadelphia chef greg bur nick is celebrating some major recognition. up next on "the dish" he was one of the best chef winnerset the james beard award and his restaurant was called the best in the city. we'll meet him next. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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also try listerine® pocketpaks for fresh breath on the go. ♪ born in cherry hill, new jersey, outside of philadelphia, chef greg vernick grew up in a true food family. s he family owned a butcher shop and a market and his mother worked a restaurant. before becoming executive chef. >> in 20
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philadelphia, opening vernick food & drink, celebrated for no fuss new american cooking. this year "the philadelphia inquirer" called it the best restaurant in the city and vernick just took home the 2017 james beard award for best chef in the mid therein region. chef greg vernick, congratulations. >> thank you very much. >> come on. what did it feel like? >> i felt very kratzy. i wish i could hit rewind and do it again because i'm getting made fun of for the little speech i made. it was great. >> that's genuine emotion. what do we have here? >> we did a little summer pick nick situation. i think we need to start with a cocktail first. >> i don't mind if we did. >> we did a summer watermelon cocktail with ginger and gin and some
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juice. >> i've got the ingredients list over here because i'm taking it home. >> a really nice fresh cocktail. then we have a couple of summary salads, grilled romaine with stoned fruits. quinoa salad. roasted leg of lam with mustard. and last but not least cannoli stuffed with strawberry mousse. >> you started as a kid that grew up in restaurants how did that shape you being like that? >> it was my childhood. it's a lot of my memory revolves around being in my mom's restaurant. she had a little luncheonette and my grandfather would be playing in the back making sandwiches and salads. they were disgusting but he would eat them.
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before that my grandfather had a butcher shop in philadelphia. so it's a little bit of third jen ration food business. you know, it's been really nice. >> and when you were a teenager, your parents saiding you're not going to camp, you're going to get a job. >> yeah. i wasn't happy about that. i remember i was 13. and they were like you can't go to camp anymoring you need to get a job. so we made up a fake resume with my grades and my activities and i liked basketball and stuff and we droesh up and down the jersey shore just dropping off resumes and feeble somebody accepted it and interviewed me on the spot. you know, i don't know if i should say this. i lied to them and said i know how to cook and i had no idea. >> too late now, and you did okay for yourself. i said, mom, i got a job. i told her the story and she said, but you lied. so, yeah. i guess it
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but a little life lesson at the same time. >> you ended up wo chef john george training at restaurants all over the world. >> yeah. >> what was that like? >> i felt like i had the greatest job in the world. i felt like a fly on the wall. you get to see a hotel come to life. you get to be a fly on the wall and see everything happen. >> it's a great business education. >> yeah. it was amazing. and at the same time i was building a curriculum as to what it would take to open my own restaurant. >> yeah. >> so it was a lot of time on the road in hotels, but, you know, every opening, we got a little bit better and i got a little more experienced to, you know, i think i could do this myself that and you did and you and your wife julie back in philadelphia. why was it so important for you to go back home and do this? >> philadelphia is home. it was always home. it was always sort after conversation. it's thirdit
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i love cities. i loved new york, e loved boston, but there's no sense of home like philadelphia was and now we have a family there and it just is a special place to us. it really does feel like home. >> it sounds leak you have a special place at home now that you have a restaurant. >> it really is fine. >> let me hand you this dish and ask you to sign it. if you could have a meal with someone past or present, who would it be? >> it would be fun to have all the people of my past, sort of a small group of people who taught me the ways. that would be amazing. >> have everybody cook something too. what a meal. >> i'd be like look what i became. >> thanks to you guys is that thank you. >> thank you, guys, very much. >> for more, you can head to our website, cbsnews.com. up next, our saturday session. jade jackson though considered country, her debutlb
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actually produced by an all-time producer of punk. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." your brain changes as you get older. but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient originallyco disd.vere.. in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. the name to remember. moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis was intense. my mom's pain from i wondered if she could do the stuff she does for us which is kinda, a lot. and if that pain could mean something worse. joint pain could mean joint damage. enbrel helps relieve joint pain, and helps stop further damage enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been someplace
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starting ring in our "satur session" jade jackson grew up in california. in a house free of tell investigation and computers her father's collectionen spired enexpiration. >> at 13 she began writing songs and performing live. after college she went into bands. her debut album was produced by mike necessary of punk band social distortion. and now making her national television debut here is jade jackson with "aden." ♪
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♪ i grew up you'll never see me cry till now i had no reason why ♪ ♪ all alone because my baby is gone ain't no place feels like home to me ♪ ♪ don't make me move on i've never loved anyone ♪ can't you see you are tearing me apart don't you know you are breaking my heart ♪ ♪
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i went to bed this morning about nine ♪ ♪ didn't get much sleep last night funny what i've come to compromise ♪ ♪ i'm alone 'cause my baby, he's gone ♪ ♪ ain't no place feels like home to me ♪ ♪ aden, please don't make me move on i've never loved anyone ♪ ♪ can't you see you are tearing me apart don't you know you are breaking my heart ♪ ♪
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♪ can't you see you are tearing me apart ♪ ♪ don't you know you are breaking my heart ♪ ♪ had nothing when he left except a pack of american spirits ♪ ♪ i smoked them one by one as slow and steady as the sun ♪ ♪ i'm alone 'cause my baby, he's gone ain't no place feels like home to me ♪ ♪ aden, please don't make me move on i've never loved anyone
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♪ oh can't you see you are tearing me apart don't you know you are breaking my heart ♪ ♪ oh can't you see you are tearing me apart don't you know you are breaking my heart ♪ >> don't go away. we'll be right back with more music from jade jackson. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> announcer: "saturday sessions" are sponsored by blue buffalo. you love your pets like family. so feed them like family with blue.
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with some big news about type 2 diabetes. you have type 2 diabetes, right? yes. so let me ask you this... how does diabetes affect your heart? it doesn't, does it? actually, it does. type 2 diabetes can make you twice as likely to die from a cardiovascular event, like a heart attack or stroke. and with heart disease, your risk is even higher. you didn't know that. no. yeah. but, wait, there's good news for adults who have type 2 diabetes and heart disease. jardiance is the only type 2 diabetes pill with a lifesaving cardiovascular benefit. jardiance is proven to both significantly reduce the chance of dying from a cardiovascular event in adults who have type 2 diabetes and heart disease and lower your a1c. jardiance can cause serious side effects including dehydration. this may cause you to feel dizzy, faint, or lightheaded, or weak upon standing. ketoacidosis is a serious side effect that may be fatal. symptoms include nausea, vomiting, stomach pain, tiredness, and trouble breathing. stop taking jardiance and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of ketoacidosis or an allergic reaction.
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include rash, swelling, and difficulty breathing or swallowing. do not take jardiance if you are on dialysis or have severe kidney problems. other side effects are sudden kidney problems, genital yeast infections, increased bad cholesterol, and urinary tract infections, which may be serious. taking jardiance with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you have any medical conditions. so now that you know all that, what do you think? that it's time to think about jardiance. ask your doctor about jardiance. and get to the heart of what matters. you brush your teeth diligently... two times a day right? but 80% of bacteria aren't even on teeth. eughty purschunt?! colgate total's different. it fights bacteria on teeth, tongue, cheeks and gums. protecting 100% of your mouth's surfaces. colgate total for whole mouth health. do yno, not really. head & shoulders? i knew that not the one you think you know the tri action formula cleans removing up to 100% of flakes protects and even moisturizes
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harold hatahh.verything. but i recently bought jimmy dean stuffed hash browns. they're stuffed with delicious meat and cheeses. all of that crispy goodness has him seeing the day in a whole new light. jimmy dean stuffed hash browns. shine on. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ have a great weekend, everybody. thanks for watching. we leave you now with more music from jade jackson. >> this is "finish line." ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ i don't need no one care should i leave town ♪ ♪
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note ♪ they couldn't wait to talk until i turned my back ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ i'm never going back to your family's house ♪ ♪ waking up for the first time ♪ don't stop running at the finish line ♪ ♪ some things in life they stay the same ♪ and they're usually the things we wish would change ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ waking up for the first time you don't stop running at the finish line ♪ ♪ waking up for the first time is when you don't stop running at the finish line ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ so i don't worry about the
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rather sleep out under these stars instead ♪ ♪ all the money in the world couldn't buy me back ♪ ♪ the lord knows i'm too proud for that ♪ ♪ waking up for the first time is when you don't stop running at the finish line ♪ ♪ waking up for the first time is when you don't stop running at the finish line ♪
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narrator: today on "lucky dog"... ... five different pups that brandon has rescued are destined for five entertaining new homes. brandon: up! narrator: but each pooch faces a different kind of music... brandon: whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. narrator: ...on the journey to find a forever family. 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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