tv CBS This Morning CBS October 14, 2017 8:00am-9:54am EDT
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ good morning. it's october 14, 2017. welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." unraveling the obama legacy. president trump chips away at two of his predecessor's signature achievement, but who cleans up the mess? and into the fire. new footage captures the chaos as firefighters battle some of the worst wildfires california has ever seen. we'll have the latest on the fight. trying to tackle some of the most challenging projects of our
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silicon valley lab with someone who's been there and he is a legend in his own time. bill murray's films has entertained us for decades and now he's taking his talent to the world of music with a band, an album and a tour right here at studio 57. we begin with today's eye opener. your world in 90 seconds. it's a fight against time here and a fight against mother nature as firefighters assault this fire from the ground and in the air. the devastation continues in california. firefighters are fanned out across the region. many of them charged with putting out hot spots to make sure the flames don't reignite. >> newly released footage captures the frantic effort to evacuate homes. >> sir, you've got to go! importantly, iran is not living up to the spirit of the deal. >> president trump is threatening to quit the iran nuclear deal. >> if the united states were to pull out no one
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the president also added $7 billion in subsidies for the affordable care act. >> we just took care of of a big chunk and now we'll take care of the other chunk. house speaker paul ryan led a congressional delegation to puerto rico to see first hand the devastation from hurricane maria. >> we are absolutely committed to solving this problem. a u.s.-canadian family held hostage is back home in north america. >> how are you feeling, josh? >> angry. >> hurricane ophelia is in the ocean. >> we can see 80-mile-per-hour gusts battering ireland. final score 2-1. >> and all that matters. it was just reported that even pokemon go was used by the russian-linked election meddling effort. who knows how the russia thing will play out, but i hope he'
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catch them all. >> on cbs this morning. >> touchdown! syracuse, ismael, the upset by the orange defeat clemson 27-24! [ cheering ] ♪ ♪ you can tell we have a producer who went to syracuse on this show, huh? >> that's a locker room that is very happy. >> a little stoked there. >> welcome to the weekend, think. i'm anthony mason along with alex wagner. we begin this morning with breaking news overnight of significant progress in the deadliest wildfires in california history, but the battle is far from over. new body camera footage shows a sheriff's deputy braving the flames to rescue a
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woman and to get people to flee to safety. the good news is short lived. firefighters are bracing for more dry and windy weather today. >> the fires have killed at least 35 people and forced more than 90,000 residents from their homes. more than 5700 homes and buildings have been destroyed. carter evans is in santa rosa with the latest on the fire. carter, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the fire wiped out entire neighborhoods like this one and this is what thousands of people are going to find when they're finally allowed to return home. the fire store raced through town in the middle of the night and many people had little or no warning at all. dramatic body camera video shows the danger sonoma county sheriffs deputies faced driving through the flames in a desperate effort to evacuate as many people as possible. >> go! go! go! >> even loading a woman in the back of a patrol car. >> she's disabled. >> let me get her feet! let me
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>> sonoma county sheriff rob giordano says it's important for people to see the video. >> this is a dangerous event. it is not over. stay away from the houses and understand the severity of what this fire can do. >> reporter: more than 9,000 firefighters are trying to contain the flames which have already scorched an area larger than new york city, and high winds expected this weekend could reignite the danger. >> the trees and everything on this fire, that tree was on fire. they raced toward his home in santa rosa. >> how fast did this all go up? >> pretty quick. i would say within three or four minutes this fire was getting up right to where we were standing. >> his home was spared, but not his barn. >> his wife alicia tried to salvage what she could. >> we're just glad that we could get out because i know there's people that haven't and
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the fires continues to rise. friday crews dressed in protective suits searched for the missing with cadaver dogs. >> we are all humans. everybody cares about this, and it does impact us. we're not going to give ourselves a time limit, but we're going to find every missing person that gets reported. >> reporter: authorities say it could be weeks before they determine the actual cause of the fire. searching for the cause is a process they described as painstaking because a lot of the evidence was burned. that's forcing them, alex, to search for other clues. >> tragic situation out there. carter evans in santa rosa, california. thanks, carter. president trump is using his executive authority to make progress on fulfilling two of his signature campaign promises. on friday the president announced he will not certify iran to be in compliance with the landmark nuclear deal that the obama administration negotiated with tehran and five other nations. mr. trump stopped short of tearup
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repeatedly promised during the campaign. >> it comes one day after he ended pages that keep millions of americans insured under obamacare. in a tweet late last night the president said those payments to insurance companies are over and urged congressional democrats to come to the table. harold barnett is following all of this. good morning. >> good morning, yes. president trump is taking an axe to two pillars of policy from the obama administration, ending both move axe away from the iran nuclear deal and rolling back key subsidies for obamacare. president trump said he is simply following through on one promise after another. >> we cannot and will not make thisser is t this certification. >> reporter: while not breaking away from the iran nuclear deal, president trump did highlight the option telling congress to address his concerns with the country's behavior and reimpose sanctions if iran
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comply. >> we will deny the regime all paths to a nuclear weapon. >> reporter: but iran and the other five countries signatory to the deal are staying on track. the uk, france and germany issued a joint statement saying they stand to the plan's full implementation. the president's own national security confirms the deal is working. >> i do believe the agreement to date has delayed the development of a nuclear capability by iran. >> reporter: for that reason secretary of state rex tillerson, and joseph dunford and secretary of defense jim mattis signed off on this current action which keeps the u.s. involved for now. >> i can sign it myself. i don't need anybody. >> reporter: president trump is intent on taking his own action against obamacare signing an executive order which slashes $7 billion in annual payments to insurers, funds designed to bring down costs on the individual market. >> that money is going to insurance companies to lift up their stock price.
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medical condition you better be very, very rich. >> reporter: beyond the unified opposition for democrats who called the order sabotage, nevada's republican governor brian sandoval warned of the human costs. >> it will hurt people with mental health issues. it's going to hurt veterans. it's going to hurt everybody. >> reporter: the non-partisan congressional budget office warns eliminating subsidies could prompt insurers to hike rates 20% next year. that's if they don't leave the exchange. at the values voters summit, president trump said congressional inaction forced his hand. >> we're taking a little different route than we had hoped because getting congress, they forgot what their pledges were. >> now as far as the future of u.s. participation in the iran deal, cbs news has learned that the white house intends to keep diplomatic channels with tehran open through the joint ommission which oversees compliance and president trump has still yet to appoint his official
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commission. anthony? >> harld barnett at the white house. thanks, errol. for the iranian reaction, iran's president hassan rouhani said iran will remain inside the deal along with the eu, russia and china despite president trump's desertification. elizabeth palmer is in tehran and she's just spoken with the foreign minister mohammad jarav zarif who negotiated the deal. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. yes. foreign ministers have spent two years working very hard to bring this deal to fruition, but he wouldn't admit to being disappointed this morning at least on camera, he's still portraying it as a triumph of diplomacy because as you mentioned, the five other countries who signed are standing in solidarity with iran as far as the concern. the deal is just going to go ahead. he did tell me that he felt that the net effect
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trump's move to decertify is going to be to undermine u.s. credibility generally internationally. >> nobody else would trust any u.s. administration to engage in any long-term negotiation because the length of any commitment, the duration of any commitment from now on with any u.s. administration would be the reminder of the term of that president. >> reporter: now, i asked him about some of the other potential fallout, for example, boeing's ambition, the big aircraft maker to sell e riran new planes. it would be worth billions. iran has no bone with american business, that's just fine. did president trump's aggressive tone put the cab ash on iran's desire
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better relations with the united states and this is what he said. >> i believe the trump administration is closing its eyes on the realities of our region. we believe it would be important for the united states, for the trump administration to exercise a reset and its cognitive disorder with regard to our region. >> liz, to what degree did doctor zarif know what president bush was going to say about desertification? >> reporter: i asked where he watched the speech and he watched it live in the same building as the iranian president. he said there were no surprises in it. he did not get a phone call from, for example, the u.s. secretary of state for a head's up nor from any other official in the administration which gives you an idea of how bad and chilly diplomatic relations are, but h
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surprises because the european allies had been funneling information about what was coming to him all week. >> i see, indeed. elizabeth palmer in tehran. thanks, liz. the iran deal will be a major topec program morning on "face the nation" here on cbs. john dickerson's guest include secretary of state rex tillerson and israeli prime minister prime minister benjamin netanyahu. let's take a look at the latest actions by president trump. bob cusack is editor in chief of "the hill." good morning. they kicked the iran deal back to congress. so what's the reaction on capitol hill to this. >> republicans are basically saying they support the president, but the question is what will the republican congress do? will they move forward with sanks which will definitely kill the deal? will they come up with a new deal that could be approved? i think they're going to hold hearings and they're not going to get a lot done over the next 60 days because they'll have a budget deal and tax reform. they don't want to handle this issue. it's too hot right now.
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>> and diplomacy between the white house and capitol hill is not at an all-time high. if you look at the fit for share between the senate foreign relations share bob corker. the president has, in bob corker's words castrated secretary of state rex tillerson. what is your assessment of the relationship there? >> relationships are very important to washington, and bob corker is a key member of the budget committee, he's the chairman of the foreign relations committee, as you say. he will need bob cork or tax reform so this is a problem. this feud is only escalating and remember, corker -- corker's retiring. he's not running for reelection. he's a free agent. >> you don't think this is say reverse psychology that corker is trying to convince president trump to be more engaged in the diplomatic process? he said as much to "the washington post". >> i've never used corker use this strong language. he's such a pragmatic guy. the president says he's a counter puncher and we've seen bob corker is now a counter
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major step of undoing a key part of obama care and ending these subsidies. what is he trying to do here, do you think? >> number one, he's trying to hollow the obama legacy on a number of fronts especially health care. he was frustrated that the obamacare bill did not pass. so he's doing, i think, what he promised to do is basically gut obamacare. the question is does he get blamed? who knows? i don't think that's going to work. >> there's no signal the democrats are going to come to the table so what is he really expecting here? because he could end up with pretty angry people who lose coverage. >> yes. it's incredibly risky for the president to do what he's doing right now because it could backfire on him. i think it's a negotiating tactic and it's something that works with his base. powe i'm going to. ut obamacare >> are republicans on the hill happy he's done this? >> no. the house republicans did sue
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saying it was not constitutional and congress approved them. the question is will congress step in and put it in some type of bill. >> what does it do for 2018 and the mid-term elections. >> good question. it could hurt state republicans. in a lot of these districts people will lose coverage and they're going to blame president trump, but it depends on the pr battle. can the bully pulpit blame president obama when they say is a flawed law? >> the next big hurdle for the congress seems to be the whole issue of tax reform. how ready for that are they? > >> we haven't seen a bill yet. we were supposed to see a bill months ago and republicans say release the bill. the reason they're not is when you release a tax reform bill there are winners and losers and the lobbyists will swarm and pounce on this bill. so i think it will be very difficult to get through both the house and the senate especially the senate. now republicans in the senate mitch
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with centrist democrats including joe manchin because john mccain voted on the tax cuts and you can't count on john mccain to support this bill. >> there are so many variables. one is bob mueller's investigation. we know reince priebus met with him. what are we expecting on that front in the coming weeks? >> it looks like this thing is wrapping up. if he's talking to the chief of staff and there's been speculation that next would be president trump, that mueller personally would interview trump. i think from a big standpoint, you've got to get this investigation done either this year or you kick it until the end of next year. so you don't have the investigation during an election. >> there are, like, 17 stories that we have to cram into this discussion. thank you for your time, my friend. >> thanks, alex. another memorial service is planned today for one of the 58 people killed in the las vegas shooting massacre. about four dozen of those injured remain in the hospital, some in
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meanwhile, las vegas authorities have revised a time line of the events as they struggle to determine a motive for the rampage. here's jamie yuccas. >> reporter: his frustration obvious. clark county sheriff joseph lombardo defended his department for offering conflicting information about how police responded to the deadly shooting at the mandalay bay. >> nobody is attempting to hide anything reference this investigation. >> reporter: addressing reporters, but refusing to answer any of their questions, lombardo said investigators have been going through mountains of information. some of it subject to human error in an attempt to quickly paint the most accurate time portrait of the events that night. >> my attempt like i stated earlier was to give you the information as i know it, unverified to calm the public. >> reporter: lombardo did offer new detail saying at 9:59 pchl m. hotel security guard jesus
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alarm on the 32nd floor, but was likely not shot until close to 10:05 p.m. that's when he used his radio and his cell phone to report that he'd been shot. within seconds, stephen paddock then turned his gun fire to concert goers below his windows and to aviation fuel tanks about 100 yards past the concert crowd. at 10:15 p.m. police arrived outside his room, 12 minutes after the shooting began. sheriff lombardo also revealed that when officers arrived by car, paddock started shooting at them. for "cbs this morning saturday," jamie yuccas, las vegas. a canadian family is back home after five years in captivity in afghanistan. joshua boyle and his wife and three children were rescued after being kidnapped by a taliban-linked extremist network while on a backpacking trip. boyle said the group raped his american wife and killed his infant
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the haqqani networks kidnapping of a pilgrim and his heavily pregnant wivfe engaged in ordinary villagers was eclipsed only by the stupidity and evil of authorizing the murder of my infant daughter. >> the family's rescue was carried out by pakistani forces based on u.s. intelligence information. time to show you some of this morning's headlines. reuters reports u.s.-backed kurdish fighters claim they are on the verge of driving out isis from their de facto capital of raqqa in syria. the kurds have been waging a street by street battle against the islamic extremists in the city since june. a spokesman tells cbs news about 100 isis terrorists have surrendered in the past 24 hours and he warned of difficult fighting in the days ahead. defeat in raqqa will be a major blow to isis. "the losel
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reports california has declareded a state of emergency over its outbreak of hepatitis a. it allowed officials to purchase more vaccines to halt the virus which has sickened more than 500 people. the outbreak is believed to have started in san diego's homeless community. federal health officials warn that even with efforts to stop it, the illness can last years. "the new york times" reports tesla has fired hundreds of workers. the electric carmaker said friday the dismissals were done following performance reviews. it's boosted production of the model 3 sedans. the company has produced a fraction of the 1500 vehicles it projected in its recent quarter. it's not clear if personnel issues are contributing to the production delays. "usa today" reports a hole the size of the state of maine has been discovered in the sea ice near antarctica.
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researchers are not sure what to make of the massive opening in the sea and it's the largest hole at the site in nearly 40 years. solid sea ice is usually found at this location especially during winter which wrapped up in august in the southern hemisphere. the hole comes just weeks after a trillion-ton iceberg broke off from antarctica. and "the salt lake tribune" reports an elderly texas couple was rescued after spending a week along the remote road in southern utah. the husband and wife ventured out on a day trip in nearby arizona when their rental car broke down. both were found separately away from the car and severely dehydrated. officials credit the husband for creating an s.o.s. sign using flowers and rocks which alerted first responders flying overhead. >> i am very glad that has a happy ending. >> me, too. >> and what a crafty thing to do, that husband. >>
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disgraced movie mogul harvey weinstein may be trying to get his job back, but after the extreme turmoil he's caused, will there even be a company to return to? we'll have the latest on that scandal. later from drones that deliver packages to balloons that deliver the internet to self-driving cars. those are just some of the innovations being worked on at google x. we'll get a rare look inside the secretive lab with a journalist who went inside. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday."
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out of this world collectible. this is "cbs this morning saturday." ralph northam: i'm ralph northam, candidate for governor, and i sponsored this ad. narrator: ed gillespie wants to end a woman's right to choose. ed giof a woman'sd put thpersonal decisions,rge not women and their doctors. as governor, ed gillespie says, i would like to see abortion be banned. if ed gillespie would like to see abortion banned, i would like to see i would like to see i would like to see that ed gillespie
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♪ beautiful miami sunrise. welcome back to "cbs this morning saturday." coming up, after restoration efforts, wolves are once again roaming the american west. but the win for wildlife has also produced howling controversy. >> and we'll touch down with a unique focus, miracles love affair with football. see what the images also tell us about our collective history. that's ahead. we begin this half hour with more fallout from the sexual assault allegations gwen hollywood film producer harvey weinstein. another board member has resigned from the company stinstein founded and artists at
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projects brokered with the weinstein company. >> this as weinstein prepares for a symbolic knockout blow. the academy of arts and sciences is holding an emergency meeting today to consider whether it should suspend or end weinstein's membership. tony has the latest p. >> if weinstein is suspended or expelled he would no long ber able to vote for nomineesers for the academy awards. he's already been spoended by the british film academy and more celebrities speak out against him. >> evidence you can't refute. d.a. should prosecute! >> reporter: on friday, members of the national organization for women demanded harvey weinstein be prosecuted. now new york president sonja asor owe. >> what why don't they open an investigation to see if they could find more victims? because we know now that they're clearly out there. >> reporter: in 2015, weinstein was reco
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d.a. vance said his office decided not to move forward the case against weinstein because it was not going to be provable. >> first of all, my hands are shaking. >> reporter: on friday, actress and former model angie everhart talked about a disturbing encounter with weinstein a decade ago. while she was sleep oong boat at the cannes film festival, weinstein broke into her room and master baited in front of her. >> he told you not to tell anybody and you told everybody. you told people on the boat after it happened? >> i told people on the boat. i told people at the dinner i was at. and everybody was like, oh, that's just harvey. >> reporter: the chorus of hollywood heavy hitters condemning weinstein has grown louder. in a hollywood reporter roundtable discussion about weinstein, seth rogan said he only worked with weinstein once, but that was enough for him. >> i remember one of the first stories you heard about him involved inappropriate sexual misconduct, you know
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think that people -- i know the people would say to me when i would refuse to work with him, you know, he's old school, it's stuff like that. and there is kind of like a wink and an acceptance of that type of behavior. >> producer amy pascal. >> i think that the women who stood up have to be applauded. >> yeah. >> because that's really, really hard to do when nobody wants to stand up. and the silence is deafening. and i think that's the part that we're responsible for. >> reporter: harvey weinstein has denied allegations of rape and maintains that all of the relationships were consensual. on friday, his brother, bob weinstein, denied reports that the weinstein company was exploring a sale or shutdown. he said, quote, business is continuing as usual as the company moves ahead. meanwhile, harvey weinstein reportedly plans to fight his dismal mist sal from the company because, wrap your mind around this, his contract may h
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>> the clause in there. >> there will be a lot of examination about what the company knew and how much it knew. >> thanks so much. they think big, real big. it seem nosz idea is too bold for the creative minds at google x's lab. the secret of silicon valley last tasked with imagining radical solutions. we'll talk to a journalist who had a chance to go inside. turning medicine into a movement, up next we'll meet the subjects of an inspiring new documentary whose vision helped change health care delivery across the globe, saving millions of lives in the process. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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they would borrow things from some of the hospitals to improve the situation in haiti. >> actually the first we had was -- >> that was a clip from "bending the arc." it's a chronicled journey of doctors who helped change the way public issues are dressed especially with developing nations to the benefit of millions. this morning in "morning rounds" dr. jon lapook sat down with the film's two key figures in the documentary. >> how long have you guys known each other? >> december 1983, 34 years. >> 34 years. >> would you ever have imagined that you would be where
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imagined dr. jim as president of the world bank. >> they attended school together at harvard in the 1980s. it's there in boston where the foundation for their life's work would take shape. >> you have to continue to ask, okay, now, what's the most important thing i can do to really lift people out of poverty, to provide health care, education, pro e provide them jobs, and it sustained us and sustained the group. >> reporter: the nonprofit health organization partners in health was born. their story is told in a new documentary, "bending the arc." >> there was an arc from just the few of you meeting so many years ago to where you are now. what does bending the arc mean? >> it's a saying. i myanmar tin luther king used to talk about it at the arc of history. islam, but it bends toward justice. but for us, i think the thing has been if you look at mar
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luther king's life, the arc does not bend unless people grab it and bend it. >> reporter: a common theme throughout their lives has been fighting conventionism. >> there was a young man who was on death's door. he had drug-induced tuberculosis. tell us about that? >> i participated in his care. i participated in him staying on his therapy. i didn't think he was going to make it. >> reporter: he did indeed make it. at one point in the film dr. kim was shown video of what his old patient in peru looks like now. when you see something like that, it's amazing to see the recovery, but is it also like a sort of fury? >> yeah. my reaction first was to weep, but then my second reaction was really admonishing ourselves
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and so the thought that i had right at that moment is can you believe we almost were too late, can you believe we almost left him out, and it was -- >> i believe you added, because it was inconvenient. >> and so much of that happens. i mean when it comes to the lives of the poor, so much of the worst things that happen to them happen because good people embrace the conventional wisdom and turn their heads away. >> reporter: dr. farmer has done anything but look away. i saw that firsthand five years ago walking the halls of the new teaching hospital partners in health helped build in haiti. >> i remember an exact quote from you. you said, it's about time. >> as you saw yourself after the earthquake, conventional wisdom was that this was not a ranking priority to build an academic medical center after devastation, but if it's not a rankinri
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would it be. >> making it a priority paid off. just a few years after the hospital opened, conjoined twins were successfully separated, a first in haiti. thanking globally has been part of their approach from the start. five years ago dr. kim became president of the world bank. >> i think the work that paul continues to build in building these health systems, building schools, houses, this is the right thing for everybody. >> investing in people. >> investing in people in the poorest countries is a critically important thing for the global economy and certainly the world that our children and grandchildren will live in. >> a lot has been accomplished in the 34 years since they met, but both are aware of the heavy lifting that remains. >> this piling up of innovation for some people and pry vags for others, and, you know, that's the biggest problem we have facing medicine, is these disparities face every field.
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rights era and in which we weren't going to treat the 25 million people, young people today say, oh, god, can you believe we thought that. i think the task for every young person needs to ask themselves, what are we doing or not doing and look back and say, is that what we thought? >> partners in health does amazing, amazing work. >> they're so impressive. it's the secretive lab tasked with innovating and inventing the future. up next we'll go inside google's so-called moonshot lab where the technologies o tomorrow are being developed and no idea is too outlandish to propose. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday."
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the u.s. needs to develop more renewable and clean energy resources because there are limits to the amount of fossil fuels that we can burn. since 1925, we have depended on diesel generators, burning approximately a million gallons of diesel fuel a year. our mission is to make off-shore wind one of the principle new sources of energy. not every bank is willing to get involved in a "first of its kind" project. citi saw the promise of clean energy and they worked really closely with us, the wind farm will lower power prices. we're polluting the air less.
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silicon valley lab tasked with developed futuristic technologies. >> but what else are they envisioning? er derek thompson had a chance to go inside. derek, it's good to see you, my friend. >> good to see you as well. >> how were you able to go inside? >> it was really fun. i felt like charlie bucket entering the chocolate factory. you go into the lobby, there's a self-driving car and drones hanging from the rafters. it looked like a museum of future alternatives and it was really exciting to talk to these people with ideas that could be months and years away. some really interesting and fun stuff. >> what exactly is the purpose
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of x in. >> it has a dual purpose. one is to develop companies that have a 10 x return somehow, that improve the world by a factor of x, ten, and companies that can build essentially the next google. change the world and build the next google. it's interesting because sometimes these two purposes are aligned, but as i talk to the people there, i pushed back a little bit and i said, you know, you look at companies like facebook, designed initially to digitize a college yearbook and ended up becoming the global infrastructure of innovation. sometimes they create the future, sometimes incremental innovation does. >> it's not all whacky ideas. it sounds like there's a rigorous testing process in terms of developing this thing. >> yes, there is. there's group called the rapid evaluation team. i say like they're a justice league of nerds. you have metal scientists and
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and you enter the room and pitch an idea. i didn't i go into the room and say, i have an idea, we need more housing density in rich-productive cities. let's build houses on the ocean. what do you think of that? >> it was interesting to have people mull over my idea and tease it out. they said, what are you trying to accomplish and what do you hope to accomplish. it's wonderful to watch it in work. >> xerox at one time hat a palo alto research center. at&t had bell labs. are we going back to that, do you think? >> i hope we do. i think -- i look at x as sort of the microcosm. we need in every economy, invention, science, and ability to take scientific discoveries and kmernlize them and the u.s. used to be fantastic at this. in the 1940s and 1970s, we came up with the transistor at bell
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labs. we came up with the guts as the modern consumer and now we're lacking that ambition in the corporate sector and the government and it would be nice to have that spirit of invention come back to us. >> yeah. government funding for invention has gob down in the last decade. >> 70% since the 1950s. >> dramatic drop-off. not everything is a wehner at x, right? google glass is a notorious failure. how do they deal with that inside. >> yes. it was really interesting. the biggest knock on x is they haven't shipped a useful product yet. it might be waymo which is doing well. >> self-driving cars. >> exactly. google glass was a huge failure. the lesson they took from that is they sold glass when as if it was a product when it was a prototype. what they learned they're a great scientific lab but they need to be more purposeful about turning their scientific discoveries into products.
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on large products is they're going to fail. >> it's part of the process. derek thompson, thank you so much. >> thank you. they're gold records that haven't sold billions of copes but they have traveled billions of miles. a message for aliens will soon be arrived at home here on earth. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." ♪ psoriatic arthritis tries to get in my way? watch me. ♪ i've tried lots of things for my joint pain. now? watch me. ♪ think i'd give up showing these guys how it's done? please. real people with active psoriatic arthritis are changing the way they fight it... they're moving forward with cosentyx®. it's a different kind of targeted biologic. it's proven to help people find less joint pain and clearer skin. don't use if you are allergic to cosentyx.
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inserted these. gold records with 2,000 sounds from nature, spoken languages. and a variety of music from bach -- ♪ >> reporter: -- to chuck berry. ♪ >> reporter: the idea, if alien space voyagers ever discuss the voyager probes, they'll discover the planet of earth. now those sights and sounds can be seen and heard back here on terra firma. they have remastered the ved owe and offered it as a boxed set. >> throughout the project, we've been in close touch with all of the people who created the original voyager record. it was really important for us to feel that the work that we created respected their
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a million dollars on kickstarter in a month. >> the voyager golden record, you know, was a gift from humanity to the cosmos, but it's also a gift to humanity. >> reporter: while this compendium is availability here on earth, it will be another 40,000 years before either of those voyager records or the probes reach the cosmos system. but that didn't stop "saturday night live" -- >> the four words that will appear on the cover of "time" magazine next week are "sin more chuck berry." >> i want to know what's on those albums. i've got to get a copy. >> 40,000 years you have to wait out in space. >> that's a long time that that's a long time. an intimate portrait of a
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♪ ♪ welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." i'm anthony mason. >> and i'm alex wagner. coming up this hour, trying to prevent deadly future confrontations. a lawsuit in charlottesville, virginia, is filed seeking to block illegal militias. >> also, what can we learn about america through our love of football. a new museum exhibit reveals a lot from our most popular sport. and actor, comedian and now professional singer. the versatile bill murray performs later in our saturday session. but first an update to our top story. overnight there was significant progress in fighting the deadly
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northern california. they're the worst in the state's history and have killed at least 35 people and forced more than 90,000 residents from their homes. more than 5700 homes and buildings have been destroyed. new body camera video footage shows a deputy sheriff facing the flames to rescue people and bring them to safety. firefighters have another difficult day ahead as more dry and windy weather is forecast. president trump is using his executive authority to fulfill a campaign promise. the president announced friday that he will not be certifying iran to be in compliance with the landmark nuclear deal. the deal with iran and five other nations was negotiated by the obama administration in 2015. iran's president hassan rouhani says his country will not renegotiate the nuclear deal. mr. trump is making a push to roll back president trump's signature domestic policy, the affordable care act, also known as obamacare. on thursday he
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would stop federal payments to insurers that lower premiums for millions of lower income americans. mr. trump's plan eliminates $7 billion in subsidies to insurers. he criticized the pages saying they're making insurance companies rich. >> that money is a subsidy for insurance companies. take a look at their stocks. look where they are. they're going through the roof. from past, i don't know about today, but the insurance companies have made a fortune. that money was a subsidy and almost you could say a payoff to insurance companies. >> president trump said he wants to negotiate a health care deal with democratic leaders. now the non-partisan congressional budget office estimates move could hike some health insurance rates in the individual marketplace by as much as 20% in the next year. for more on what lies ahead for obamacare, we are joined by eric levitz, he's a political writer for "new york magazine." good morning. >> good morning. >> let's talk who bears the
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americans that the president is trying to rescind or middle-income americans who are facing higher insurance premiums? >> ironically, the lower income people will be fbied unless this is so destructive that insurance leave the marketplaces where they live. what it will hurt is the 400% middle-income people have said we're representing them. they're the people that don't qualify for subsidies under the obamacare marketplaces and so they feel the brunt of the premiums whereas those who have subsidy, the way the subsidy is structured is the higher the premium goes, the higher the tax credit goes and you can always afford the insurance, but the middle income people will get hurt if they still pursue the insurance. >> because if these subsidies go away, they will raise the rates on the people with the middle income. that's what you're saying, right? they'll raise premiums across the board and the people who have subsidies will be insulated from the
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>> what's the overall impact of the obamacare exchanges on this? >> so the congressional budget office did an estimate on this months ago. they suggested that you're going to have for the first year, insurers will have marketplaces and that will cost people their insurance and it will be around a million fewer people having insurance next year. however, after that, the cbo thought that things would get better and people would get used to the new system and insurers would say in the marketplaces, but there are a lot of questions because they're doing this days before open enrollment begins and all kinds of other sabotage. the department in charge of promoting enrollment is spending money on anti-obamacare propaganda. with these things in the air no one knows for sure what will happen? we focus on the subsidies for low-income americans. >> there is another piece to this, president trump has rolled back in an executive order another piece of the aca. the president j
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that this morning saying very proud of my executive order which will allow greatly expanded access and far lower costs for health care. millions of people benefit. what is he referring to? >> yes. he's referring to an executive order that is functionally it's a plan to make a plan. so the executive order instructs the departments of labor, health and treasury to write new rules that would essentially create loopholes that would allow healthy people to get cheap, skimpy insurance that they are no longer allowed to get under the obamacare which the whole idea is the way obamacare works we have to have a society where people don't die from preventable illnesses because they're not healthy. you need to have healthy people subsidize the sick. the way obamacare does that is it forces the benefits that sick people need and they need to pay with comprehensive coverage. >> and this may take those healthy people out of the bigger pool and -- >> it gives them alternative
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insurance and other vehicles. >> a lot to process. eric levitz from "new york magazine," thank you. >> thank you. charlottesville, virginia, has fileded a unique lawsuit y trying to prevent future -- they violateded a virginia law banning private armes. paula reed reports. >> city leaders marched to the courthouse on thursday to file a lawsuit intended to stop future violent protests like the one that occurred august that left one woman dead and dozens injured. the lawsuit relies on a novel legal theory alleging that the white supremacists and militia groups that descended on the city were violating virginia statute planning for violence outside government supervision. the protesters had a permit for the rally and virginia is an open carry state. >> it was not a normal protest.
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militaries invading charlottesville. >> reporter: mary mccord is a former federal prosecutor and is now a senior litigator at georgetown law. she says the level of organization and an alleged attempt to intimidate make the august event different from constitutionally protected speech. >> we saw the self-professed militia who claimed to be there to keep the peace, but they weren't under of the governor or under the authority of the national guard and that's prohibited under virginia law. >> reporter: there are 22 defendants named in the lawsuit. we reached out to all of them, but none would agree to an on-camera interview and some have taken to social media to respond. the officer said our team acted strictly as a neutral peacekeeping force and did not take sides in any fashion. we helped people on both sides while we were repeated lead assaulted by both sides. the lawsuit alleges that virginia's ban on private
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peacekeeping efforts. >> wearing matching shirts and wearing matching hats is fine. that's protected freedom of expression. what we think is not protected and more important in direct violation of virginia's statutes and constitution is this paramilitary activity. >> protesters argue the government cannot regulate alt-right activates and not regulate leftists who do the same thing, but the city's attorney says if this is successful it could be used as a tool by dozens of states to block paramilitary activity across the political spectrum. >> paula r
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the howl of the wolf is again being heard in some western states. up next, a new book tells the story of these sleek and social animals by focusing on a single charismatic creature. we'll talk to the author coming up next. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." ♪ ♪ okay folks! let's get the lady of the house back on her feet. and help her feel more strength and energy in just two weeks. yaaay! the complete balanced nutrition of ensure with 9 grams of protein and 26 vitamins and minerals. ensure. always be you.
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♪ ♪ after decades of restoration effort, wolves are once again roaming part of the western u.s. the western of the animals is not without controversy and a remarkable new book examines the issues involved from a unique perspective, through the life story of one of the animals. "american wolf," a true story of survival and obsession in the west is by author nate blakesly. nate, good morning and welcome. >> good morning. thanks for having me.
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re-introduction of the wolves to yellowstone national park in 1995. how did that happen and how successful was it? >> wolves were eliminated from yellowstone as they were from most of the lower 48 by the end of the 19th century, and what happened in yellowstone was you saw this huge explosion in the elk population, that is the wolf's main prey and there was nothing left to prey on them, and so in turn, the habitat in yellowstone started to degrade. opportunities for other species were lost because the elk -- you've probably heard the expression the mountain fears the elk like the elk fears the wolf. the idea that bringing wolves back might solve this problem first came up in the 1940s, but it was controversial and the federal government wasn't able to get it done until the mid-90s. when they did bring it back it was immensely successful so much so the debate is whether or not they are well established enough to hunt them again. >> the hero of the book is a wolf made
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>> 06's story captivated the world in the time she was the queen of yellowstone. she was the most visible wolf in the park when wolf watching became popular and facebook was exploding and her image was everywhere. i met this small group of wolf-watching fanatics in the park. people who come to the park every day and track wolfs and follow them in their scope. i met this retired san diego school teacher and she gave me a treasure trove of notes she'd collected of 06 and her pack over the years. i read it and it was like reading the diary of a wolf pack and the author in me said what you could do with this material, you can write a non-fiction book that reads like a novel, like the jack lunden story except it's all true. >> i don't want to give any spoilers away, but you know, the re-introduction of wolves is not without controversy there. some environmentalists on one side and business owners and livestock owners who don't like the re-production of
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tell us about the tension there. >> yes. the same ranchers that eliminated wolves generations ago, their descendants are still there and they still fear losing cattle and sheep to wolves and elk hunting is really big business in the northern rockies, and wolves eat a lot of elk. so there was a concern there, and also the politics of wolves has become really poisonous. it's become this sort of us versus them, this federal government with local control. >> it's almost a cultural issue, isn't it? >> it is. the governor ran on a campaign to remove as many wolves as soon as they came off the endangered species. >> at the same time wolfs have balanced the environment there, haven't they? >> yes. one of the goals, as i said of bringing wolves back is to restore yellowstone and to fix yellowstone and we've seen it. biologists call it a terrific cascade. bring back the apex predator and all of a sudden there's fewer elk which in turn means the
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healthier streams, more fish, more beavers. one of the first things that happened is the coyote population plummeted because wolves preyed on coyotes. they broad rodents back which in turn broad eagles back and it's been this cascade of effect. >> just fascinating. nate blakes plly, thank you ver much for being with us. the book is "american wolf". >> from norman rockwell to andy warhol, some of the greatest names once put their focus football and those works are checked in a unique exhibit. and we'll take a tour. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." >> announcer: this portion sponsored by abreva. heal your cold sore fast. t. only abreva can heal a cold sore
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last night's loss while syracuse is coming off three straight losing seasonsle the sound of cheering you hear are the syracuse alums in our control room. >> it's moments like that that has propelled football to its perch atop the american landscape and now a short ways away in canton, ohio, looks at the history. dana jacobson got a look. >> reporter: in a small studio sean has a creative art. subjects he became familiar with as a football play e at boden college in maine. how different of an artist do you think you would be without football? >> incredibly. >> reporter: leonardo produced this piece of art called "bull in a ring."
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>> not in a positive way. >> not in a positive way. >> the drill, which has been banned for the most part or amended has a single player defending himself from teammates who are charging from all directions. >> there's no accident that all the players are wearing not only my number. they're allal sew wearing visors. this is because this is how it exists as a nightmare. >> reporter: leonardo leonardo says he's questioning macho rituals that men experience in rites of passage. >> it's pervasive in every sport and it's echoed in military, in politics, family and the workplace and we're at once supposed to be a team player while at the same time survive, and exhibit superiority. leonardo's video is on display at the canton museum of art in ohio. max barton is the museum's executive director. who knew that football could make you think abouto
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this is not football art. this is the art of football that is teaching you about where our country came from. >> reporter: scrimmage brings 78 works together from 150 years of american art. >> this is andy warhol and this is from the mid-'70s with his series called the athletes. >> reporter: items range from polaroids and a screen print of o.j. simpson. >> we don't think of o.j. as even being a part of the game of football anymore because of what that celebrity has become. >> reporter: to a painting by the iconic american artist norman rockwell. >> do young boys today dream of growing up to being the football star? the football hero which the title of this piece is a little boy has a lot of heroes. >> reporter: from the 1961 rockwell, to photographs of today's young players. >> and this is really a stud of what do players look like before
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they become part of the team? is he the nerd? is he the captain of the team? >> the exhibition, which was originally curated by staff at colorado state and the university of oregon tackles eight different themes like race, class and ethnicity and violence. >> this piece which is called the onslaught, it gives you an idea about the roughness and the brutality of the game and what goes on inside the football scrum. >> the section includes fumble in the line by ernie barnes. >> so he has an interesting story in that he was both artist and football player. >> ernie played for five seasons and went to college on a football scholarship to study art. he was known by his teammates in the nfl as big rembrandt was the name that he was called on the side lines. >> around 20 of the pieces are on loan from the personal collection of michael oriard. >> okay. so these are pieces by frederick remington in harper's
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wood-engraved collage from 1888. >> and so the background here is actually, you know, multiple lines. everything had to be hand carved. i mean -- >> this is art. >> this is art. >> he played college football at notre dame and four seasons in the nfl with the kansas city chiefs. he would go on to become a professor of english at oregon state university. >> as football became popular and it was beginning at elite universities at harvard, yale and princeton, and harper's weekly was interested in that audience, they began representing the game. >> over the years, oriard began amassing a treasure trove of the earliest depictions of the game. >> most of this is through ebay, you know? ebay gives you access to everybody's addict. >> somebody's trash is your treasure. >> exactly. >> reporter: he's published six books on the game, the most recent, the art of the football which looks at the period from 1870 to 1920. >> gender was central t
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because it was just overwhelmingly and obviously male, masculine and football's initial appeal came from that fact and the anxiety in the society that americans were getting soft by working in factories now instead of on farms and women were essential to the game because their presence sort of validated it, you know? football is not sheer brutality, you know, if women can enjoy it. >> race has always been a part of this. >> race has always been a part of it. black colleges started playing football in the 1890s just like everybody else in the country, but football in the south was wholly segregated. i played in college against segregated teams. >> he points out that a number of former african-american players in the early 20th century like paul robson and william henry lewis would become influential
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politicians. decades later, a new generation of football players are also expressing themselves through activism, and maybe even art. >> is it safe to say that colin kaepernick taking a knee in some ways is performance art? >> i think it's very much so, and i think one thing that i'm attempting to argue is that our life on the field very much mirrors our experience that has existed outside of the field, and we all at some point feel a need to make that gesture. >> reporter: for cbs this morning saturday, dana jacobson, canton, ohio. >> it looks like a fascinating exhibit. >> especially when football is at the front lines of cultural debate. great timing. greek cuisine is known to be healthful and delicious, and few have done like danielle kochilas. a master of greek cooking. you're watchin
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cnarrator: ed gillespie and i wants to endis ad. a woman's right to choose. ed giof a woman'sd put thpersonal decisions,rge not women and their doctors. as governor, ed gillespie says, i would like to see abortion be banned. if ed gillespie would like to see abortion banned, i would like to see i would like to see i would like to see that ed gillespie never becomes governor.
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celebrity chef diane kochilas. she's from new york but has maude her food from the fwrees. >> she is the award winning author of books on greek and mediterranean cuisine. she's a consulting chef. her latest project is called my greek table, a 13-part cooking travel series about greece and greek cuisine. i wish i could have been a
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on that shoot. diane co-chill lis, welcome to "the dish." >> thank you. >> what's on this table? >> wonderful octopus, grilled onions, grilled lam chops, stuffed pew chop ya and a dessert with custard and a great cockta cocktail. >> what is in the cocktail glass? >> if you could drink baklava, that's what this tastes like. >> tell us about it. >> i was a bad eater as a quds and my father would bribe me to eat dinner. at some point i don't know what happen but i discovered i had a the keeping gene. >> you took a trip when you
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was from. >> i did. >> what happened? >> i had a total awakening. it was an amazing trip. the feeling i had is i totally get it and i love it. >> you went back there. >> i went a couple of years % after i graduated, went back to the island and met and married my husband. old shoes and old patch. mair someone from your part of the country. >> an old shoe, you're welcome. >> thanks. >> what is the blue zone for people? >> ikaria is a blue zone. it's one of the five places on the planet where the longevity of the inhabitants is extremely high. >> which is a reason to live there. >> no stress. a lot of natural exercise, walking, thaor
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a pretty healthy diet. >> what is diet? >> the diet among the people who are now 100 years oeg is a meager diet, calorically low, a lot of plant-based foods, wild greens, mushrooms, meat on occasion, fish, and very, very close social connections. there's no alienation. >> you've run a cooking school there since 2003 every summer now. >> yes. every summer and sometimes in the spring. >> where are the people coming from? >> mainly from the states. >> really. >> yeah. >> do you try to infuse that with theic ryanne blue zone diet? >> absolutely. we cook a lot from our garden. my husband's an amazing gardner. we bring people into contact with village life and what it's like to live in a small slow paced place. and we cook and just enjoy life all week.
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series about greek cooking. that must have been an exciting project for you. >> yeah. it was a labor of love. very excited. >> what is the greatest misconception we in the states have about greek cooking? >> the greatest misconception is that there are four dishes, baklava, sue vaky, cope ta and something involving feta, greek salad. greek cuisine is an amazing varieed cuisine. you see the dishes on the table, the dishes we receiver at committee are from all over, both greek traditional and modern. it's always evolving. i think that's the greatest misconception. there's a huge variety of regional food and an amazing variety of plant-based food. it's a healthy, healthy cuisine. >> we're ready to move on to what e
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>> chef co-chill lis as i ask you to sign this dish, the question i'd ask if if you can share this meal with anyone, who would it be? >> i thought about it for a little bit. maybe socrates. >> good answer. makes sense. i'd think he's be happy to see how greek question zone has developed since he was last on earth. >> reporter: and something more important, the whole idea of conversation around foods. the most famous con very sausagealist who ever live, right? >> socratic dinner. >> sew carat eck lam chops. chef kochilas,
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before you and your rheumatologist move to another treatment, ask if xeljanz is right for you. xeljanz is a small pill for adults with moderate to severe ra for whom methotrexate did not work well. xeljanz can reduce joint pain and swelling in as little as two weeks, and help stop further joint damage. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections, lymphoma and other cancers have happened. don't start xeljanz if you have an infection. tears in the stomach or intestines, low blood cell counts and higher liver tests and cholesterol levels have happened. your doctor should perform blood tests before you start and while taking xeljanz, and monitor certain liver tests. tell your doctor if you were in a region where fungal infections are common and if you have had tb, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. xeljanz can reduce the symptoms of ra, even without methotrexate, and is also available in a once-daily pill. ask about xeljanz xr.
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in this morning's "saturday sessions," we're so excited about this, bill murray. in his comedy classic "groundhog day," nothing much changes for the character and actor/comedian. >> his career has been full of surprises and the latest has him singing this a band of classically trained musicians, not in a movie but real life. he's been making us laugh for more than 40 years. how about a nice cool drink, varmints. from thor earliest days of "saturday night live" to his decades as a box office star, now bill murray has found another way to entertain audiences by singing. ♪ it ain't
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>> reporter: the actor teemed up with chellow list vaughn. murray sings and reads american classics. >> he unbuckled his sword. then he handed it to the astonished lee. >> reporter: accompanied by vogue ler and pianist vanessa and violinist vera wang. the musical partnership began when murray and vogue ler met on a flight from berlin to new york in 2013. three years later "new worlds was born." murray's fans have seen him sing before. ""star wars" nothing but "star wars" note. >> whether it was his character of nick the lounge
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"snl," the karaoke scene from his nominated role of "lost in translation." ♪ bare necessities >> or his live performance of baloo the bare. and this week, another classic during his beloved chicago cubs playoff game. ♪ take me out to the ball game >> as murray told "cbs sunday morning," with new worlds and his new musical partners, it's a whole different ball game. >> by myself in the shower, i'm just as good as anyone else in the shower -- well, better than some maybe. but on the staj with these three, i'm elevated. >> now performing van morrison's when will i ever learn to
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♪ and all the boats keep moving slow in the glory of the flashing light in the evening glow ♪ ♪ when will i ever learn to live in god when will i ever learn ♪ ♪ he gives me everything i need and more when will i ever learn ♪ ♪ you brought it to my attention everything was made in god ♪ ♪ down through centuries of great writings and paintings everything lives in god ♪ ♪ seen through architecture of great cathedrals down
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time ♪ ♪ is and was in the beginning and evermore shall ever be ♪ ♪ when will i ever learn to live in god when will i ever learn ♪ ♪ he gives me everything i need and ever more when will i ever learn ♪ ♪ whatever it takes to fill his mission that is the way that we must go ♪ but you've got to do it your own way tear down the old
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♪ when will i ever learn to live in god when will i ever learn ♪ ♪ he's given me everything i need and more when will i ever learn ♪ ♪ when will i ever learn to live in good when will i ever learn ♪ ♪ he gives me everything i need and more when will i ever learn ♪ ♪ when will i ever learn to live in god when will i ever learn ♪ ♪ he gives me ery
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when will i ever learn ♪ ♪ when will i ever learn when will i ever learn when will i ever learn ♪ >> don't go away. we'll be right back with more music from bill murray, onvogue ler, and friends. 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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he's a nascar champion who's she's a world-class swimmer who's stared down the best in her sport. but for both of them, the most challenging opponent was... pe blood clots in my lung. it was really scary. a dvt in my leg. i had to learn all i could to help protect myself. my doctor and i choose xarelto® xarelto®... to help keep me protected. xarelto® is a latest-generation blood thinner... ...that's proven to treat and reduce the risk of dvt and pe blood clots from happening again. in clinical studies, almost 98% of patients on xarelto® did not experience another dvt or pe. here's how xarelto works. xarelto® works differently. warfarin interferes with at least six blood-clotting factors. xarelto® is selective... ...targeting just one critical factor, interacting with less of your body's natural blood-clotting function. don't stop taking xarelto® without talking to your doctor as this may increase risk of blood clots. while taking, you may bruise more easily, or take longer for bleeding to stop.
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xarelto® can cause serious, and in rare cases, fatal bleeding. get help right away for unexpected bleeding, unusual bruising, or tingling. if you've had spinal anesthesia, watch for back pain or any nerve or muscle-related signs or symptoms. do not take xarelto® if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. tell your doctor before all planned medical or dental procedures and before starting xarelto® about any conditions, such as kidney, liver, or bleeding problems. you've got to learn all you can... ...to help protect yourself from dvt and pe blood clots. talk to your doctor about xarelto®. there's more to know.
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[phi anne.g] so those financial regulations being talked about? they could affect your accounts, so let's get together and talk, and make sure everything's clear. yeah, that would be great. being proactive... it's how edward jones makes sense of investing. ♪ ... like you do sometimes, grandpa? well, when you have copd,
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t, which can make it hard to get air in. so i talked to my doctor. she said... symbicort could help you breathe better, starting within 5 minutes. symbicort doesn't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden symptoms. symbicort helps provide significant improvement of your lung function. symbicort is for copd, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. it should not be taken more than twice a day. symbicort contains formoterol. medicines like formoterol increase the risk of death from asthma problems. symbicort may increase your risk of lung infections, osteoporosis, and some eye problems. you should tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. symbicort could mean a day with better breathing. watch out, piggies! (child giggles) symbicort. breathe better starting within 5 minutes. get symbicort free for up to one year. visit saveonsymbicort.com today to learn more. this i can do, easily. i try hard to get a great shape. benefiber® healthy shape is a clear, taste-free, 100% natural daily fiber...
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eel fuller longer. benefiber® healthy shape. this i can do! i am totally blind. and non-24 can throw my days and nights out of sync, keeping me from the things i love to do. talk to your doctor, and call 844-214-2424. listen up, heart disease. you too, unnecessary er visits. and hey, unmanaged depression,
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don't get too comfortable. we're talking to you, cost inefficiencies, and data without insights. and fragmented care, stop getting in the way of patient recovery and pay attention. every single one of you is on our list. at optum, we're partnering across the health system to tackle its biggest challenges. ♪ i ♪ if i'm leave you
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before we go, we want to congratulate singer/songwriter rihanna gibbons for being the recipient of a mcarthur foundation fellowship sometimes known as the genius grant. she was one of our featured guests performing right here in studio 57. she receives $625,000 no strings attached to pursue her work, which is very nice indeed. >> nice. congratulations. we leave you now with more from bill murray, ian vogler, and friends. >> this is lucille clifton's "the swan," a clip from "blessing the boats." ♪
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>> may the tide that is entering even now, the lip of our understanding, carry you out beyond the face of fear. may you kiss the wind then turn from it certain that it will love your back. may you open your eyes to water, water waving forever, and may you in your innocence sail through this to that ♪
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vowould be a disaster forion virginia families.e adams supports letting insurance companies deny coverage for pre-existing conditions. seniors would be charged thousands more. 685,000 virginians would lose their health care. and adams is against medicaid expansion - denying coverage to thousands of veterans, children and the disabled. john adams: higher costs, less coverage, hurting virginians. mark: i'm mark herring, candidate for attorney general, and i sponsored this ad.
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narrator: today on "luy dog"... brandon: all right, come here. what do you know? narrator: a maltipoo puppy found on the streets is jumping at the opportunity to find a home. brandon: that's not a command that i want you to do. narrator: and a newlywed couple is ready to open their hearts after their previous dog passed away. carri: we want someone to love. we're ready now. narrator: but fixing this puppy's bad habits... brandon: if a dog has a door dash habit, the results typically aren't that good. narrator: ...will take every trick in the book. brandon: beg, up, good! [clicker clicks] brandon: good, good, good! i'm brandon mcmillan, and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are
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