tv CBS This Morning CBS November 4, 2017 8:00am-9:55am EDT
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♪ ♪ good morning. it's november 4, 2017, welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." president trump heads out to a marathon trip by asia. the longest in a sitting president in over a quarter century, but back at home the russia investigation continues to heat up. the tales on the report of yet another russian meeting with the trump adviser. new york city detectives believe they have enough evidence to arrest harvey weinstein while kevin spacey's allegations get him dropped from "house of ca
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project around some of the busiest freeways in the world. how conservationists are trying to track down a rare mountain lion high in the hollywood hills. we begin this morning with a look at today's eye opener. your world in 90 seconds. this is the longest presidential trip to asia. the main topec of conversation will be north korea and it's nuclear weapon. the idea that the dnc can rig a contest is laughable. >> donna brazile accuses hillary clinton of rigging the primary. >> she lost anyway. >> our grandmothers were right. cheaters never prosper. >> house republicans are making changes to the big tax overhaul. >> this package is pretty awesome. >> netflix has cut ties with actor kevin spacey as he faces
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and harassment. bowe bergdahl will not serve any prison time. president trump blasting the decision as a disgrace. >> major security will be in place for the new york city marathon on sunday. >> it's our job to stand up and to be unafraid. winter is coming early to the sierra nevada area. >> they've got a nice dusting. >> that means time to ski. >> wake up your thumbs because the cold bear emoji is finally here. boom! can we put that up split screen? check it out! and all that matters. >> what the hell took us so long to win a world series? >> a celebration decades in the making hit the streets of houston. >> we're limousine riding, wheeling dealing, son of a gun, ooh! >> on cbs this morning saturday. >> how about this for team work at the parade. >> a woman drop her
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and as you can see, the fans pull off the ultimate relay. [ cheering ] they're still celebrating in houston. >> as they should be. >> welcome to the weekend, everyone. i'm anthony mason along with alex wagner. we begin with president trump's trip to asia as he faces mounting pressure here at home. after he arrives in japan today the president hopscotches through five different countries in asia where he'll push for increased pressure on north korea, meet with china's president, attend an economic summit and go one-on-one with rodrigo duterte, the controversial president of the philippines. >> but back in washington, president trump is facing challenges. questions persist a
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counsel robert mueller's investigation of the trump campaign while congress takes up a tax reform plan that the president has said will be the largest in the history. before heading to japan president trump made a stop in hawaii, his first visit to the state since the election. jamie yuccas is in honolulu. good morning. >> good morning. on twitter the president thanked hawaii for the beautiful welcome, the one-day stopover did include an arrival ceremony where both the president and first lady received traditional leis and later he made a trip to pearl harbor. despite the pleasantries, the president will have looming questions over his administration when he leaves hawaii today for asia. president trump laid a wreath at the "uss arizona" memorial at pearl harbor friday. it was coming after a meeting with the leaders of the u.s. pacific command which
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military operations near north korea. a topic on the president's mind as he left on his first official tour of asia. >> we'll be talking about north korea and we'll be enlisting the help of a lot of people. >> reporter: the president's troubles could maunt him on this trip which starts less than a week after an indictment of his former campaign chorm an paul manafort, anex aide, rick gates and a guilty plea by george papadopoulos. according to court papers filed by robert mueller, papadopoulos suggested arranging a meeting between then-candidate trump and vladimir putin, and a meeting that the president says was not memorable. i don't remember much about the meeting. i don't remember much about it. >> now it's being reported another trump campaign adviser, carter page met with russian government officials during a 2016 trip to moscow, something he has denied
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according to "the new york times" trump e-maileded a trump campaign aide about those conversations. the paper reports that e-mail was read aloud before page's testimony before the house intelligence commit. mueller's investigation has tru frustrated the president. three republican congressman introduced a resolution calling for mueller's resignation. the president says he's confident he will be absolved of all wrongdoing. >> i hope he is looking at everything, and i am truly not involved with any form of collusion with russia, believe me. >> the president is very likely to be asked about russia on this trip. as a matter of fact, on friday a kremlin spokesperson would not rule out a potential meeting between president trump and vladimir putin next week at an economic summit in vietnam. anthony? >> jamie yuccas in
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thanks. some of the president's frustrations lie with jeff sessions. mr. trump turned up the heat on sessions and on the president's political opponents in a move some say test the boundaries of his office errol barnett is in our washington bureau. >> yes. while president trump is away the ongoing investigation by special counsel robert mueller continues to churn here in washington. before he left the commander in chief made clear his views on the department of justice's performance and its apparent reluctance to go after his opposition. >> a lot of people are disappointed in the justice department including me. >> reporter: president trump's last words before leaving the white house friday made his displeasure with the justice department clear. >> all i can tell you is this. there was no collusion. there was no nothing. it's a disgrace, frankly that they continue. >> reporter: and as he does repeatedly via twitter, mr. trump encouge
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department to investigate democrats. >> you want to look at hillary clinton and you want to look at the new book that was just put out by donna brazile. >> reporter: fueling the president's argument is the revelation by the once interim chair of the democratic national committee donna brazile. >> as long as she's in charge we're never going back and that's why i'm with her. >> brazile became the head of the part amid e-mail hacks coordinated by russia last year. at that time, according to her upcoming book, she discovered an existing signed agreement where, quote, an exchange for raising money and investing in the dnc, hillary would control the party's finances, strategy and all of the money raised. she goes on to write this was not a criminal act, but as i saw it, it compromised the party's integrity. >> we have one area of disagreement with the secretary. >> the document was signed by the dnc and the clinton campaign in august of 2015, early in the election cycle
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candidates like vice president joe biden was still dieding whether to get in. former bernie sanders campaign manager jeff weaver. >> what these types of activities do is destroy the faith of people that we have a fair and democratic electoral process. >> the clinton campaign said the dnc was in debt and former chair governor howard dean described the agreement as standard operating procedure and as special counsel mueller continue bringing russia, it will continue to exploit divisions between the party. >> errol barnett in washington. thanks, errol. changes have been made to the sweeping republican tax proposal overhaul. he has released a revised version of the plan that would lower the overall value of the proposal. brady also says president trump wants a tax bill to repeal the obamacare individual mandate. the penalty for americans who fail to buy health insurance. repealing that
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save the government about $400 billion, but it would also result in lost insurance for up to 15 million americans. here to talk about that and everything else, and boy, there is a lot in washington is shannon pettypiece white house correspondent for bloomberg news. good to see you. >> let's first start with the russia piece. we know about paul manafort and george papadopoulos and now we're hearing carter page may have had undisclosed meetings with officials. >> on the surface the white house has playeded a very calm, cool attitude about this. there's nothing here. nothing to hide, we're fully cooperating. there's obviously tensions among the staff who are being interviewed continuing into next week and there have been a number of interviews and the white house is hoping those interviews are wrapped up by thanksgiving and that might be wishful thinking and there are tensions about who's talking to who and not to mention the huge legal bills they're starting to face as they're called in front of mueer
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>> the president's longtime bodyguard keith schuller is expected to testify to the house intelligence committee next week. about the dossier about the president's trip to moscow in 2013. how concerned should the white house be about that? >> well, other than the president's family, no one is closer to him than keith schuller. keith schuller is often the first person he sees in the morning and the last person he sees at night until august until schuller leaves the white house. he is a bodyguard, a body man. a confidant and the friend. he has been with the president step by step through the campaign, through his time in his presidency until he left in august and through his rise in a businessman and reality star. he was in moscow at the miss universe pageant and the dossier and next to him on every phone call during the campaign, and he knows a lot and fiercely loyal to the president and don't expect him to sing
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any time soon. >> shannon, independent of the russia investigation the thing that is taking up a lot of bandwidth in the white house is the fate of tax reform in congress. how likely is this house-announced plan to fly in the senate? >> this is going to be a tough battle, and i know the members who have put this bill together are trying to make it sound like it will be done by christmas. i guess who knows? anything is possible, but when i talk to people on the hill they say if you thought health care was hard wait until tax reform because it is touching every inch and sector of the u.s. economy and there's enormous special interest and division within the republican party and of course, the democrats are once they got their hands on this bill they're picking at it and finding weak spots where they can use it to their advantage. meantime, the democrats appear to be eating their own at this moment in time. what factualexactly -- what is happening here? this is a party in
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causing more internal dissension. >> this often happens to the party that loses the presidency and not to mention control of congress and weave seen turmoil in the republican party and it's going through a transform tiff moment where they'll have to figure out what they stand for, where they're going and recruit really great candidates for 2018 if they want to have a chance. nothing is in the bag for them and there's soul-searching going on right now and for who the heart and soul and the future and fate of the democratic party is. >> we know the president is embarking on an extending trip to asia. what's the expectation of that, shannon? >> foreign policy will be a big focus north korea. the white house is trying to use this as a chance to show unity, something that the entire region is taking seriously. there is also a big economic piece to this. the president pulled out of the transpacific partnership, the
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make these bilateral, one-on-one deals with the countries. he promised he'd be able to get us a better deal and the rubber will meet the road on that. >> in terms of the rubber meeting the road, is there an expectation that the president is going to return with anything when he gets back to washington? >> there are definitely some deals they're trying to line up which they do allow these trips to show that there's some sort of progress. it was interesting, was there a question in the press briefing the other day about who will be leading these talks? >> of course, we have a u.s. trade representative and they said the president, he is the one that's the deal maifshg out there which is unusual upon. usually there's more of a staff and group that works on the deals ahead of time. he's a hands-on president and fancies himself as a dealmaker and he wants to do the one-on-one and has good relationships with abe and xi. >> he wrote the book "the art of the
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transpires. >> thanks, shannon. security will be tight for tomorrow's marathon. the race comes less than a week after the terror attack on a bike path when a truck driver killed eight people. tony de koppel is in new york's finish line in new york's central park. tony, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. shortly after tuesday's deadly terror attack just about four miles from here, new york city officials promised that the race would go on as planned, but there will be changes to race security. the 51,000 runners expected to participate. we'll see more blocking vehicles and more sniper teams and more police officers both uniformed and plain clothed. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: thousands of runners from around the world gathered for the new york city marathon opening ceremony friday night. >> i've been apprehensive about running the marathon and i realize i can't let it stop me.
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like new yorker diane malcolm. >> we just want to make a point to let it be known that tomorrow is not promised to us. >> reporter: new york city officials say there is no credible or specific threats against the marathon or the city. >> here's mayor bill de blasio. >> it is our job to stand up and to be unafraid and i've seen that everywhere. >> the new york city police department said there would be a record number of sand trucks and other blocker vehicles to prevent a vehicle attack on runners or spectators. chief carlos gomez. >> we will have hundreds of counter terrorism trained officers on the route. there will be a substantial number of explosive detecting k-9s on the route and we'll utilize the aviation unit to monitor the crowd and the rooftops from above. >> on tuesday sayfullo saipov used a rented truck to mow down
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pedestrians and bicyclists along a bike path, killing eight people before crashing into a school bus. >> this video shows a group of argentine friends riding on the path before the attack of the ten men, five were killed. on friday, four of the five survivors appeared publicly for the first time since tuesday. we are still convinced that the way to change the world is the way we learn when we learned as children which is what brought us to this city to celebrate our friendship of 30 years said guillermo. love conquers hate for our friends, our families, for us, for the whole world. >> reporter: tomorrow morning the nypd will open the joint operation center which will bring together representatives from over 20 state, local and federal agencies. they'll monitor the race and make sure there are no obstacles to getting to the finish line except the 26.2 miles.
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bowe bergdahl is waking up a free man. a judge sentenced him to a dishonorable discharge, reducing his rank and sparing him any jail time. bergdahl pleaded guilty last month to dissertion and misbehavior before the enemy. bergdahl walked away from his post in afghanistan in 2009. he was held by the taliban as a prisoner for five years before president obama in gosch yated his release. the sentence drew swift condemnation from president trump who tweeted the decision on sergeant bergdahl as a complete and total disgrace to our country and to our military. netflix has fire actor kevin spacey from "house of cards." spacey plays the lead character frank underwood. he was dropped following allegations of sexual harassment and assault. the company suspended production of the show's sixth and final season this week after actor anthony rapp accused spacey
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trying to seduce him when he was 18 years old. eight current and former employees of the show brought forward allegations. police in new york said the criminal case against harvey weinstein is intensifying, moving them closer to making an arrest. they say the rape allegations made by paz de la huerta in films like "the cider house rules" has them looking for a request for a warrant. jericka dunk an has the latest. >> at an nypd news conference, robert boies made it clear they are working to arrest harvey weinstein. >> we are happy with where the investigation is right now. mr. weinstein is out of state. we would need an arrest warrant to arrest him. >> reporter: cbs news first reported thursday that actress paz de la huerta said weinstein raped her in new york city twice in octer
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weinstein's spokesperson has not responded to this latest allegation. >> what makes her story so credible? >> the ability to articulate each and every movement of the crime, where she was, where they met, where this happened and what he did. >> reporter: thursday i spoke to de la huerta by phone. both times she was allegedly raped it happened inside her apartment. >> the second time around was much more aggressive. i suffered somewhat of a breakdown that night. i disassociated because i was so afraid of him. police say that because it's a seven-year-old case and weinstein is reportedly in arizona they need a court to issue an arrest warrant so they can take him into custody. to date more than 60 women allege weinstein has sexually assaulted them. he's denied having non-consensual sex with anyone. since de la huerta's allegations
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investigators say at least three witnesses have come forward to corroborate her story. alex? >> jericka dunk an. thanks, jericka. the las vegas reports radio communications released booty fire department reside guarding its response to last month's country music festival. >> there are multiple victims that have come over the fence on to the airport. >> by the gulfstream hangar and there's about 30 in the maintenance hangar. >> copy that. >> the communications reveal first responders were overwhelmed by victims fleeing the concert site. 58 people were killed and more than 500 others were injured after a lone gunman opened fire from the 32nd story of the hotel. investigators are still working to determine a motive. the tallahassee
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reports the pi kappa fraternity was suspended following the death of of a pledge. he was unconscious after an ambulance arrived and died after attending a party where alcohol was served. police have questioned several people, but have so far made no arrests. >> the website screen rant reports "the los angeles times" has been banned from attending screening of disney films. it has a bias and inaccurate series of reports in the paper the times raised questions about business dealings between disney and anaheim. it's about 22 after the hour and a remind toer to set your ck
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books, music, computers, clothing. so what's next for amazon to sell? perhaps anything yud find at a drugstore including prescriptions themselves, and that has drugstores on edge. also from russia, but not with love, congress uncovers the shocking extent of russian manipulation of our social media before and after the 2016 election. we'll dive into why it may be even worse than we first thought. you're watching "cbs this saturday.turday."
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mark herring: my mom to provide for our family. at one point, she got fired for of all things -- getting married. that was a lifelong lesson for me: when people are hurt, you need to stand up and do something. and i've never forgotten that as your attorney general. whether it's protecting veterans and seniors from shady debt collectors,
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i have one guiding principle: do what's right for people. i'm mark herring, candidate for attorney general, and i sponsored this ad. used to be a view that was literally for the birds and then strictly for professionals. ahead, we'll see how more and more amateur photographers are taking to the skies to capre
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once in a life time images. we'll be right back. this is "cbs this morning saturday." ralph northam: i'm ralph northam, candidate for governor, and i sponsored this ad. they're studying for 21st century jobs. but ed gillespie supports donald trump's plan to take money out of virginia public schools and give it to private schools. as a washington dc lobbyist, ed gillespie worked for lenders trying to keep student loan rates high. and ed gillespie's plan to cut taxes for the wealthy could cut virginia school funding, too.
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♪ ♪ welcome back to "cbs this morning: saturday." coming up this half hour, congress demands answers on russian infiltration of our social media during the 2016 election. we'll explain why it may be worse than originally thought. >> also we'll show you master works that have been hidden for decades and had ties to the nazi rule and germany and are now on display in germany and switzerland. and we may be a self-obsessed culture, but why not point your phones at this. how amateur photographers are getting sky-high views once
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the online retailer has already crushed key competition in several industries. >> now amazon may be prepared to sell pharmaceuticals and that's putting drugstores on edge and making concerns about making opioids even more available. here's dean reynolds. >> reporter: you might try looking for your local radioshack or borders books and now having expanded beyond books and delivery service and lately groceries, amazon is sending tremors through a new opportunity, drugstores. amazon won't confirm 1u67 a move but ice been approved in 12 states for pharmaceutical device and medical deviss. stocks took a hint. >> it seems to have a ripple
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effect. >> reporter: r.j.hodavee is a business analyst at morningstar. >> i think it's going to take time to build out. >> reporter: because prescriptions are not books or records. they would have to take care not to worsen the flood of pain-killing medication. >> this isn't like a lot of the other industries they've gone after. there's more regulatory barriers and data sharing barriers they'll have to go through. >> reporter: amazon has already raced new questions, amazon key, which enables delivery drivers to drop off packages inside your home with a special smart door lock. still a recent wells fargo survey found out five out of ten american adults would use an amazon pharmacy if they could, probably because their entry into a previous sector has usually had two results, lower prices and happier consumers. for "cbs this morning:
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chicago. >> boy, i don't know about this one. >> yeah. amazon is reshaping the landscape. >> they sure are. >> food, drugs. >> it would be nice to get that prescription to come straight home. >> that is true. on the hunt for wildlife in one of the least likely places. we'll tell you why conservationalists are puzzled over new mountain lions s could something that is probably in your medicine cabinet reduce certain forms of cancer? up next in our medical rounds, dr
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time for medical round. first up, can a regular dose of aspirin affect certain types of cancer. new research on long-term aspirin use was talked about. >> the study look aet over 600,000 people from hong kong. there were two groups. one used aspirin. one did not. the aspirin users had been taking the drug on average for eight years. participants were followed for up to 14 years to measure the incidence of cancer. to join us to discuss the findings, dr. david agus. doc, what did they find? >> it's pretty
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dramatically lower risk in esophageal cancer, stomach cancer and colon cancer and slightly lower risk of prostate and leukemia. so pretty dramatic. you down-modulate inflammation from aspirin and cancer incidence goes down. >> should we all be popping them? >> is it a wonder drug? >> hi pock karats say you take the bark and chew it and pain goes away, but the death rate of cancer from 81 milligrams of cancer a day, something to talk to your doc about. >> you're no stranger to the aspirin world. you've written about this in "the new york times.." >> you guys are acting like i was 2,400 years old. >> noing no. you don't look a day over 2,000. what else are we missing? >> we had done a study.
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if everybody who takes an aspirin does, 900,000 excess people -- i love the word excess -- would be alive who wouldn't have been. $690 billion in savings. that's pretty wild. >> that's substantial. up next, with more talks of humans one day colonizing other planets. there's new research on the travel of the human brain. a study this week examined the brains of more than 30 american astronauts. researchers conducted mris before and after space flight to see if the astronauts' brains underwent any structural changes. this is the one i want to hear. what did they find? >> space brain. if you go up in space, gravity goes down. what happens is fluid that normally goes to the ground goes up. so what you see is areas where fluid was built in the brain.
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brain, the brain pushes upward, the eye pushes outward. >> aye. >> aye is right. we have to study these. as we talk about going to mars an other places, remember mars . . . . mars is a four to six-month travel in weightlessness. we have to look at these changes if we are going to do something out there. >> are there benefits to space brain? asking for a friend? >> alex, i know that look. >> we just don't know. we know the changes happen. we don't know if they are forever or you go back. the notion that the brain has plasticity and can change depending on your environment is fascinating. >> it seems like we want to work out these changes before we start sending people out. >> think about the application for stroke recovery. if the brain has plasticity and can change, a couple months in space, what is it going to do with disease? >> the way you described it
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initially, i'm thinking, this cannot be a good thing. you come back with football brain essentially. >> i am not sure it is the same as that but astronauts have changes in their vision. all of the sudden, it is pushing outward the nerves. they are not functioning the same. when the brain changes, we don't know the application. four to six months travel to mars, they have one-third the gravity. you are going to be living there in this. how do we do that? people in space lose 1% of their bone mass a month. >> yikes. >> men and women as they get older lose 1% a year. these are dramatic changes we have to learn. >> tricking your tastebuds, high salt consumption can harm your health. it is one risk factor for cardiovascular disease. what if you need that plaflavor your food? >> a new study finds spices might be a good substitute. the people that enjoyed spicy
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further more, they showed less sen sensitivity to salt. >> as if i needed another reason to eat spicy food. >> we all need to stimulate our tastebuds. salt does it. spicy foods can do the same. it seems to be a lot safer than having lots of salt. >> sign me up with the tobasco. one senator called it the beginning of cyberwarfair. up next, congress investigates russian interference in the 2016 election by using our own social media. what happened? why it wasn't stopped? and what can be done to prevent it next time? that's ahead on "cbs morning saturday."
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♪ you bear this responsibility. you've created these platforms and now they are being misused. you have to be the ones to do something about it. or we will. >> that was california senator, dianne feinstein. one of the lawmakers slamming executives of social media companies at this week's congressional hearings. they demanded to know how and why russian operatives were allowed to infiltrate facebook, twitter and google purchasing ads that reached millions of americans before, during, and after last year's presidential election. here to talk about it is nick thompson, editor in chief of "wired" magazine. good morning. >> good morning, alex. >> did the companies really know what was happening here? can anything be done? >> no, they didn't know it was
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they had some hints. they don't even know now entirely what happened. no one knows the full extent of how the platforms were used by russian intelligence operatives to mess up our elections. can the companies do things better? absolutely. there are hundreds of levers likely to happen in the future. >> there were dummy ads and fake twitter happen twitter handles. what was most effective? >> i think russians set up fake accounts as though they were gop political operatives and fake facebook groups. they were very effective at getting in the middle of american political conversations and riling people up or getting and organizing little protests. much more effective than the actual ads. facebook is saying it deleted the russian accounts because they were fake and not because a foreign power was trying to manipulate our elections. what is the implication there? >> that was part of t
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questioning marco rubio brought up. very smart question. the russians created the accounts and used false names. it is pretty easy for facebook to have an excuse to get rid of them. there is no rule in facebook's terms of service that a russian intelligence operative can't mess with our election. you can't imagine a rule where somebody from one country can't comment on what's going on in another. how is facebook supposed to know who is a russian operative and who is a russian. that puts an unfair burden on facebook if you expect them to do that. it is a really hard problem to imagine facebook saying, no russian intelligence operatives on our platform commenting about american politics. >> how do you regulate it? >> the congress is regulating the ads, which is a small thing. what facebook has to do is they have to change their core algo richly a rit many and the core of the way it works
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platform that helps with partisan anger and outrage. that's a fundamental engineering problem that hasn't been baked into their dna. the way to solve it is to get much more introspective and it's platform will be much harder to weaponize. >> how sophisticated were these ads? >> they were pretty good. i am surprised at how good russian intelligence offers were at creating memes. they look like they could be made by really smart 20 somethings. they are not the best meme creators. there are better ones but they exceeded my expectations. >> they are not done either. they are still interfering on issues including the nfl kneeling controversy. they are trying to stoke around race and immigration. this is an on going thing. >> you might think that the problem to solve is america and russia just need to stop messing
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one level up from facebook. >> is there any evidence, nick, that facebook and twitter are anxious the government is sticking their fingers in this? >> they are terrified. there us a bill they have been opposing about sex trafficking. they just caved. probably because they are worried about public outrage, that congress is upset. you watch those hearings. those hearings, congress is throwing the kitchen sink at them, all kinds of different anxieties and frustrations. billions of upon billions. on the other hand, congress is scared of these companies because they have so much power that and they don't know -- >> congress has no idea what to do. nobody has any idea what to do. e i'm looking forward to talking about it in the future. >> very encouraging. nick thompson, thank you. >> happy to be he
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the toy list faster than a rocket. up next, what legos is making that's the newest release and a hit especially for young girls. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." what are you doing? watching this breath savers protect mint neutralize the plaque acids in my mouth. i can't see anything! that's because it's working so hard. hey, what are you guys doing? karen. we're neutralizing. maybe i want to neutralize. you ever think of that?
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discover card. i justis this for real?match, yep. we match all the cash back new cardmembers earn at the end of their first year, automatically. whoo! i got my money! hard to contain yourself, isn't it? uh huh! let it go! whoo! get a dollar-for-dollar match at the end of your first year. only from discover. sally ride made history back in 1983 when she became the first american woman to travel into outer space. now ride and three other women, all nasa pioneers are being honored with their own likenesses. the women of nasa legos set went on sale this week and it quickly became the top-selling toy on amazon. >> the group of astronauts include the first. >> i'm
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first woman of color to go into space. >> she stands next to the space shuttle. also depicted astron never nancy g. roman. >> i started in na saudi arabsa. i was 16 years old. >> there are these stunning pictu pictures. computer scientist margaret hamilton wrote the software cold koed that helped "apollo 11" crew land safely on the moon. and just last year she was awarded the presidential medal of freedom. >> i wanted for this particular set to focus on women who had contributed to nasa history. >> the women of nasa edition was originally thought
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writer miya wine stock. she submitted the plans to lego in 2016 and they received 10,000 votes it needed to proceed in a little more than two weeks. by shrinking them down to a little more than an mg, weinstock hopes to oversize their achievements. >> you can never have enough sets to celebrate women who have been underappreciated in women's history. >> one small step for history and one giant leap for women. coming up, attracting the kind of cat you don't expect to find in an urban area. for some of you, your local news is next. for the rest of you stick you'r morning: saturday"let .
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♪ ♪ there's a beautiful new york city sunrise. welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." i'm anthony mason. >> i'm alex wagner. coming up this hour, during world war ii the nazis looted hundreds of works of great european artists including monet and picasso. now those works are being exhibited in germany and switzerland as experts try to find out who owned them. >> then it's a view like none other. the world from high above, and while aerial photography used to be only for professionals, we'll hear how more and more amateurs are now taking aim. plus the incredible view you get when you climb all of the way up your family tree. one author was amazed to discover just o
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to from presidents to rap stars, and he says your own tree may be hiding similar secrets. >> the first on prdz, and today he begins an 11-day tour of five countries. mr. trump will visit japan, south korea, china, vietnam and the philippines with a focus the north korea nuclear threat and economic issues. >> the president made a stopover in hawaii on friday. jamie yuccas is in honolulu with more. jamie, aloha and good morning. >> reporter: good morning. during a meeting with pacific command leaders the president said he was excited to make his first-ever trip to pearl harbor. friday evening the president and first lady watched as two sailors laid a wreath to the fallen u.s. service members at the "uss arizona" memorial. this morning the president departs for tokyo, the first stop on his asian tour. it's expected that north korea's ongoing nuclear threats will cloud much of the trip. he'll deliver a speechn
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countries to step up pressure against the north's nuclear ambitions. the president is also expected to deliver an economic message during meetings with china's president and that a pair of regional summits. also on the agenda, a one-on-one meeting with the philippines' controversial president rodrigo duterte. there can also be a meeting with vladimir putin at an economic summit next week in vietnam. the kremlin says they have not ruled that out. alex? >> jamie yuccas in hawaii, thanks, jamie. >> president trump continues to face questions about the ongoing russia investigation. the president has expressed frustration over robert mueller's probe and attorney general jeff sessions. cbs news justice reporter paula reid has been tracking the investigation. paul a good morning. >> good morning. >> okay. this week we learned about paul manafort, george papadopoulos. what can you tell us about the scope of this investigation and where is it heading? >> we knew paul manafort was
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possible money laundering, tax crimes and not filling out the proper paperwork for his foreign lobbying activity and we knew all of this because we were keeping an eye on who was testifying before the grand jury, but what we didn't know and caught us by surprise was papadopoulos and this was a surprise to everyone and what that tells us is that mueller has line of inquiry and collecting evidence that suggests there were contacts between the trump campaign and russia. it tells everyone that mueller's only letting us see what he wants people to see. >> president trump meanwhile is painting papadopoulos as a low-level player. how significant could he be here, do you think? >> even if he is a low-level player, this is someone who possesses e-mails, aledly and has communications with higher-level campaign officials and that could potentially cause a problem. it's easy to distance yourself from paul manafort's personal business dealings and easy to distance yourself from a low-level campaign staffer. as we saw in court
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plea was issued it is clear prosecutors say he has evidence, e-mails and other communications with higher level staffers and that's a problem. >> he's known as a proactive cooperator which means what exactly? >> some people have interpreted this to mean that oh, he wore a wire. i've talked to sources and no one has confirmed the wire, but what people points out to me, in this day and age you don't need to wear a wire to trip someone up. e-mails, text messages and there's so much electronic communication that you can collect that can be used as evidence. >> what do you think the use of the term was when they announced these charges. >> let's look at the choreography here on monday. nothing is a mistake here. everything is a very well-choreographed message to the other people under scrutiny and saying a proactive -- excuse me, a proactive cooperator, that's a clear message he is cooperating and will continue to cooperate and that will probably concern anyone who is speaking with him in the past few months
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you'll start wondering who else might be proactively cooperating? >> we have a chilling effect speaking of which attorney general jeff sessions is under scrutiny for testimony he made under oath regarding communications between the administration and the russians and the campaign and the russians. has he spoken to mueller's investigative team? >> he has not. i confirmed he has not been asked to testify. he confirmed that on the hill and that is still the case and that should be a possible point of concern for him because it suggests he's not a mere witness to the possible obstruction of justis and the firing of james comby and he could be a focus of the overall investigation into this question of conspiracy or collusion. >> wow. that's a big deal. it is a big deal. it hasn't been a great week for jeff sessions. on t would you remember something that was said by a low-level campaign staffer. >> who was in the room with the president, though. >> he was, but when you goac
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it doesn't appear to be a clear case of perjury. of course, sessions has had a tough year in terms of his congressional testimony for failing to disclose meetings he had with ambassador kislyak and most people would agree that you are most likely to remember a meeting you had than a meeting that someone suggested. >> paula reid, thank you, paula. climate change challenges a popular talking point by the trump administration. a report suggests it's, quote, extremely likely that the rising temperature of the planet is man made and stronger than ever. the heat is the result of carbon dioxide from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas. the energy secretary and the environmental protection chief have repeatedly said carbon dioxide is not the primary contributor to global warming. the lure of the neon lights and the hustle and bustle is the stuff of legend when it comes to hollywood, but it is attracting a surprising breed to the
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carter evans fills us in. >> i've heard of many reports of mountain lions through the years living up here. >> you just didn't have the proof. >> exactly. >> reporter: high in the hollywood hills conservational tony tucci was curious about the wild life still thriving in this urban jungle. >> i put the camera right here. >> he left it here in june and captured the usual, squirrels and deer and earlier this week when he downloaded the most recent images. >> it was click, boom, mountain lion. my mind was known. >> pum as are known to inhabit the santa monica mountains and most are tagged and well documented, but the big cat in this picture has no tracking collar so nothing is known about its whereabouts except that it had to cross one of the busiest fr freeways in the country. >> it's ak mazing we still have mountain lions in los angeles. >> seth track the mountain
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aggressive toward people. >> it's clear they don't think of people as prey because this mountain lion is seeing thousands of people every day. if it thought of people as prey it would have attacked someone. >> what is a concern is how the big cat will interact with the only other mountain lion known to stalk this area. he's known as p-22 and he became something of a celebrity when caught on camera near the hollywood sign and mountain lions are extremely territorial. >> if it's a male, what happens between p-22. if it's a female, do they mate? >> reporter: regardless of what happens, tucci's organization, citizens for los angeles wild life or c.l.a.w. is trying to protect the last few wild life corridors in l.a. including this undeveloped plot. >> why is this 17-acre parcel so important. why do you need to keep this empty? >> because this is potentially his living room or its den. it needs to be preserved and the hallways and the wild life
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preserved so this animal can thrive. >> reporter: no one knows how long the animal has been living on this prime real estate, but for the time being, this big city cat has mains one of hollywood's most elusive celebrities. for cbs this morning saturday, carter evans, hollywood. >> even the mountain lions are chaseded by paparazzi. >> i love how they're wanted by mountain lions. don't forget, daylight savings time ends tomorrow morning. set your clocks back an hour before you go to bed tonight. you get an
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turns out the saying we're all connected is more than a cliche. our next guest found that out when he explored his family tree and found everything from harry potter to dr. oz. we'll hear about his incredible journey coming up next. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." journey coming up next. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." 4 when you're close to the people you love, does psoriasis ever get in the way of a touching moment? if you have moderate to severe psoriasis, you can embrace the chance of completely clear skin with taltz. taltz is proven to give you a chance at completely clear skin. with taltz, up to 90% of patients had a significant improvement of their psoriasis plaques. in fact, 4 out of 10 even achieved completely clear skin. do not use if you are allergic to taltz. before starting you should be checked for tuberculosis. taltz may increase your risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them.
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♪ ♪ from tv shows like finding your roots to ancestry websites, to companies offering to analyze your dna, learning where we come from has never been more popular and it sent our next guest on his own journey of discovery. >> author a.j. jacobs put it all in his funny and new book "it's all relative" adventures up and down the world's
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publisheded by simon & schuster. welcome. >> thank you. >> what set you off on this adeveryoa adventure. >> a got an e-mail from someone who said i am your eighth cousin and i thought he would ask me to wire money to nigeria and he is building the biggest family tree in history. literally millions of people in dozens of countries all on the same tree and it blew me away, and i thought genealogy is kind of staunchy and it affects politics to health and race relations and i thought this has got to be my next book. >> and i have a book that touches on the same idea and i'm particularly fascinated by what you found. at one point you tried to have the biggest family reunion in history and in turn, it was called the global family reunion. what was that and how much of a nightmare was it?
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>> well, yes. the book is part memoir, part how-to and part my quest to throw the biggest family reunion in history, and i got to say that it was the strangest day of my life, and we had -- i know -- we had 10,000 people all around the world all singing "we are family" to sister sledge at the same time. >> you weren't arguing over who makes the best thanksgiving turkey. >> there was probably a little of that. >> i love the i am a cousin sign. we're all cousins. >> that was the idea of the book that we are all related and we had quite the variety. we had a rabbi and minister and a buddhist monk and it was like the setup to a joke. >> the genealogy has become a big business. >> huge. huge. 5 million people have taken dna tests and there are genealogy shows and genealogy cruises. i think we all want
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where we come from. this desire of who am i and this is one way to fiend out. >> do you think it is bringing us closer together? >> my hope is yes and that we are all cousins and we share 9 9.9% dna. when they showed palestinians and israelis, how closely they're related and they were kinder to each other and more willing to negotiate. so that's the idea. you know, our parents always said we're all one big family. now you can see it. now the science is there to show. >> who were you related to? who were your cousins? >> pretty much everyone other than us? >> but what i love side that it was like the ultimate social network because you could reach out. i would call daniel radcliffe and i said this may sound weird, but i'm your second great uncle's third cousin. would you do a solid? >> did he respond?
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them did and some got restraining orders and i interviewed everyone from david blane to george h.w. bush. >> wow! >> you do raise questions about privacy concerns with all of this information that people are sharing on genealogy. >> right, yeah. like any technology there is a risk so in the future, hackers may get all of our dna and it will be like that movie gattica, great movie, but i would think the benefits outweigh the risks and these companies are doing their best to keep it private. >> you took a number of tests and did they all return the same results? >> first of all, it turned out i am jewish. >> you got confirmation on that? >> one said i was 2.5% arab. i said have the middle east conflict in my body. one said i was 14% scandinavian. >> you
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sets could be a little bit funny which you can read more about in my forthcoming book. >> they are getting better. >> the more data they have, the better they get. >> a.j. jacobs, we're related. i knew it. >> thank you, cousins. coming up, taking your smartphone pictures to a whole other level. thrilling aerial photography, once a rare specialty of professionals is now in the reach of all of us. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." complete the job with listerine® help prevent plaque, early gum disease, bad breath and kill up to 99.9% of germs. listerine® bring out the bold™ feel the power of thenew power...smax. ...to fight back theraflu's powerful new formula to defeat 7 cold and flu symptoms... fast. so you can play on. theraflu expressmax. new power.
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aerial photography used to be only used by professionals. now people take them on travel opportunities. >> they're becoming routine and that's making for a spectacular surge of aerial photography nationwide. jeff glor explains. >> reporter: looking up at america's largest city, it's impossible to beat the views unless you try looking down f
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central park to one world trade and the statue of liberty, new york is even more impressive from elevation. >> it's an believable shot. you can't get it from anywhere else. >> fly nia is one of the businesses taking advantage of a rapidly rising aerial photography market by offering tours without the doors. >> this is an unobstructed view. you've got nothing between you and the city. >> tim orr. >> it doesn't have that personal touch. >> because today people don't want to look at great photos. they want to take them themselves. >> indeed it's great experience. the city is an experience from the air. there's nothing like it. >> when fly nigh onlaunched in 2013, it was geared to professionals. >> all of this for you is social media. >> 100% of it. we were sharing what we were
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it was coming back ten-fold. i want to do this, how do you do this. i want to get that picture. the light bulb went off. i thought, i don't see why you can't come either. we opened the doors and people started jumping on board. >> they've expand to las vegas, miami, san francisco, and los angeles. >> this makes it accessful to everybodiful you buy a seat rj you go up when you want to, you take your photos and post them on instagram and facebook and your friends are going, whoa, waejt to do that. >> everybody's a photographer today. >> it ee true. >> is that bad? >> no. i think it's great. >> it's a long way from where alex mcclain started 42 years ago. mcclain has published 11 book on aerial photography over his career. >> would go up, shoot, get my film back and get it back three days later and you wanted to shoot yourself. it was really expensive. now you can see how you're doing right on the
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it's very simple. >> reporter: his views of ranges go from tobacco fields, flowers and b-52 bone yards. >> first you have to learn how to fly. that was tough itself because i was terrified of fly. >> reporter: we joined him for a recent flight outside of boston. >> i'm curious how you do this. >> reporter: in a cessna 152. >> there's nothing fancy about this. >> it's all low-tech. >> what is that? [ indiscernible ] >> that's an old farm that has been there forever. >> reporter: we flew over the famed walden farm. the water is so low it's surrounded by a beach. he points out the environment. >>er
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everywhere you look you can see climate issues aet play from agriculture, coastal areas, heat, fires that we have now. >> reporter: going is also in the game. earth lets users aerially let explorers view the entire planet in 3-d. now youto see that place from t altitude and see how the earth is connected between the oceans and mountains and different land masses. there's no way to do that without having that kind of perspective. >> this year google also added a voyager feature. part tourist guide, part teacherer. >> if google earth is a place to get lost, google voyager is a place to leadership? >> voyager is a bit of a guide to help you navigate to some of these places and to have that kind of ability to spin the globe, zoom into a place you think might be interesting
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go along for the ride and see where it takes you. >> it's addicting. >> it is a little bit addicting. it also doesn't cost anything. the beauty is you can see all these places from where it's most comfortable for you. >> all that said, the best place to capture it is in your mind. >> are there times they're sew focused on capturing they're not seeing it with their eyes? >> sometimes they're shooting so fast, we say put the camera down. look at what you're seeing. sometimes it's a lot more valuable. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning: saturday," jeff glor, new york. >> i don't like flying out of lagu
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will have power over your health care. adams supports letting insurance companies deny coverage for pre-existing conditions. seniors would be charged more for health care; premiums would go up. and adams supports giving employers the power to block birth control access for female employees. john adams: wrong on health care, wrong on birth control, wrong for virginia.
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candidate for attorney general, and i sponsored this ad. ralcandidate for'm governor,rtham, and i sponsored this ad. narrator: they call him enron ed. because washington, dc lobbyist ed gillespie represented the worst of the worst. lenders trying to keep student loan rates high. corporations sending jobs overseas. and of course the enron scandal. now, enron ed is lobbying for donald trump's agenda. like cuts to virginia school funding, and taking away healthcare from thousands of virginians.
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hundredsds of art pieces ar on displalay. they'll l be s shown in parar exhibitions in paris and switzerland this week. charlie d'agata gives us a tour. >> reporter: it's an art collection like no other because it was collected like no other. 450 masterpieces like monet and rodin. all of the skpikts in the simultaneous shows in germany and switzerland were seized by the nazis during ward war 2. a thought of hoarding by a leader who led the
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poaching art from jewish families and selling arm defamed to degeneraets overseas. it displays the darkest chapter on nazi germany. >> they persecuted artists and art they didn't like. how they did this systematically. >> reporter: the works here might have never seen the light of day had they not done a routine tax examination in jaefrmt they had hidden away a trove. the priceless rodin sitting near a potted plant. the monet hanging on the wall. the exhibition has raised moral and ethical issues over the art's true providence including pieces likely looted from jewish owners ought to be on display at all. the shows can act as something of a lost and
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>> through the broad media coverage of the exhibitions, of course, the public is reached and maybe somebody recognizes something. >> they run into the hundreds of millions of dollars and half the pieces discovered have been reunited with their rightful owners. for "cbs this morning: saturday," charlie d'agata, london. >> i'm glad the public gets to see all this. >> and hopefully some chef floyd car toews is known for putting an
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cuisine. growing up in mumbai, floyd cardoz was on the medical path. then he headed to new york and made his way with the highly acclaimed modern endian restaurant tabla. >> paowalla and the bombay cantina in mumbai gives a unique take on where it all began. welcome to "the dish." >> welcome. >> thank you for having me. >> start with the refreshment. >> the cocktail is black label scotch and honey coconut oil. >> very handsome. >> very delicious. >> and sweet potato followed by
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grandma made. and a bacon mariani. my father's mother would make it. followed by broccoli with lime and chilchili. and to end, grilled pineapple with honey syrup. >> you mention portugal and portugal cuisine. when people think india, it has a modern chromatic sense of it. but it's influenced very much by european cuisine. tell us about it. >> portuguese, it was over 300 years. my restaurant is paowalla. pao is the bread that they brought to india which is now all over india. they came and influenced us with pork and vinegar, the tamarin, now they eat it regularly. the english and
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there for a long time and the french brought their cooking to india. we've had colonization for a long time. but it's been since the leites 1950s. >> as much as you loved food growing up, you were intending on a completely different direction. >> yeah. i was actually in the sciences. >> you wanted to be a doctor. >> i wanted to be a doctor. i wanted to be a biochemist, and i read a book called "hotel". >> by arthur haley. >> and when i read the book i thought, wow, this is so much fun. i loved food growing up. food was a big part of my life. i thought, i could go work in a hotel, hospitality and eat whatever food i want. then i started cooking and realized i'm really good at it. i thought, wow, i'm really good at this. maybe i should stay in it. >> inindia, women cook. you were to become a doctor.
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into a role that isn't necessarily lauded in the same way in the indian culture? >> it was very, very hard. when i went into the business and went into the kitchens, e was working six days a week, 14 to 16 hours a day. i lost all my friends. no one wanted to headache hang out with a cook. that's when i realized it was hard. i thought, india is not for me. i left. i went to switzerland. my brother tried to get me. >> you came here for a wedding. >> i came for a wedding. i gave myself a day. if i don't get myself a job, i'll leave. the day before i was supposed to go back, i got a job. >> and you introduced indian food to new yorkers in a way they had never tasted it before. how difficult was it. you now have a restaurant back in india. how difficult was it to go back home again? >> so, i never wanted to do an indian restaurant because i foun t
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late 1980s, '90s wasn't very good. i like to say india is like europe. you can't say indian cuisine. but you say italian cuisine, french cuisine. that's very different. going back tond ya and bringing this was very important but i realized new york needed it too. chef, as i ask you to sign the dish, which is custom, if you could share this meal with any figure past or present, who would it be? >> i would actually like to share this meal with a fictitious family. >> ooh. a twist. >> there's a book called "a hunter for journey." it's made for the movie. i did the food for the movie. a tnld chef in the bob, hasan, his story is very similar to mine. so i would like to see what his inspirations are. >> i love this idea. >> jumping into a parallel universe. jeff floyd cardoz. creative to the end. thank you. good luck with the new
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for more on chef cardoz and "the dish," head to our website cbsnews.com. up next, grizzly bear. after five years, the band loved and as wide ranging as beyonce and radiohead, we'll have a recording live at jimmy hen direction electric studios in new york. this is "cbs this morning: saturday." ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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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. before starting cosentyx you should be checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms of an infection. or if you have received a vaccine, or plan to. if you have inflammatory bowel disease tell your doctor if symptoms develop or worsen. serious allergic reactions may occur. with less joint pain, watch me. for less joint pain and clearer skin, ask your rheumatologist about cosentyx.
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starring in our "saturday sessions," grizzly bear. they became one of indy rock's defining groups. five years ago after four successful album and countless tours, they took a break. >> now they're back with their album "painted ruins." here recorded live at electric studio in new york. this is grizzly bear with "losing all sense."
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♪ i keep looking for reasons to come around to make sense of your internal row ♪ ♪ but it's a maze and there's nothing to be found it just leads me away from my end goal ♪ ♪ move too fast here we are can't let go ♪ ♪ take the past own your scars let it show ♪ ♪ ♪ like a rogue wave you wash right over me ♪ ♪ losing all sense of what
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>> announcer: "saturday sessions" are sponsored by blue buffalo. you love your pets like family. so feed them like family with blue. hey, need fast heartburn relief? try cool mint zantac. it releases a cooling sensation in your mouth and throat. zantac works in as little as 30 minutes. nexium can take 24 hours. try cool mint zantac. no pill relieves heartburn faster. i'm and i'm an emt.erer when i get a migraine at work, it's debilitating. if i call out with a migraine,
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i just don't want to let these people down. excedrin migraine. relief that works as hard as you do. fly nigh on. a type of irregular heartbeat not caused by a heart valve problem. but whatever trail i take, i go for my best. so if there's something better than warfarin, i'll go for that too. eliquis. eliquis reduced the risk of stroke better than warfarin, plus had less major bleeding
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eliquis had both. don't stop taking eliquis unless your doctor tells you to, as stopping increases your risk of having a stroke. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily... ...and it may take longer than usual for any bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. i'm still going for my best. and for eliquis ask your doctor about eliquis. ♪
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z2i1zz z16fz y2i1zy y16fy will have power over your health care. adams supports letting insurance companies deny coverage for pre-existing conditions. seniors would be charged more for health care; premiums would go up. and adams supports giving employers the power to block birth control access for female employees. john adams: wrong on health care, wrong on birth control, wrong for virginia. disclaimer: i'm mark herring, candidate for attorney general, and i sponsored this ad.
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narrator: today on lucky dog, a chocolate lab mix faces an uphill battle. brandon: whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. this dog doesn't have just separation anxiety, this dog has straight anxiety. it's so bad that i fear he's gonna hurt himself. narrator: it will take overcoming many bumps in the road to find his way to a new home. and with brandon by his side he may just have a chance. brandon: i'm brandon mcmillan and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are living without hope.
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