tv CBS This Morning CBS November 25, 2017 8:00am-9:55am EST
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♪ good morning, it is november 25th, 2017. welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." a massacre in a mosque. dozens of gunman storm into during prayers killing hundreds of worshipers. we'll have the latest from egypt. plus president trump uses the attack to call for support for his travel ban and the border wall. but hours later it is a fight over a magazine cover that is grabbing his attention. we're traveling with the president. the holiday shopping season starts strong and we'll have numbers from
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what is different. and what is old is knew new again. spike lee and we head to his film headquarters to see why the story he wrote three decades ago is more relevant than ever. but we begin with a look at today's "eye opener", you're world in 90 seconds. >> explosions drew people outside and then gunman opened fire and then moved inside executing people. >> a terror attack on a mosque rocks egypt. >> the deadliest terror attack in egypt ever. >> president trump called it horrible and cowardly and phoned egypt's president to offer his condolences. time magazine disputing the president's claim in a tweet that he turned down being probably named person of the year. >> a big scare for holiday shoppers in london after reports of shooting being fired but police found no sign of gunshots. >> this st. louis area mall was forred
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protest turned chaotic. >> black friday, today merken gauged in one dangerous situations. >> a neighborhood is under water in washington after a river flooded. >> rescue crews searching for people who need help. >> mr. president -- >> president trump played golf with the game's greats including tiger woods. >> what a cool day. >> all of that -- >> and a woman saved from an on coming train with seconds to spare. >> and that was a close one. >> and we're having this huge reckoning when it comes to women, what is the lesson. >> i don't do takeaways. i don't say -- >> what do you think about the conversation we're having? >> it is long overdue. >> on "cbs this morning saturday." mchughs with a head of steam and mike hughes the one to beat.
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do you believe it? ucf the first team in fbs history to go from winless to unbeaten in the regular season in a two year span. welcome to the weekend, everyone. i'm alex wagner with tony. >> glad to be here. >> anthony mason has a much deserved day off. we begin with the aftermath of the terror attack at a crowded mosque in egypt that left 305 worshipers dead and 128 injured. friday's assault was in the northern part of the troubled sinai peninsula. >> so far no group has claimed responsibility for the attack. charlie d'agata is following developments from our london bureau and he has the latest. charlie, good morning. >> good morning. egypt's president vowed to respond to the massacre with an iron fist and within hours jets were scramled and launching air-strikes and targeting the militants behind the worst terrorist attack
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country's recent history. egypt military released video this morning claiming to show fighter jets targeting the vehicles used in yesterday's attack. they said killed suspected militants inside. and zeroing in on hideouts. while outside of the hospital, exhausted medics loaded ambulances with more victims, they simply were not able to save. the blood stained walls inside f the mosque tell of the horror that unfolded when as many as 30 armed militants set off a bomb during friday prayers and gunned down as many worshipers as they could as they tried to escape. even opening fire on emergency vehicles trying to tend to the wounded. egypt an president has vowed to respond with brutal force to those behind the attack. for years the sinai has been a fertile ground for islamic extremists like isis despite repeated government attempts to root them out. in the past, the militant group
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and security forces. in isis in the sinai also claiming responsibility for twin bombings on christian churches that left 45 dead and killing a bus load of christian pilgrims earlier this year. but yesterday's attack was the first ever large-scale assault on a mosque. worshippers there practice the soofi branch of islam which siz has blanded ant blasphemous. and a place of peace yesterday provided neither one. some have noted the attack took place in a small tight knit village and that staggering death toll amounts to 10% of the population. >> thanks, charlie. president trump called egypt's president to offer his condolences. he also used the attack to call for support for two of his campaign promises. in atweet after the attack the president wrote, we have to get tougher and smarter than ever before and we will, need the
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he was alluding to his proposed border wall with mexico and a travel ban from some muslim majority countries. mr. trump also made a rare disclosure acknowledging that he played a round of golf this time with some of the game's greats. he's away from washington spending the holiday weekend at his florida club. errol barnett is traveling with the president. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. yes, president trump ended the week making a rare admission that he played golf, dropping a few big names in the process. and facing a new development in the russia investigation. this plus a few diplomatic calls making it a busy working vacation. >> mr. president -- >> reporter: at a florida golf club bearing his name, president golfed with tiger woods and pga fro brad faxin. it was his 52nd as president and he's already spent all or part of 126 days at trump branded
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>> everything is executive order. because he doesn't have -- enough time because he's playing so much golf. >> reporter: during the campaign then candidate trump criticized president obama for spending time on the golf course and promised to separate himself from his business as president. >> i'm going to be working for you. i won't have time to go play golf. >> reporter: in addition to playing golf, mr. trump made calls to two foreign leaders and smoke with egypt's president to offer condolences after gunman attacked worships in the sinai province. mr. trump also phoned president erdogan of turkey to discuss sale of military equipment from the united states as well as diplomatic solutions they think could potentially end the syrian civil war. back in washington, pressing issues away the president. cbs news has confirmed that michael flynn cut off kmupg -- communications with the president's legal team. >> he lasted 24 days as national security adviser. stepping down after is
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president pence about his communications with russian ambassador sergei kislyak during the transition. >> to my knowledge he did not collude with anybody to influence the campaign. >> flynn came under scrutiny by robert mueller for his private sector work on behalf of the turkish government. mr. trump's former campaign manager cory lewandowski. >> if michael flynn did something wrong by not disclosing the relationship with turkey and other governments, he should be held accountable for that. >> the fact that flynn cut off communications with the president's legal team suggests he is cooperating with special counsel mueller but president trump said they are not concerned about that. in a statement trump's lawyer said if it is a plea deal, which they expect, it doesn't necessarily mean it has anything to do with the president. tony. >> errol barnett traveling with the president. thank you. time magazine is disputing
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trump's tweet, tweeting that time has probably chosen him as the person. year and he passed on the interview and i photo shoot and time responded with a tweet of its own saying the president is incorrect about how we choose person of the year. time does not comment on choice until publication which is december 6th. time named mr. trump as person of the year last year, 2016. >> for some many needed perspective on what is going on in washington, we're joined by gabriel dibenetti at politico. gabe, good morning. >> good morni >> good morning. >> let's start with the michael flynn news. the white house is not concerned. how nervous do you think they are about the fact that mr. flynn may be cooperating with special prosecutors. >> let be clear. they are certainly not no concerned. they are very worried about this. this is a real possibility f
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could be cooperating and therefore implicated someone higher up the food chain. there aren't that many people higher up the food chain than him but the question is what does this mean. but what the wlous is saying he's talking about a plea deal and that is long expected. so it remains to be seen what this will mean. but the white house is definitely nervous. >> the practice of mueller tell us that he's likely going for a bigger fish here. if he's looking to strike a deal with flynn, is that the understanding. >> that is absolutely what a lot of folks are expected. but the question is who the bigger fish would be. there is the president, the vice president, jared kushner, donald trump jr., but we shouldn't speculate too much about this because we don't yet know what mueller is asking flynn and what flynn is willing to talk about because there are a lot of issues on the table but since the manafort indictments the white house has been on edge and it remains to be seen what they will do. >> gabe, do you have a sense of the time line we are working on here in terms of the special investigation? an well, no.
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thanksgiving, 2017. which of course did not happen. >> that has passed. >> that has passed. so this is a real headache for the white house because they've been saying, this will be over soon. they are wrapping up. all indication is that that is not the case and we're still in for a few more months of this. >> mueller's team is scheduled to interview hope hicks, white house communications director and that is getting close to trump himself. what does that tell us about the process. >> hope hicks has been with him for a long time compared to the other folks and it tells us this is close to the top. we don't know if any of these people aric plie -- implicated hope hicks who has been on the campaign trail and working with the president for years that means this goes all the way up. >> in the meantime sh the trump administration and republicans in congress would very much like to tax reform pass. they've set a deadline for themselves the end of the year. how likely is that they will meet the deadline. >> i'm going to hedge because this year hor
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before. it is likely they are going to try and pass something. what we don't know is what that's going to look like. they are desperate to get some sort of legislative achievement on the table because this is a foul year with total republican control and they haven't passed any of the big priorities. tax reform is a big one. >> and the other issue looming over washington is sexual misconduct and sexual harassment and we have senator al frank ebb and rob john conyers and implicated in accusations. is there a reform or change in the culture. >> the real answer is there to going to be a reckoning on capitol hill and everybody understands this. and the question is when and what will it look like. there are reforms in the reporting process on capitol hill and we've seen suggestions that is happening and there is chatter about month more names coming up of people involved in this kind of behaviorment we just don't know what the time line is. >> reckoning is correct. and before we go, the trump
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fight about the consumer financial protection bureau and we'll talk about thatity lear t -- later in the hour and tell us about where the back and forth is at this point. >> richard cordray at the top of the bureau has just stepped down. there is speculation he will run for governor in ohio as a democrat. and the administration has said they are going to put mic mulvaney in charge of the bureau but he said his deputy should be in charge and there is a standoff about who will be in charge of the body that protects consumers and this is a fight we have no idea where it is going but it seems like a lawsuit is imminent. >> and who sits in the chair on monday morning. stay tuned. dave dibenetti. thanks. the holiday shopping season is here and online sales are booming. according to don'ty analytics online shoppers spent more than $3.5 billion by 8:00 on black friday, an increase of nearly 16% from a year ago. while there has been talk of the death of black friday f
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years, most purchases still happen at brick and mortar stores. adrianna diaz is the macy's flagship store here in new york. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. that is right. one expert told us that even though black friday sales are starting earlier and earlier every year, and of course a lot of people are buying things online, he said black friday is still relevant and it shore was here at macy's yesterday. it was so busy that the cash registers were having issues processing the credit cards and gift cards because of a systemwide slow down. >> everywhere is pretty much 50% off and guy one and get one and those deals that i want. >> i got a fabulous bedding set for almost 50% off. >> it was worth it, man. you know what i'm saying. wait all year for this. >> i just go buy things that people are telling me is on sale. >> reporter: all across the country shoppers lined up and filled into stores for deep discounts. while some retailers rolled out deals as far back as
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tradition brought susan brandt out to the mall on black friday. >> for 25 years three sisters in law are getting together on black friday and it is a sacred day and got together and do all of our shopping. >> more than 164 million people are expected to open their wallets this holiday week weekend, up from 154 million last year. >> wages are kicking up and they want to get out and spend a have a good time this holiday season. >> when all is sedan done consumers will have spent about $1.4 trillion this holiday season. says usa today business correspondent charese jones. >> a lot of retailers make half of the revenue for the year within this period of time. and it is even more critical now because amazon is ascending, they are scooping up all of the sales and money. >> richard berry said that is why his stores are providing unique in-store
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our fan vault, so this is an area where we're bringing collective products. yes, kids love the products, but guess what, adults love them much more. and of course there is also those cute unique items that maybe you wouldn't admit that you want, but secretly you do. >> reporter: so now that plaqbl friday is behind us we're looking forward to cyber monday. target and walmart will have thousands of discounts and amazon is expected to offer up to 50% off some gadgets. shoppers are expected to spend $6.6 billion on monday. alex. >> omg. retail is changing. thanks. next month the federal communication commission is expected to wipe out net neutrality. fcc chairman announced the ip tension this week to roll back regulations that were put in place by the obama administration preventing
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or slowing access to certain websites. >> critics say this could put smaller web companies at a disadvantage and increase cost for consumers. to break this down we welcome back jason tans who is the site director at jason, this is a confusing topic for a lost people. i think we need a metaphor to open this up. is it the information super highway that will have a private lane. >> think about the information electricity grid. so basically your utility can't tell you what to plug into the grid. could you plug in whatever you want. but what if some utility said we like it that you use microwave and rather you not use refrigerators so we'll make it flow slowly to your refrigerator than your microwave. >> so interservice providers may be picking winners an losers in term of access. >> that is what its.
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powerless to determine what you do with the internet. they give you the data and what you do is up to you. with these rules it is possible they could say, we would rather you not make phone calls over the internet. or we would rather you not watch movies on netflix, watch movies through our great cable service and therefore we're going to throttle back the speed and we may will even block them entirely. maybe we'll offer our services in a way that it doesn't hit your data cap. we can favor services and punish others. >> so not all information would be treated equally on its face necessarily. >> that is right. >> i could imagine many americans hearing that and thinking it doesn't sound fair. so what is the fcc chairman arguing for the case for dropping the rules. >> the argument is the government has been micromanaging the interest service economy. and that this is unfair regulation on internet service providers and that if we relieve them of this burden, they will be able to invest more in spreading broadband and it is
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fair system. >> there is a need to spread broadband. i've been to rural georgia and west virginia, the internet speeds are very slow because the actual pipes and tubes that carry the information, they are not very good. >> that is right. >> is there a case to be made on that point? >> i'm not a big fan of the argument. some people do buy it. i don't know that the problem is that the profits of cable and phone companies are so slim they haven't been able to invest in these areas. that is their argument. i don't know. i think the bigger problem is there isn't enough consumer demand there to pay out of the investment. >> and when you are talking about consumer demand, are we look at a landscape where consumers could afford to pay for better access to the sites they want to go to. is that what happens. >> that is part of it. it could be that you are charged for different kinds of services. and it is also possible that internet companies are charged. if you want your service as quickly as possible you have to pay the d
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providers to get in their fast lane. that is not a problem for netflix or facebook but for younger companies or small businesses who can't afford to pay each different isp some extra fee, it could really hurt their business. >> and keep in mind, some of the big companies, one started out as small companies. >> that is correct. and that is why a lot of them, google and facebook would stand to benefit from the rules but they are speaking out against it. >> jason, good to see you. and thank you for the explainer. time to show you this morning's headlines. "the new york times" reports on a possible legal fight to decide who will run the consumer financial protection bureau. now that two people have been tapped to leave the agency. before resigning on friday, director richard cordray appointed by president obama promote minnesotaed his chief of staff leandra english to serve as acting director but president announced white house budget director mick mulvaney would rule and they f
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gut the pours. a woman in western new york was shot by a neighborhood who thought she was a dear. rose mar by bill quest was working her three dogs in a field the night before thanksgiving. police say the neighborhood used a high powered single shot handgun that is often used for dear hunting. so far no charges have been filed. bloomberg reports that a swedish power company's attempt to wean off burning coal is fashion friendly. the facility northwest of stock home is using recycled wood and trash as part of the goal to become fossil fuel free by 2020. they are also burning clothes that the retailer h&m can't sell because a nearby warehouse is feeding the trash the plant is burning. somehow there ma be a more efficient way. >> i'm going back to that story. and the washington post that a california man's attempt to prove the earth is flat will have
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mike hughes was hoping to take off in his home made scrap metal rocket for a 500 mile-per-hour flight. some 1800 feet over the mojave desert but he could not get formal permission from the bureau of land management to conduct the test over public land. he is hoping to launch from private property later this month. and i hope we'll have a camera there. >> yes. also mike, i think the jury is in on this one. the planet may not be a flat disk. maybe. it is about 22 minutes after the it is the hashtag that launched an online movement. still ahead this morning, how the
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empowered those of sexual harassment and raised awareness of the extent of the problem. and later was a small budget film that had a huge impact. almost 30 years since spike lee released the debut film she's gotta have it and now it is a streaming tv series and coming at a perfect time. we'll talk to at claimed director ahead. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." this morning."
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relax, havertys black friday sale been extended all weekend. a whole new selection of sectionals, sofas, beds and more - are now on sale. get big savings through monday. havertys. life looks good. ♪ ♪ small businesses get a big assist between black friday and cyber monday. today is small business saturday. we'll look at the status and the impact of the campaign meant to encourage you to shop local. and a film some say gets better as time goes by. we'll celebrate this week's 75th anniversary of casablanca. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday". ♪ ♪
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morning: saturday." coming up, millions of americans are getting a jump on crowds. that could have a devastating effect on small businesses. we'll look at the program that's been saving the day when it comes to shopping small. the band r.e.m. struggles. their results are even bigger. we'll look back at the release of "automatic people" with two members of the band. that's ahead. we begin
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accusations of fallout by men. women and men have been coming forward publicly to accuse dozens of other well known figures. it's led to the "me too" campaign. for many who say they've experienced sexual harassment or abuse. >> we sat down with five women all leaders in their respective fields. jenelieman with rent the runway. sal sally crawcheck, elaine welter off, editor in chief of team vogue and howard, a gymnast. she and her teammates accuse dr. larry nassar of sexual assault. p
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assaulting seven girls, most of them gymnasts. the women shared their experiences and offered insight and hope to help women as they come forward. >> when i started to work on wall street, i remember one day leaning over a desk to work on a spreadsheet and turning around and there was a guy behind me pretending to perform a sex act on me with all the other guys watching and all the other guys laughing and this sense of incredible shame. >> you felt ashamed. >> absolutely. how could i have leaned over the desk like that. >> do you think sexual harass money and the definition of it changes depending what generation you're in? >> if this locker room talk starts in high cool with men thinking it's okay to oversexual ietz women, what did we think was going to happen 30 or 40 years later when they get into the boardroom. you think about incidents with harvey weinstein and roger ailes and bill
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these are companies where not just those individuals were powerful, but even who runs that company in any position of power is a man. >> you know, i think there is this problematic definition of rape as something that happens in a dark al libi a scary drunkard stranger. but the reality is that only 8% of women are raped by strangers. >> jessica, i want to get you in here. did you know what was happening to you was wrong and did you feel like there was someone at the olympics committee in management, someone on the team you could go talk to to help stop this behavior? >> you know, i didn't, and i was in a position where i had to just trust this man. when news about dr. nassar started coming out, i realized i wasn't the only one and more than 140 women have now come forward and usa olympic
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i really think the entire board needs to resign. >> wheel we have victims and survivors to come forward and say "me too," we need men to step forward and say "i did that." we need men to step forward. >> i think there are a lot of men in shock as to what they believed normal behavior was. harvey is an extreme case that is a sexual predator, and for somebody to say i grew up in a sexually per miss was time is [ bleep ]. >> we're different ages, but we all know about anita hill, we know about bill clinton, we know about bill cosby. what makes this moment different. >> the proliferation of social media and media outlets. what's different about this moment is we have a way to express our voices. what's also different about this moment is women are rallying around each other. >> i don't know who said it, but
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pandora is pissed. >> do you think that young women, the readers of "teen vogue" are more forthright about what's happening to them and their bodies than older women? >> yes, slooul. we need more women in these leadership positions. we need more women on board. but it might still happen to you. >> that's actually the reason i spoke up because i was sexually harassed after already raising over $100 million for my company, after having a successful company, and after i refused this investor's sexual advances. he called my board members and told them i was being unresponsive and should likely be fired. so he tried to come after my career when i rejected him. and honestly my board members were shocked and we decided as a board to take immediate action together. >> do you think that you can get to a point where t
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thing that you think defines you? >> i hope so. i really do. >> you will. >> yeah. and i -- seeing you guys and just listening to everything that you've been talking about, it -- it almost makes me want to cry because i know that we can do what we need to do to make sure this never happens again, so that not one person has to come up and say, you know, "me too." i'm just very empowered by listening to you guys. >> you know, tony, what struck me is how many women had stories like this and how many of them reacted with shame, and in this time, that shame is turning to anger and indignation. >> i want to put one of your questions back to you. do you think after doing that piece that this moment is different from past moments? >> yes, undoubtedly. the sheer number of womenom
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shared community around being targets of sexual harassment and predation. >> a really powerful series. >> coming up to on the street from on the force. a rookie officer who a few years ago was homeless and in danger how much of our cancer risk is within our control? up next, our "morning rounds" medical news. dr. david agus with a new study on just how many cases of the disease are the product of lifestyle factors we may be a
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time now for "morning rounds," our look at the medical news of the week. first up, putting your health in your hands. a new study by the american cancer society looked at the number of cases and deaths where modified risk factors played a role. >> yep. they used 14 data to draw those conclusions. they found that an estimated 42% of all cancer cases are a result of risk factors we potentially control and that an even higher 45% of cancer deaths are a result of these factors. joining us to discuss the findings is cbs news contributor dr. david agus. doc, i think this is good news so far as people wanting to say i can affect my risk health outcomes. what are the factors? >> it's good news and bad news because we're not doing it.
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what we're showing is that over the years, smoking, smoking, smoking was the risk factor. over the years smoking has gone down and obesity has gone up and it's taken the place of smoking. the big ones are smoking, obesity. >> weight. >> lack of movement, sitting or being stagnant all day and things like hpv vaccine. those are the critical ones. if we hit those, we're going to dramatically decrease the incidence of cancer in this country. >> i shouldn't be sitting down for this next topic, but i guess i'm going to have to. it is -- >> i think we have -- just before we get to our next topic, let's just wrap up -- >> you're welcome to stand. >> i will. >> our cancer conversation, are there certain cancers that are more implicated than others when we talk about these risk factors? >> yes. so lung cancer is the big one. lung cancer, 85%, 90% is related to smoking. smoking is still there. 19% of kids in high school still smoke, which is an
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figure when you think about it. we need to decrease smoking. things like coloner, breast cancer can be e related to obesity and what we eat. both of those are addressable. we get away from the processed meats and other things, colon cancer rates will go down. if we move more and we have less obesity, we're going to get less breast cancer which is dramatic. >> i am eager to get onto the next subject. i have one more question on this topic. >> the answer is yes. >> we know that overeating and cancer is tied to cancer. that message is out there. how do we make sure people are actually getting it? >> you hit it, right? the problem is if i tell you to do something today, it's not going to help you until a decade, two or three decades from now. that lag in health is really killing us in the big respelkt of things. how do we do that? we need to educate and get people to understand. so when you tell patients what to do, they just role their eyes. you explain to them why,
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>> literally you can release your risk for cancer if you do this. >> yes. >> is it time? can we go? >> it is time. >> i should not be sitting down for this one. our next topic, taking a stand for your health. many workplace environments require people to work at their desks. that's a health risk. a new study published by biomed central selected a group of german-led desk workers. they compared the time they desired to sit and stand versus the reality. i would like to do more walking around. what do they find? >> people want to walk around more than they do. people are surprised how much they sit. i've got one of these little watches and i was shocked how much i was sitting. i have a treadmill desk. at least once a day i have a walking meeting. it makes a big difference. remember, we were designed to move
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cancer and heart disease. those data are pretty impressive. never have a printer at your desk. have it somewhere else in the building. go to a different floor to go to the bathroom at work. find ways to move. >> that seems drastic. i have a standing desk, and i'm thankful cbs has a standing desk. you have a treadmill desk. not many places can do that. >> i love that. when said you have to walk to go to the bathroom, you said that seems drastic. >> i was going to say get a pipe -- >> alex, we need to find out ways to redesign our life. if you can walk for five minutes an hour, you've done a major impact on your health. don't call up someone three offices down. walk down. steve jobs and i would meet. he said, david, there's two reasons to walk. first is it's a health benefit. the second is
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instead of right, it gives you an advantage in business negotiations. figure out ways to bring walking into your life. >> why is it on us? it should be on the companies. they should make some changes. >> no question about it. redesign the buildings. >> why are we sitting now? no, i'm not going to do that to our camera guys. dr. agus, thank you for your time and thoughts. it's one of the season's biggest shopping days, but one where community is as important as commerce. up next, the impact on small business saturday on your local businesses in your neighborhood. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." smooth, melting, crafted by the lindt master chocolatiers. whenever, wherever. lindor, from lindt. life's too short for ordinary chocolate.
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♪ and it's now available where you buy groceries. about 116 million people spent part of the day shopping on black friday, many of them in malls and big box stores. while you still might find crowds in your local malls, many people are expected to spend their money at small businesses. >> it's what's known as small business saturday and as carter evans reports, the plan by american express to support local businessesk
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continues to pay off. >> reporter: there are no door deals but small business saturdays means a big boost in sales. >> we have a really great community that supports us and we support them. >> reporter: she opened a store in 2009 and has since expanded to three. she believes donating to schools and connecting with customers is more important than opting for discounts. >> we make sure they pick the right product for the right child. >> reporter: while some shoppers brave the store madness, they want to support a store that provides a uniqueness. >> it feels special. it's not a big faceless nameless place. >> reporter: 71 million people say they'll shop today and 76% of those plan to spend at small businesses. this is an owner of an independent bookstore. he's not
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to get people in. he duct need to. >> do you have customers who shop here because they want to keep your store alive? >> yes. we're offering something a little different and has roots in the neighborhood. >> it appears to be working. in 2016 an estimated 112 million shoppers bought on small business saturday, a 13% increase from the year before. >> but it's so much easier to point and click. >> but you don't get that one-on-one person to person-interaction. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning: saturday," carter evans, los angeles. you know what i love about small businesses? small selection. >> yes. and i like the excuse of being able to go shopping with a good conscience, which is what i will do today. thank you, carter evans. more than seven decades after it appeared, the movie "casablanca" remains at the top of many lists of one of the finest films ever made. 'l
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look at us. ♪ you must remember this a kiss is just a kiss a sigh is just a sigh ♪ >>. it was 75 years ago that "casablanca" made its debut. >> here's looking at you kid. >> it was a commercial and critical success, winning three oscars catapulting ingrid bergman into stardom and turning humphrey bogart into hollywood's highest paid actor. >> if that plane leaves the ground without you, you'll regret it. maybe not today. >> it also increase ourd vocabulary. >> of all the j
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but they quote the lines. >> he's the author of new book "we'll always have "casablanca". >> the screen writers won an oscar but one of film's most memorable lines wasn't in the original script. producer wallace unhappy with the ending sent a memo with two opposite lines. >> he brought bogart and claude in to do voiceovers. >> they would choose the second one. >> lee, think i this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship. >> this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship, tony. >> indeed. i think i'm going to watch it again. >> i think you need a fedora and a trench coat. >> let's bring popcorn and do it. still ahead, the remarkable story of a rookieff
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♪ ♪ welcome to "cbs this morning." i'm alex wagner. >> anthony mason is off today. i'm tony depoppel. a allegations of misconduct against a university professor and now they are calling for a worldwide boycott of the college. >> and then spike lee made a stunning debut with the film "she's gotta have it" and now it is a streaming series set in today's brooklyn and as timely as ever. we'll talk with him. o cf1 o >> and rem rose from a small band in athens, georgia to one of the most influential acts of all time and
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looking back at the album that cemented their legacy. the 20th anniversary of auto for the people. and first our top story. egypt responds to the terror atta attack that killed 305 people. the ruthless well-planned assault on a mosque take place in the sinai peninsula during friday prayers. more than i hundred people were wounded. the egypt president said the culprits will not go unpunished. >> this americaning egypt warships targeted several and no group has claim the responsibility for deadliest ever attack in egypt. president trump tweeted the world cannot tolerate terrorism and followed up with a second tweet saying we have to get tougher and smarter than ever before and we will need the wall, need the ban. residents in western washington state are drying out this weekend after the s
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spilled over the banks, which is far more -- with far more force than expected. the thanksgiving day flooding closed roads and forced several homes to be evacuated. some horses had to be rescued from the high water. officials say a perfect storm of rain and snow melt coupled with record-breaking temperatures led to the flooding. at this time of heightened awareness about sexual assault and harassment hundreds are callp one school on the carpet and threatening a worldwide boycott. they have written a letter to the university of rochester in new york and strongly reconsider the handling of a professor accused of preying on students. we have the story. >> reporter: the open letter expresses disappointment with the university of rochester and their response to allegations of miss conduct by brain sciences professor dr. florian jaeger, criticizing the university for supporting the
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intimidating the victims and advocates and the professors state they will notten occur students to employ opportunities at the university. rutgers university was the 49th to sign. >> it says the university is more concerned about saving face than protecting the most popular vulnerable. >> searchers filed an equal opportunity commission complaint claiming that school officials were not protecting students. 111 page complaint alleges jaeger used sexual language with his students and uses influence to sleep with female graduates and pressured a student to live with him. that student is dr. celeste kid. now a professor at the university. >> he had made it clear explicitly by telling me that if i had a problem with him and i expressed that i would be
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professional consequences. >> in a statement to cbs news, university officials say the fact is that many students, faculty and administrators at the university do not recognize the institution described in the letter circulating on the internet. >> the sort of response they are seeing from the administration there to suppress this to the point of actually putting those victims at risk, i think that was most troubling to me. >> jag e remains on paid administrative leave and did not respond to our request for common. the university has launched an investigation since the ccoe explain. jericka duncan, new york. violence outside of a shopping mall in houston plaqbl friday. one person was stabbed and another shot when a fight broke out in a parking lot between two men. both are recovering in the hospital. it is not clear what set off the confrontation. and seven people were arrested during a black friday
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in st. louis. a hundred people rallied against police treatment of african-americans. the mall was closed for about an hour until police were able to clear the crowd. >> this is my great fear. a great white shark attacked a man near pebble beach, california. the victim was spear fishing when the shark bit on a leg. an off duty sheriff's deputy was in the water at the time. >> and then all of a sudden the safety people came out and the jet ski and said you have to get out of the watt. >> ---er there is a great white. and the wet suit was inside of the zodiac and it was shredded and blood and stuff like that. so it was -- it didn't look good. l. >> the victim is expected to survive and we wish him a speedy
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it has been just over three decades since spike lee burst on to the scene with "she's gotta have it" now now it is a streaming series updated for this particular moment in time. we'll take you to his new york headquarters to talk about the project and the controversy currently swirling around hollywood. details ahead. you're watching "cbs this morning." round hollywood. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." i-surface brushes and power-lifting suction to grab and remove everything from fine dust to large debris. daily dirt doesn't stand a chance. you and roomba from irobot. better together. yeeeeaaaahhh! hmmhmm. uh oh...a painful sore throat? not now.
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in the air, right. >> tails you lose. will you tell these two gentlemen it is time for them to go. >> my fate decided by the flip of a coin. >> how much longer must i tolerate -- >> that is a clip from "she's gotta have it" that mark the the debut of spike lee. lee followed it up with string of landmark movies including "do the right thing." 3-1/3 years later his career has come full circle. on thursday netflix premiered the television series "she's gotta have it" which is the original story and setting it in 2017. it is as timely as ever. we spoke with lee this week at his offices in brooklyn, new >> i consider myself abnormal. but who wants to be like everybody else. ♪ ♪ >> she's gotta have it tells the story of a poly am orrous black female artist who is juggling four different lovers in the
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recently gender fighted neighborhood of fort green brooklyn. >> do you worry one day that brooklyn that is chroniced in your films wouldn't exist any more. >> the bed-stuy and the film is no more. >> today the neighborhood where lee grew up and set his story is much different both on screen and off. >> you said that television afforded you more of a canvass. >> yes. a bigger canvass. >> and a lot more money to buy more paint. so we have pmore coloring. we weren't doing it in -- pun intended -- black and white. >> lee was 29 and just out of nyu film school bh he released "she's gotta have it". >> so december of 1985 we shot "she's gotta have it" and my grandmother
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so i went on to make $7.5 million -- >> did you tell your grandmother what the film was going to be about. >> she grandmother had complete faith in me. she said i know nothing about film making and if that is what you want to do, i'll support you. >> it explores soexuality and impairment through a young artist named nola darling. >> i consider myself normal. >> i knew that she would be a woman that people talk about. >> does it surprise you looking back at the film how risque it was. >> nobody knows this, we were having trouble with the rating system. because it was just -- too many black people and naked bodies on the screen and they would tell us there is too much sex. the day we opened had a call from the mpaa saying that i had to make a cut and -- the fillp was playing. >> lee called his editor
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brown and sent him to the theater to cut half of the scene while the film was still >> the projectionist looks at me and said, so what do you do? i know there is a moment where they part and then they are going to come back together and cut there and cut again. and what was remarkable, it went right through. >> that movie that set in motion the rest of the partnership. >> she's gotta have it. >> she's gotta have it did everything. it just doesn't seem to agree with the career about it. >> this time around lee made sure to include female perspective in developing the ten episode first season. >> you are the epitome of nars isism. >> he enlisted his wife tanya lewis lee who he credited with bringing the story to tv
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as five female writers, including the poll united stateser prize winning playwright lynn noddage. >> you were criticized that nola darling in the film version was -- this is the male gaze that directed this film. >> people forget that this is my first film. people forget that this was 86 minutes long. and people forget we're revisiting this 30 years later. 30 years ago i was not married. 30 years ago, i was not a father. so it is not a big thing to include black women in this project about black women. it is what you need. this is my mother right here. >> lee credited his late mother and elementary school teacher with his love for cinema. >> godfather in a town
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throughout his offices. >> this is a poster of the mean streaks signed by marty. >> but the oscar winning director said despite his success there is a long way to go for people of color and women looking to make it in hollywood. >> this is only going to change when we get in a room with the gatekeepers, the gate keepers that run stuff at cbs, at nbc, at warner brothers, at netflix and show -- whoever it is, amazon and to have meetings about what we're making, it is going to be meeting about this show. all right, where is spike going to go. it was trying to get me out of the show. these are the gate keepers that make these decisions and until we're in those rooms with the gatekeepth
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>> isn't freedom having the right to do whatever you will about your own body. >> michelle obama isn't about to start carving herself up any time soon. >> lee got a second chance to reimagine nola darling when gender and sexuality are making national headlines. >> we're having this huge reckoning when it comes to women, women being in the room, women having power, women making decisions, women as victims. >> right. >> when you think about what is going on in the national conversation and you think about this show that is about to premiere, what is the lesson? >> i'm going to give you an honest answer, okay. i don't tell audiences what the lesson is. i respect my audience, i never say well, you come out of the theater, here is the takeaway. i don't do takeaways. i leave it up to the audience. i respect
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>> what do you think about the conversation we're having. >> it is long overdue. >> he is a master of cinema. it is fascinating how timely the themes of "she's gotta have it" made in 1986 are today in 2018. >> and what a cool office. >> the cool office office in america. >> and did his grandmother call him spiky. >> i did not call him spiky. >> that is a great piece. from sergeant pepper to pet sounds to purple rain, some albums are musical might stones and one of them is r.e.m.'s automatic for the people praised by the critics as one of the best of all time. it also sold 18 million copies. not too bad. we'll visit the members of the band on the 25th anniversary of its release. you're watching "cbs this morning." >> announcer: this portion sponsored by thara flu, the power to feel better. wer...
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i love that song. that is r.e.m. performing "man on the moon." the album which was released 25 years ago last month is considered by many critics to be one of the best of all time. >> this month r.e.m. rereleased "automatic for the people" including a deluxe anniversary edition that includes 20 unreleased demos. we sat down with mike sometime and mike mills in the studio to talk about the album. ♪ nobody tells you what to do, baby ♪ >> reporter: r.e.m. released 15 studio albums before they disbanded in 2011. but many consider "automatic for the
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>> reporter: you've been quoted as saying this is your strong t est -- favorite album. >> it's our strongest. >> reporter: mike mills, michael stipe, peter buck, and bill berry went into the studio to sing this. >> how did you sing it? >> in a mansion on the top of a stairwell and reading the lyric off a laptop. swimming." ♪ night swimming deserves
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quiet night ♪ >> reporter: which started with a mike mills melody. >> i started gooding around on the piano. michael heard it and loved it and said keep playing it. >> reporter: the track was laid down at criteria studio in miami on the same piano used for a classic. >> reporter: it's recorded on a leila piano which is not the best piano in the world, but the history of it is fantastic and it sounds great. >> reporter: led zeppelin's john paul jones arranged the strings for the song as he did for the album's biggest hit. ♪ everybody hurts sometimes >> reporter: "everybody hurts" won the band fou
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music awards. >> what this becomes is something you can't put on a shelf. that's yours and everybody's out there. >> reporter: the last song written for the album was "man on the moon." ♪ if you believe they put a man on the moon man on the moon ♪ >> the song was pretty much completed except for any singing and we all knew it was a song that had to be on the record and we knew there was something great lurking in there. we just had to get it out. >> but you had a little trouble getting it out. >> yeah. >> reporter: sometime found inspiration unexpectedly in the videos of andy kaufman. ♪ andy, did you hear about this one ♪ >> andy came out unintentionally? >> i had no intention of writing about an duh in the song, but that's what came out. >>
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"yeahs" was an attempt to outdo nirvana's kurt cobain. >> my goal was to do something better than kurt cobain and that was our attempt to do it. >> that's quite funny. >> reporter: "automatic for the people" reached number two on the charts but they did not attend. >> people thought it had to do with health. >> people were saying i had hiv/aids. i didn't. i wanted to avoid it. i was living with people with hi visit. that's my community. i'm not sure i made the right choice. >> you're not. >> yeah. >> what would you have said? >> i'm healthy. i didn't think that's what it was about. i was thinking that people were trying to force me to talk about
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anyone's business. ♪ i've got to leave to find my way ♪ >> this is an album that's become more and more popular. >> that's the sign of a good record. one of the things we tried to do is when you listen to them, you could say that's clearly from 1986. if you can do that, it has a chance of lasting longer. >> i love the idea that this record could find a newer younger audience, people that might know some of the songs but they haven't put together that it's r.e.m. or those songs created something that was once an album in a far away century called the 20th century that makes me say i can look back 25 years and look at it. >> michael mills is right. it does belong to the people. >> now with more yeahs than nirvana. coming up rngs he's a police officer now but he never
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we begin this half hour with a case study in 21st century policing. police departments have long believed in hiring police officers who connect with their communities able to become part of the fabrics of the neighborhoods they protect and serve. >> john blackstone introduces us to one recruit who won't soon forget his path to working in law enforcement. >> reporter: the rigorous training at the california highway patrol academy includes a ceremony. polishing a memorial to officers killed on duty. >> it puts it in a little bit more perspective of what you're signing up for even before you graduate. >> reporter: officer edwin lopez still can't quite believe he
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graduate. >> sometimes i wake up and go, oh, my goodness, i'm an officer. >> reporter: long before he could get into a pa montreal car, lopez had to pass a background check and lie detecher test which had him particularly worried. the highway patrol wants to no err candidates ever lived. he was reluctant to admit he was homeless for nearly a year living in this sacramento park. after serving in the army, lopez worked in a tire store but lost his job when it closed. >> i lost my apartment. soon after that i lost my car. and then from there i didn't have any other place to really go. >> reporter: soon he was skroun scrounging for food. >> you'd be surprised how much food people throw away. >> and you would eat that? >> oh, yeah. >> reporter: lopez was still serving in the national guard. that paid him $50 a month to pay for his cell phone so he could look for work. >>
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get something out of this rather than roll over and wait for someone to save me. >> reporter: the california highway patrol thought his experience on the streets could be an asset for this offer. now he has a uniform, fiancee, and a home. he's thankful for all of it. for "cbs this morning: saturday," john blackstone, sacramento. >> don't you love that? >> that's an incredible story of resilience. hat's off to him. coming up, a look at the weather for your his delectable southern question zone but with a lighter touch, just ahead on he
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chef sam talbot blemds his southern awareness with a helping of healthy eating. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." american or. simply orange and tropicana ship in juice from overseas. only florida's natural grows all of our oranges in florida. great taste. naturally. 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. before starting cosentyx you should be checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections
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like this dewalt 20-volt max drill for $99. hi, i need your help.s for i've been trying to find. a knee specialist... but nobody has an opening for months! uuuggghhh!!! uuurrrggghhh!!! mr. powers? you can't always control your feelings... i found one in-network next tuesday. but choosing unitedhealthcare can help you control your care. thanks, stephanie. i see on your preventive checklist, you're due for a colonoscopy. it's covered at no additional cost to you. great! no green. unitedhealthcare this morning on "the dish" north carolina born chef sam talbot. he had to learn at an early age not fo
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he was diagnosed with type one diabet diabetes. helping others has been a livelong passion. >> he's opened an eatery with healthy dishes and southern cuisine dishes. he produced his second "100% real" cookbook. chef, welcome to "the dish." >> welcome. >> thank you for having me. it's so lovely to see you guys. >> what are we having? >> anything you want. >> that fried chicken. >> fried chicken with honey drizzle. carolina favorite, blackened shrimp, pimento blackened cheese, butter milk biscuits, sweet potato waffles, cranberry baked ham and also spiked arnold palmer. >> yes, just what we need right now in the 9:00 hour. >> so this is the perfect
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thanksgiving day meal two days ago. when we talk about southern cuisine, we often don't think lighter. how with we making it lighter and healthier? >> that's the thing. being diagnosed with diabetes at a really young age, i knew everything matters, but i knew that food from the low country happens to be one of the best cuisines on planet. maybe i'm biased. but it's also maybe not the healthiest way to do things. >> how do you keep the flavor intact? >> normally we're using dairy. if you're using heavy cream or butter, we substitute hemp milk or almond milk or coconut oil. if you're talking about macaroni cheese normally made with heavy cream but you do it with butternut squash and coconut milk, what a difference it can make. if you're making fried chicken in just ska nola oil, maybe you change it to grape seed oil or brian to speed up the cooking process, everything changes. >> yum. how did you get into
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we know that grandmothers played a role in your earlier days. >> they always do. grandmothers are the best. you grew up thinking your grandparents are the sweetest, the coolest. so growing up, my grandmother -- we lived at kind of like the end -- our street ran into a farmer's market. it was a smaller one. fresh eggs, people made sausage, dairy, milk, and we would go back to the house and literally do scrambled eggs. proper slow cooked ones, not with the brown edges. i fell in love cooking with my grandmother and my mom in the kitchen. it turned into a full-blown love affair. i was cooking and getting fired from jobs. >> too much of the spiked arnold palmers? >> too much spiked arnold palmers at 14. then i start working at dean & da luca's. going into the professional kitchen, this was their career. i was 16. i didn't know what was
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>> right, right. >> pretty southern. this is the kind of food you could put in a very large dining room and keep the people coming in, but you've got an intimate dining room at southern dining. why the tight confines? >> i think in the world today, it's a fast casual world. people don't necessarily want to be sitting in a restaurant for three hours. we have our lives, you want to get out, be active with your family. for me i love being outdoors and i just like being outside. i want to be out there. so the restaurant is really built to come in, have delicious food, but you can take it to go, you can bring a picnic to the park. it's -- >> it's a great location. >> it's a great location, a great neighborhood, yeah. i couldn't be more pleased. >> it's great, great, great, all the way around and we love brooklyn. chef, i'd ask you to sign this dish as is custom for the program. if you could share this meme with anybody past or present, who would it be? >> past or present, i
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>> grandfather, okay. >> i never got a chance to cook for my grandfather in the way that -- you know, when you're 17, you don't really know how to cook. when i'm 39 -- did i say that? i'm 22. no, i'm 39. i'd love to cook for my grandfather and have him see what i've become. >> he's be proud. >> he'd be prout of my butter milk biscuits. >> we're proud. we know he's proud doubly. chef sam talbot, thank you. for more on chef talbot, head to "the dish" on cbsnews.com. music wasn't just heard in his childhood home. it was made there. up next, lucas nelson, son of legend willie nelson has been forging his own musical identity. we'll hear from his band coming up next. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday.." >> announcer: request the dish" is sponsored by eggland's
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sessions" lucas nelson and promises of real. he started playing guitar when he was 12 and on breaks hit the road with his dad. >> they performed in college and they took off, recording three albums, backing neil young on tour. their new self-titled album is gaining critical praise, and now here to "find yourself" is lucas nelson and "promise of the real." ♪ ♪ well, i don't mind sleeping alone if it means i don't have to play your crazy games
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♪ you're the most precious thing i've ever seen but i ain't gonna let it slide when you're mean to me ♪ ♪ i know the love that i dese e deserve ♪ ♪ i said i hope you find yourself before i find somebody else to be my lover ♪ ♪ and i hope you find yourself before i find somebody else to be my love er lover ♪
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wecage-free eggs.ng and we care about amazing taste. because at hellmann's, we're on the side of food. bthe less stuff i have, myto carry the better.k. with surface pro, i have one device that does everything. technology has really changed how i do this job. on pacific rim: uprising our characters are 250 ft. tall. where in the heck are you gonna land this big robot? pulled up a satellite image and there is like a giant bullseye, robots here! i feel very proud of what i bring to the screen. i have the greatest job in the world. take a moment. to unwrap, and unwind... with lindor. a hard chocolate shell,
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atiers. whenever. wherever. lindor, from lindt. life's too short for ordinary chocolate. for you, it's always now over later. and pause. not even in your vocabulary. so when a cold sore tingle strikes you act on it. only abreva can heal a cold sore in as little as two and a half days when used at the first sign. it starts to work immediately to block the virus and protect healthy cells. nothing heals a cold sore faster. and because abreva acts on it... you can too. act on it, with abreva. and roomba from irobot gets to work using two multi-surface brushes and power-lifting suction to grab and remove everything from fine dust to large debris. daily dirt doesn't stand a chance. you and roomba from irobot. better together. with advil's fast relief,
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♪ i caught every single red light as i cried my way back home ♪ ♪ my good lord she turned me sideways in the end ♪ ♪ but i might never let nobody do me twice what she done wrong ♪ ♪ fool me once, shame on you, i'll be gone ♪ ♪ fool me once and i'll be gone i'm gonna leave my house and home ♪ ♪ i'm gonna go out on the road and sing my songs ♪ ♪ i might find a love sometime i might even wk
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narrator: today on "lucky dog", a young doberman pinscher is bursting with excitement to find a home. brandon: whoa, okay, slow it down there. narrator: and a family is hoping to find a dog for their special needs son. traci: he communicates more with animals than he does with us sometimes. narrator: it could be a match made in heaven, but there's no room for error. brandon: i always have in the back of my mind, did i do everything possible to make sure this dog is right for this child? brian: hey! 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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