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Transcripts For KPIX CBS This Morning Saturday 20130511
today. it's now the highest in the western hemisphere. come atop its crowning achievement right here on "cbs this morning saturday," may 11th, 2013. captioning funded by cbs and good morning. welcome to the weekend. welcome to you. nice to see you again. >> hey, it's great to be here. we have a really really good show today. >> we do have a good show. it was so inspiring to see them top the world trade center. >> and so scary, the camera looking down, all the way down. >> incredible. we have a great guest for you in studio 57 including one of the world's most popular singers. josh groban will be performing in our second cup cafe. >> very excited about that. and a special mother's day brunch from the new york dish. >> boy, am i looking for that. but we begin the with scandal from the irs. they're looking into this matter after they admitted to targeting conservative groups during the 2012 campaign. the tactics are being called thuggish. we're joined with more this morning. kristin, good morning. >> good morning, nancy, anthony. well, the irs is saying we're sorry, we made mistakes, and they're not politically motivated. they blame this all on low level employees. tea partiers they're not buying it. they rejected the apology and are demanding the resignation of those in the irs. groups were flagged for one reason. their application contained the key words "tea party." >> it's disgusting and it's disturbing. >> they applied for tax-exempt status four years ago and to this day they've received no reply from the irs. >> they're acting like kings and it's the antithesis of what the irs is supposed to be. >> reporter: they say the groups were not. it doubled in the last two years but that contradicts what the head of irs said last year on capitol hill. >> there's absolutely no targeting. this is the kind of back and forth that happens when people apply for 501 c4 status. >> it certainly does seem to be based on what we've seen to be inappropriate action that we would want to see thoroughly investigating. >> in a conference call friday an irs official said they fixed the problem, but when asked for the exact number of conservative groups targeted here's how she replied. >> i'm not good at magt.th. i'm not a lawyer. i'm an accountant. >> she wouldn't say whether or not the employees responsible would be disciplined. the white house is also feeling the pressure this morning over the charges that it whitewashed public statements about the u.s. attacks on the u.s. embassy in benghazi libya. four americans were killed. the white house said a series . >> the talking points that got so much attention and let's remember these are talking points, not policy but talking points, to this day have shown to be wrong in only one instance and that was the existence of demonstrations preceding the attack. everything else about them is true. >> joining us now from washington is michal len, chief white house correspondent for politico. good morning. >> good morning, nancy. >> we know the talks were revised 12 times before susan rice used the em on the air. the white house says that these were just style is tick changes. republicans say they took spin way too far. who's right here? >> well, what we're seeing is these changes were much more substantive than had been acknowledged in the past and the question was why was politico -- was the white house trying to tamp down the idea that there had been some sort of breach of intelligence security right before the election. there's some evidence that this is the way bureaucracy behaved the cia was trying to push the state department under the bus, the state department was trying to stick up for itself but it's now blowing up in a way that people couldn't have predicted even a couple of weeks ago. they've been sort of percolating between some of the republicans and the conservative media, but now there are real questions about whether the american people were intention amelie misled, and i can tell you, nancy, from your perch up on capitol hill at least five house committees looking at this all wanting to pull threads on this sweater. right. they're not wanting to let it go. and you got the sense that the state department and the white house really didn't know what to say. they were basically rebuffing all questions about benghazi and then yesterday that all changed. and your politico has reported that they're holding a deep background but that it's considered off the record. what does that mean? >> who knows. it's part of an absurdist element of a scandal. it seems like something a bad novelist might do. the white house -- nancy, you've been in many of these briefings. they were trying to set the tone for their coverage. i wasn't there, so i feel free to talk about it. we understand what was said in the braefing was pretty similar to what jay carney said on camera, which wasn't much. but what we've heard from democrats and republicans is this could go on for weeks and months. democrats are telling me their biggest hope is republicans will overplay their hands, the republicans will be obviously political about this. republicans recognize that. they tell me there's something real here we don't need to be political, we should wait and not give people an excuse to say we're being silly about this. but people aren't very patient in politics and yesterday already there was an ad from conservative republicans going after hillary clinton, and as you guys know that's a lot of the subtext, is this a way to attack hillary clinton ahead of her presidential ght. michael allen from politico. thank you so much. >> happy mother's day. >> thank you. bob schieffer's guest on "face the nation" will be robert gates. it will be his first interview since he left the pentagon. in cleveland the evidence is mounting against the suspect accuse of brutd tally holding three women hostage for nearly a decade. they were discovered monday along with a 6-year-old girl. terrell brown is in cleveland this morning with the latest. good morning, terrell. >> reporter: anthony, good morning to you. michele night was released from the hospital. in a statement she asked for privacy. here in the home where she and other kidnap victims were held the investigation continues and now there's dna that proves who the father is of amanda berry's father. amanda berry gave birth to her daughter here on christmas day 2006. this picture of her was taken at the hospital soon after the rescue. her face is blurred because of her age. according to a police report she was born in a plastic pool in castro's basement with no doctor, nurse, or medication. older captive michelle knight helped deliver the baby reviving her twice when she stopped breathing. jocelyn is now 6 years old and dna evidence now confirms that ariel castro is the father. he talked about rapes and all the things he was doing to these victims. the fact this this child is in fact, his child, you know certainly confirms if we needed a confirmation it confirms what the victim has been saying. >> reporter: castro's dna was also entered into a national database to see if it links him to other crimes. the woman that he held captive the longest was released from the hospital on friday. she was considered a runaway by her family describes what she experienced during her captivity. she said five times she was pregnant. when she would say she was pregnant he would make her abort it. he would stash her for two weeks and then repeatedly punch her in the stomach until she miscarried. castro remains in jail on a suicide watch pending a hearing. newtown is taking a big step toward heelg. a tax force unanimously recommends demolishing the sandy hook elementary school where 26 children and adults were shot to death last december. the plan calls for a new construction of a building on the property. voters in newtown will make the final decision. police in texas are now pursuing a criminal investigation into last month's explosion at a fertilizer plant in the town of west near waco. the huge blast killed 14 people injured 200, and devastated much of the small town. federal authorities are holding a local paramedic who they say was found with bomb-making materials. anna werner has more. >> i wasn't that kind of guy. >> reporter: last month 31-year-old paramedic brice reed delivered a eulogy for one of the firefighters killed a friend. >> we're all here today -- >> reporter: friday reed was arrested and charged with a possession of a destructive device. in a statement the department of justice said investigators found an assortment of bomb-making components at the home of a reed acquaintance. in an affidavit, a special agent from the bureau of alcohol, tobacco, & firearms described finding components of a pipe bomb including a metal pipe fuse, and several pounds of chemical powder in individual bags. the agent said reed's akwap tans had unwittingly taken possession of the components from reed on april 26th nine days after the fire and explosion tore through the west fertilizer plant, killing 14 people and injuring some 200 others. sources tell cbs news reed's kwan tans later became suspicious and called police. authorities won't speck late whether reed's possession of the device has anything to do with the placht explosion. in a statement friday the mclennan county sheriff ice office said it is important to emphasize at this point no evidence has been uncovered to indicate any connection to the events surrounding the fire and subsequent explosion. officials from the atf and texas state fire marshal's office are still searching for evidence at the blast site trying to find the cause of the explosion. they say they have not ruled out the possibility that the fire could have been intentionally set. for "cbs this morning saturday," anna werner, dallas. today is election day in pakistan. for the first time in the country's 65-year history, a civilian government will complete a full term and hand over power in democratic fashion. the voting is taken place despite recent attacks by the taliban that killed more than 130 people including many secular candidates. elizabeth par mer is in pakistan's capital islamabad. elizabeth? >> reporter: during the campaign most of the violence was in the northwest area of pakistan on the southwest border where the taliban was active and trying to intimidate the more secular parties. today on voting day we've got fresh reports of threats and some polling stations having to be killed. in the city of karachi, a bomb kill 11 people and one more person died in blast in pa shower. people especially from the emerging middle classes hope this has might bring real reform. >> i'm voting for the first time and i really want some change in pakistan right now. so it's important for every person to vote so every person plays his or her own part in changing. >> we for the first time have a chance at a democratic process and that's something that's really, really making pa people in pakistan feel power. >> the former prime minister. but it's the newcomer who's added some spice to the race a former cricket star who used to mix with celebrities like princess diana, khan's political campaign took a dramatic turn as when he was raised on a forklift he tumbled off backward and suffered neck and back injuries. the sight of him in the hospital bed in a head and neck brace seems to galvanize his support. analysts watching closely say the potential of a big sympathy vote for khan makes the outcome of today's poll extremely difficult to predict. in large parts of the country so far with voting well under way, things are going without a hitch and the team of international observers have just issued a statement saying where they are things are running smoothly and professionally. anthony and nancy? >> liz palmer in islamabad. thank you, liz. it's not often you set a 2 million million-year-old record but earth just did it. they report that the level of carbon dioxide, the greenhouse gas that accounts for most global warming and climate challenge is higher now than it's been since long before humans involved. let's hear more from jeffrey kluger. he's a senior writer from "time" magazine. good morning. >> good morning. >> how serious is this and how concerned should we be? >> it is serious and we should be concerned. the last time the ppm was this high was 200 million years ago. therer with forests and greenland and sea levels were 66 feet higher than we are now. what this means is we're on the west side of manhattan at this moment. if this keeps up to what it's been back then we would be swimming at this address. >> my understanding is sea animals can adjust but not this quickly. >> that's right. they adjust easily to this but it takes centuries and millenniums to equal this. that is way too fast for anything humans plants any kind of the eco system to adapt to this. >> who's responsible for this? us ultimately right? >> us ultimately. the world puts out 2.4 million pounds of co 2 per second. china is number one and 10point 5 10.5. we're second. you can see it rising at 98 feet per day. >> what is the realistic way of turning this around? i thought the international community was turning this around at least a little bit. >> a little bit is the key right here. >> goal right now is not ambitious. the goal is to continue at 450 and have everybody settle in at that. that means greater warming, greater co 2 increase in the atmosphere is baked into our plans now and those are our ambitious plans. we have to tackle this aggressively. it's a little bit like saying you're very overweight and i'm willing to put on 50 more pounding before i begin losing. >> what do we have to do, jeffrey? >> we have to curb the use of fossil fuels. the worst is coal. we're sort of feeding their habit. we have to dial back fast to renewables, to wind to solar, to hydro electric to anything that is renewable and doesn't produce co 2. that's the biggest thing. we're making a good conversion to hybrid vehicles and electric vehicles but it's this output into the atmosphere of coal exhaust is the biggest contributor. >> and you talk about what it does to the oceans. what does it do to people? >> well people are -- we're going to survive in terms of just our bodies because, you know most of the world has developed sufficiently so we can accommodate this. but we were looking just this morning at a massive hailstorm. i think it was in san antonio, texas. we have a lost people say the term global warming is a wrong term. it's global weirding. we're going to see increased volatility in weather, increased extreme events and people lose their lives when these kinds of things happen. >> all right. after the hour. time now for a look at the weather for your weekend. it took nearly a dozen years but the whole left in the new york city skyline by the 9/11 attacks has finally been healed. workers finally erected the giant spire atop the new world trade center yesterday. >> it's now the tallest building in the western hemisphere standing at the southern tip of manhattan at what was once ground zero. scott pelley was there as the workers completed the spire. >> reporter: the 400-foot spire brings the building known as 1,7 1,776 feet. you still have to ride an elevator to reach the 104th floor. from there we climbed to the roof. this is the same height from the twin towers. quite a view from the roof. manhattan and beyond recedes from the edge. the spire will hold broadcasting equipment. the first piece was hoisted in december. the last just last week. there's a computer controlled beacon on top and this is what they expect it to look like as it becomes the icon of new york. >> when you stand back and you look up and you see that spire light up what are you going to think? >> reporter: bill is in charge for the port authority of new york and new jersey which owns the project. >> i'm going to think the iron workers and sheet metal workers and thousands of people who worked on this site who said give us a chance to build this building we'll build it they got it right. >> reporter: 26,000 workers build the strongest building in skyscraper history. the tower's central core of concrete and steel is seven times stronger than usual which they figure would survive the impact of a jetliner. scott wreck ler is the port authority's vice chairman. he told us half of the office space here is already rented. people said, look if you build those buildings, nobody will move into them. world trade center was attacked by terrorists whochl ss twice. who's going to move into that building. >> people moving into this building, it comes from pride, not fear. let's think about sending man to the moon. it's about pride. >> the complex is already a daily destination for workers and when workers fill the halls in about two years the memory of 9/11 will always be outside their windows. >> on september 11th the terrorists took the lives of some 3,000 people. that's the most important thing. they also took the anchor of lower manhattan away. they took away those buildings that say there's new york. we could not allow that to continue. >> that was scott pelley reporting. in all, one world trade center will cost $4 billion to build. >> i think he's exactly right. we did feel like we lost a anchor in the city and it's moving to watch it finished. >> to watch it get high higher and higher. the workers worked seven days a week to get it done. >> amazing job. amazing job. coming up we're peering into the world of google glass but some say it's very blurry. later we count on doctors for a correct diagnosis but we'll be surprised how often they're wrong and how dangerous it can be. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." coming up, the latest on britain's prince harry's u.s. tour. he's at the air force academy in colorado today to attend the annual warrior game the competition for disabled british and american veterans. harry paid his respects yesterday to the fallen at national did you watch the world trade center tower get topped off? >> i did. i got to go on top. one of my favorite stories of all time. look. there i am. these are like two-story ladders we had to climb because obviously the elevators don't go all the way to the top they're building it so quickly. you climb these ladders. you don't have any ladders on. the ladders are sort of swaying in the breeze. it's really cool. you never get tired of that view. >> the top of the world view it's kind of amazing. it's funny, i've about been taking pictures of this building as it's been going up. there's so many construction sites going up you don't think twice of them but this one i've been so conscious of because of that sort of hole in the city they were describing. you know i still look downtown and expect something to be there and for so long it wasn't there. and i was actually surprised at how moved i was yesterday when they topped this off. it really psychologically is such a big deal for the city i think. >> and i think to be able to see that eagle-eye view of the spire being placed up there and also to be able to watch it go up so quickly. every month if you come back to new york, you could literally see it had grown another four or five stories because these steel workers, i mean they were just on overdrive trying to get it done. they all have a personal connection to this building their fathers and grandfathers worked on the world trade center, so it means a lot to them. >> it mean as lot to everybody. i remember driving down the west side highway here in new york and for the first time noticed that it was like rising and i was like wow. i've about never felt that way about a building before. it means a lot. anyway, more coming up. stay with us. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." at the international space station this morning two members are preparing for a space walk. they'll try to repair a leak in the station's cooling system. >> the space crew we're told, is in no danger jeer welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." i'm anthony mason. >> and i'm nancy cordes. welcome back. our top story this half hour britain's prince harry's visit to the u.s. he's promoting his charities during his week-long stay but he's also polishing his image as a prince of the british monarchy. today he's going to attend the annual warrior games in colorado springs where more than 200 american and british war veterans are competing in a variety of events. manuel bojorquez is at the colorado springs training center. manuel, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, nancy, and good morning, anthony. prince harry will be at the ceremony here in just a few hours joined by 2650 servicemen and women including 35 from the british armed forces. the prince's first stop in colorado was a reception in denver last night. he mingled with business executives, students and soldiers, as well as a local hero olympic swimming champion missy franklin. >> it was an honor to be here and to meet his royal highness. he's a truly amazing guy and doing wonderful things and i can't wait to be in the ceremonies with him tomorrow for the warrior games. >> reporter: she's not the only athlete. there are others from this year's warrior's games. u.s. captain mitchell is participating. he suffered injuries after an attack in iraq. his daughters are excited about seeing the prince. he's excited about what it means for his fellow servicemen and women. >> the fact that he's bringing a lot of notoriety to all these athletes it's pretty special that he's doing that. >> reporter: military service has been the main focus of prince harry's visit. yesterday he was at walter reed military medical center in washington, d.c. he chatted with wounded veterans who are rehabilitating and was shown how the latest technology is helping them and before that a solemn visit to the arlington national cemetery. from colorado he'll travel to new jersey to tour the damage from superstorm sandy. it's a decidedly different tone from his last trip to the united states when harry made headlines in las vegas for all the wrong reasons. this time the prince seems to be wearing the title of third in line to the british throne with much more decorum. despite that you can still, of course exceptpect a lot of screaming admirers at pretty much any event the prince will be at. that including the first public event of the warrior games which is cycling on sunday. nancy and anthony? >> thank you. for more on harry's u.s. trip we're joined by an expert on the royal family. good morning to you. >> good morning to you. >> it's a really packed trip a serious trip. how much of this is imagery-had because of what happened in vegas? >> i think because of what happened in vegas and this tour that's been a lot of the focus of his tour. is he rehabilitating his image? no, don't think so. he's moving on from the idea. when he came back from afghanistan, he didn't apologize but he explained what happened happened. he's over it. this is what harry does. everybody in the uk is conscious of the job he does when he's a conscious working official in the british family. i'm happy america has a chance to see what on-duty harry does as opposed to off-duty. >> he's called captain wales and i love that title. he flew an apache helicopter. what has the reaction to this trip has been? >> it's been fantastic. he was always teased about screaming girls. here he had blushing girls, hiding behind pillows, peering down from the balcony. it was an impressive reaction i would say 95% of the audience were women. they staked it out. these were white house staffers who waited it out to catch a glips. >> you're right. first of all he's an eligible batchelor. what's so charming is he's willing to talk with anybody. he's naughty, cheeky. girls want to date him and guys want to hang out with him. >> at the same time is this trip important for him? >> this trip is hugely important. he's very passionate about his causes. his crusade, i suppose moving forward, is going to be highlighting the needs of wounded veterans and not just wounded veterans but also people coming back from combat who are just trying to assimilate into regular life again. >> victoria we can't let you go without giving us an update on the bump watch. any news on the royal baby? >> kate's been very business. she's had this week off, laying very low. she's due in july and anticipation is building. >> she's looking fabulous. >> yes, she is. >> victoria arby tar, thanks so much. >> baby bump watch. i like that. hoo now here's a look at the weather dpr your weekend. >> announcer: this weather segment sponsored by nicoderm nicoderm cq. ten weeks and you're free. and up next google's new wearable computer. a technological breakthrough or a threat to your privacy? you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." 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[ penélope ] i found the best cafe in the world. nespresso. where there is an espresso to match my every mood. ♪ ♪ where just one touch creates the perfect coffee. where every cappuccino and latte is made at home. and where i can have exactly what i desire. ♪ ♪ nespresso. what else? if you have moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis, like me, and you're talking to your rheumatologist about trying or adding a biologic. this is humira, adalimumab. this is humira working to help relieve my pain. this is humira helping me through the twists and turns. this is humira helping to protect my joints from further damage. doctors have been prescribing humira for over ten years. humira works by targeting and helping to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. for many adults, humira is proven to help relieve pain and stop further joint damage. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal events, such as infections, lymphoma or other types of cancer have happened. blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions and new or worsening heart failure have occurred. before starting humira , your doctor should test you for tb. ask your doctor if you live in or have been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. tell your doctor if you have had tb, hepatitis b are prone to infections, or have symptoms such as fever fatigue, cough, or sores. you should not start humira if you have any kind of infection. ask your doctor if humira can work for you. this is humira at work. >> so tell us your early thoughts. >> it's amazing. i used to spend so much time using my phone. now with google glass i can look down would being rude or distracting. youing toed through like this and you have to activate it like this a little -- >> yeah that's pretty cool. >> it's great because no one know use're doing it. now i have to reboot it. reboot, reboot reboot. >> google's glasses enjoy plenty of attention and some jokes as we saw even before going on sale. google's wearables are also facing stiffness mostly over privacy concerns. look what you've got. >> i got them here. that hit it dead on. that captured every blogger dead on wears these over the last week and a half. i can't use them with regular glasses. i had to get contact just to tell them out. you can lay them on top but it's not recommended. you get a screener up here and you do have to do some head motions to turn it on. you don't have to say peacock over and over. you swipe it with a touch pad. you take photos by doing this. it doesn't really scan your environment, but, you know it has a few connected internet parts to get directions search the web, but it's not ready for most people to use and so it's not surprising it's set now to be kind of an early access developer tool set at a price that most people can't afford anyhow. >> $1,500 right? >> yeah, $1,500. >> and i get ges the most important question is why do you need google on your face? >> you don't. and that seems to be okay as far as an experimental case. it's part of google experimenting saying we don't know. they're very open about that. this is an attempt for developers to get their handing on this and think about new interfaces. so we may -- i saw the movie "star trek" the other night, 2009. you see scotty wearing them almost exactly like this. we've seen it in so many movies and we've seen it. so who knows. >> we seem to already be having this societal anxiety attack about these, mostly because of the video prospect of these, that you can be taking pictures of people when they don't even know it. >> it's a video element. you're not clear when it's recording and the fact that google has a history already of collecting lots of information from places like facebook and using it in sir prizing ways knitting it together. suddenly your search history, everything else. maybe there's a question of where does this all go while we're connecting our bitting of information so it feels like our memories are out there for all time. >> were you able to drive wearing these? >> i did try them and i was extremely intimidated. it works better than staring at your phone in a carob vus obviously. the screen hovers on the right side. not a bad position for where you are in a car. you should. be staring at it all the time. you should be using it at a stoplight maybe to glance up at a map. they're going have to work it out. cars and safety. any bit of distraction is an issue. you know these are very early days for that. i think it might be better to display that on a dashboard. >> based on what you've experienced, do you think this is something that's all plate going to be something we're all wearing? >> no. >> if not in this carnation, maybe another one? >> i think a lot of people will be wearing them but i think it will be five or seven years before they'll be using them. i think it will be a tool like a bluetooth earpiece. if you see, it's lightweight. it's relatively easy to get going and use but to use the rest of the features it's difficult. >> that's hot. they have them in gold. i don't know if this is my color. >> titanium. mike they'll add white, black, turquoise. i think it will take time for it to catch on. it looks invasive but i think there are uses. i think i could see search and rescue teams using them. i not sure about medical but anywhere you need a remote report like a teleprompter. when you do video chat with these, you can actually send messages that appear on there which is interesting because you actually give commands and information to somebody who's doing something and say well move that over to the left a bit or to the right and maybe send more detailed information in the future. >> scott stein thank you so much for bringing these along. >> thank you. up next doctors make the wrong die dying wrong diagnosis more often than you think. we'll tell you. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." right here at table 12 4-year-old karen kenney debuted the new hairdo she cut all by herself. and her family enjoyed new flatbread appetizers like our freshly baked chipotle chicken flatbread from our $20 dinner for two. chili's -- more life happens here. oñ ♪ ♪ [ telephone rings ] how's the camping trip? 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[ female announcer ] aveeno® with soy helps reduce the look of brown spots in 4 weeks. for healthy radiant skin. aveeno®. naturally beautiful results. medical misdiagnosis is more common than you think. it's more common than drug errors or site surgery. it can be deadly. 150,000 americans are misdiagnosed every year and one in three patients die or are debilitated. cbs news medical contributor dr. holly phillips explains why it happens so often and what to do to provide it. good morning. >> good morning. >> what are some of the causes for all of these errors? >> there are a number of different contributing factors but probably the most important is that we no longer have family physicians. it used to be that your doctor doctored you your mom, your sister, and if there was a change in your symptom, they picked it right away. now we change doctors kind of like we change our shoes so they don't know us. the other thing is patient volumes have gone up. doctors are seeing more patients in the same amount of time so the visits are shrinking and they're failing to follow up on the diagnosis. sometimes the diagnosis is on a sheet of paper in your chart but no one's looked at it. >> the scary thing is some of these mistakes are pretty serious. >> they can be absolutely life-threatening. between 40,000 and 80,000 americans are thought to die from delayed or missed diagnosis. so these are something where these numbers in looking at a study like this one is a very good thing because it can help to change the way we practice medicine. >> we all heard electronic medical records were going to change because your information will follow you everywhere but in many cases the medical information doesn't change from doctor to doctor. >> there are a lot of kinks. we need to have the medical information follow you everywhere. a hotbed happens in the emergency room where the doctors don't know you at all. that's where you see life-threatening abdominal bleeding misdiagnosed as heart burn and stroke miss diagnosed as dizziness. these are areas we hope will change with medical records and diagnosis. >> great information. thank you dr. holly phillips. happy mother's day. >> you too. coming up next italy's latest crisis. not enough pizza makers. oh, my gosh. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." when it comes to getting my family to eat breakfast i need all the help i can get. i tell them "come straight to the table." i say, "it's breakfast time, not playtime." 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[ penélope ] i found the best cafe in the world. nespresso. where there is an espresso to match my every mood. ♪ ♪ where just one touch creates the perfect coffee. where every cappuccino and latte is made at home. and where i can have exactly what i desire. ♪ ♪ nespresso. what else? now this has me really concerned. italy of all places has a serious shortage of pizza makers. >> it's gotten so bad that many pizza makers are hiring foreigners to man the oven. allen pizzey has more from rome. >> reporter: nothing says italian like pizzas so naturally the best pizza makers would be italian if there were enough of them that is. the industry has about 6,000 pizza makers than it actually needs, that in spite of a 35% unemployment rate of people under 30. >> i think young people think that it's a job of low value. it's very hard and strong for the schedule and for example because you have to work during holidays. so usually they prefer to be a chef, not a pizza maker. >> reporter: a growing number of the workers spend up to ten hours a day in front of hot ovens are immigrants predominantly egyptians. he came from cairo 20 years ago with ambition to become a pizzi pizzilo. he says it doesn't take long. i forced myself to learn. little by little i got better until i became a real pizza maker. ancient cultures made flat bread much like italy. the modern-day pizza is after a pizza maker who made it in the color of the italian flag to mark the visit of the italian queen. esposito named it after her and pizza margarita remains the most popular flavor in italy. the first piece zee rah was opened in 1905 by an italian immigrant. according to records people are eating 360 slices of pizza a second. believe me it's a pleasure to help it out. lindsey dever says you can't get anything like it back home in west palm beach. >> best pizza we've ever had. >> reporter: what made it so good? >> all of the ingredients are really fresh. the quality of the dough. >> reporter: and in italy you're never too young to start eating pizza and never too old to stop. one more reason why there are a lot of job openings for "cbs this morning saturday," allen pizzey pizzey, rome. >> this could become a crisis. >> the main crisis is now i'm going to be hungry for pizza all day. as long as somebody's making it. >> you're getting a great meal coming up. don't worry. up next some of the greatest performs in music. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." clothing retailer abercrombie and fitch after comments made to baze insider accusing the company of discriminating against larger women. >> the article alleges that abercrombie's ceo doesn't want its customers to see people who aren't hot shopping in his stores. christine lazar of our los angeles station reports. >> reporter: at the clothing store abercrombie & fitch, the size chart doesn't go past the size chart 10 and that's exactly how the ceo wants it. abercrombie's ceo mike jeffreys doesn't want larger people shopping in his store. he wants thin and beautiful people. he doesn't want his core people that richardson as hot as him to wear his clothing. people who wear his clothing should feel like one of the cool kids. >> what message does that tell young women, that they need to be a certain size in order to be a perfect body. that's not cool. >> to be thin is cool and that's not okay. >> the average woman isn't like a size ten10 or 6 you know. there's full figured women out there and they shouldn't be judged by this man. >> in a 2006 interview jeffrey's company said it isn't targeting all shapes and sizes. he says a lot of sizes can't belong in ore clothes. are they exclusionary? absolutely. >> they have racy advertisements. they even got in trouble for markets thong underwear to preteens and yet the company is expanding with more than 300 locations in the u.s. >> abercrombie & fitch is not responding to requests for a comment. welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." i'm nancy cordes. >> and i'm anthony mason. coming up this half hour, three of the biggest names in music. carol king willie nelson and annie lennox are being honored tonight at boston's berkeley college of music. the event will also remember the victims of the marathon bombing. then, airline prices may be soaring, but we have the secrets of how to vacation in europe without breaking the bank. and isabella rose leeny is here to help celebrate mother's day with her new series called mama. it's about motherhood in all its forms. first this half hour the widening investigation of the decade-long kidnapping of three women in cleveland. terrell brown has more. >> reporter: good morning, anthony. michelle knight was released last night. she's the last to be release. the investigation continues here at the home where they were held on seymour avenue. the fbi boarded up the home yesterday. inside ar yelle castro allegedly abused and raped the three victims. investigators haven't found any human remains but gathered more than 200 pieces of evidence. we learn that amanda berry gave birth to her daughter in the home in 2006. according to reports she was born in plastic pool in castro's basement. there was no doctor no nurse, and no medication. and older captive michelle knight helped deliver the baby reviving her twice when she stopped breathing. jocelyn is now 6 years old and dna evidence now confirms that ariel castro the s the father. also according to the police report michelle knight said she got pregnant by castro five times and made her miscarry by starving her and punching her in the stomach. castro remains in jail this morning on an $8 million bond. prosecutors are considering the death penalty. nancy and anthony? >> terrell brown in cleveland. thanks, terrell. now to the scandal of the irs. republicans are up in arms over their admission that theyom washington. kristin, good morning. how are they responding to this irs apology? >> well, nancy, tea partiers rejected the apology and demanded a full congressional investigation into the irs. now, keep in mind conservative groups have been accusing the irs of harassment for well over a year and until yesterday, the irs adamantly denied it, but now the irs admits it singled out about 75 groups applying for tax exempt status for one reason their applications contained the word "tea party" or "patriot." the irs claims it was all done by low level employees as a way to spike the motivated. but tea partiers they're not buying it. nancy? >> so what's next in this investigation, kristen? well, the irs says they've stopped practice and fixed the problem last year but that is not enough for house republicans. they plan to launch a full investigation. even the white house actions were inappropriate and action must be taken. the irs won't say whether or not the employees are going to face any sort of disciplinary action. ar as for those 75 applications that were flagged, many as four years ago, the irs says they have not been reject bud they're still under review. nancy? >> kristin fisher in washington thrn mog. thank you. pakistani voters are going to the polls today for a historic election. it's bag deal in a country used to military rule for most of its 65-year history but the election has been marred by deadly violence. militants have staged attacks across pakistan killing at least 16 people. in egypt the retrial of former president hosni mubarak opened this morning but was then adjourned until next mark. mubarak wearing his trademark sunglasses sat in the courtroom without expression. he's accused of being complicit with hundreds of protesters. the retrial was ordered after his previous conviction was overturn odden appeal. a washington state man was arrested after he allegedly used a bulldozer to settle a long running dispute with his neighbors. police say barry swegle went through a port angeles neighborhood destroying vehicles, knocking houses after their foundations, and taking down power lines. there were no reported injuries in the rampage. it's not at clear what the dispute was about. major league baseball issue add two-game suspension for the league umpire in thursday's night game between the houston astros and the angels. some were cited for allowing the manager beau porter to improperly switch relievers during the mid of an inning. beatles fans are in luck. the ferrari owned by john lennon will be auction off in july. the car was restored with the original blue. he bought the carafe he passed his driver's test in 19656789 it's expected to fetch about double that amount. >> that is a beauty. >> it's a beauty. it's not at the rolls royce he had but it's awful nice looking. there's a lot of people who wouldn't mind owning that car. >> i'll be on that list. you can put me on that list. >> it's about six minutes after the hour. now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. boston's prestigious berkeley college is honoring three of the biggest names in music. care king, annie lennox and willie nelson. the college is just a few blocks from the site of the boston marathon bombings. each will soov areceive a doctor of music degree saturday night. >> don dahler spoke with them before the graduation ceremony on saturday. >> reporter: the stars were out in boston last night, willie nelson annie lennox and carol king were celebrated as honorary doctorate candidates with the socks they made famous. although the evening was also a tribute to the city. >> i feel it's profoundly different to be here now. ♪ crazy for thinking that my love will hold you ♪ >> e think the people who are not musicians, they're the people who listened to it receive the same healing qualities that those do playing it. >> reporter: the campus is four blocks from the marathon bombing. >> immediately you want to protect them as a school. some were injured. some were hit with shrapnel as it were. many were injured internally in terms of what they saw, things that young people should never have to see. ♪ >> that evening they were writing songs. they're all over the youtube. they're genuine great songs and they get to you. ♪ gray clouds roll over the hills bringing darkness from above ♪ >> i think everybody in the city had an urge to do something to help in some way. ♪ nothing we could say could make this all right ♪ >> quite a few of them started writing songs about what they felt, what they witnessed. what is it about that art that allows you to kind of self heal-self-heal? >> music is cathartic. it's ka that is right tick. they realize when they use music and music therapy, people that are locked up in some kind of in ability to express themselves for whatever reason that music, music is a great healing and connecting factor bringing people out. >> reporter: along with healing, berklee students and faculty also wanted a return to normalcy and honoring those. for cbs news this morning, don dahler. music also seems to be way out of some of the things. i love the way that music plays in healing. >> it's amazing that they came up with songs about the tragedy right after it happen add and they're so beautiful sniet was really impressive what they were singing. very cool. up next, what you need to know for a perfect and affordable summer vacation. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." aw, shoot. i missed a payment. discover card. i missed a payment. aw, shoot. shoot! this is bad, isn't it? oh no! we're good! this is your first time missing a payment. and you've got our new card, so we don't charge you a late fee for for that. plus, we won't hike up your apr for paying late either. man, that's great! it is great, man! thank you. well, thanks for your help. yeah, no problem. call back anytime. at discover, we treat you like you'd treat you. late payment forgiveness. get the new it card at discover.com. i woke up with this horrible rash on my right side. an intense burning sensation like somebody had set it on fire. and the doctor said, cindie, you have shingles. he said, you had chickenpox when you were a little girl... i said, yes, i did. i don't think anybody ever thinks they're going to get shingles. but it happened to me. for more of the inside story visit shinglesinfo.com i'll be right back. booop. hi, listen i think you could do better. oh no, he's a nice guy. no i'm talking about your yogurt. see dannon oikos is so rich and thick and smooth. so smooth. in a national taste test dannon oikos fat free strawberry flavor beat chobani 2 to 1. mmmm. stamos? look babe - i'm doing better. she means the yogurt. join us babe. try it for yourself. dannon oikos greek nonfat yogurt. ♪ dannon ♪ look at it? >> ten minutes? seems disrespectful to look at it for any less than ten minutes, i guess. >> go? >> yeah. we should tell our friends that we looked at it for longer. >> i don't now how you walk away from that. the grand canyon is beautiful but there's more in the desert than that and it's about time to start planning your summer vacation. joining us with his picks for summer travels, cbs travel editor peter greenberg. good morning, peter. >> good morning. >> number one, a town i was in just last week tucson arizona. it's just beautiful. >> they've got deals. $179 a night. big savings, plus they're throwing a $100 resort credit. the good deal is it's good between may 16 and september 14th so you've got time to plan. great location there. if you like golf that's one of the places to go. >> scottsdale arizona, is also on your list. also because of the golfing? >> yes. this is serious golf. this is good between june 2nd and september 8th. they even throw another $150 resort credit. i don't play golf but i drive a cart. >> even in the middle of the summer? >> you tee off early. that's where you go ballooning early in the morning too. >> that would be neat. this surprise me. the third recommendation is you go to the mountains after the ski season is over. >> the smart people know after the ski season is over the hiking begins. more goal in the summer than in the winter. people don't know that. in colorado you've got the broad moor and colorado springs. this isn't a resort. it's like a city. giets everything. it's got its own zoo. and once again they've dropped the rates about 50%. >> good enough for prince harry who's there today. snowflake as well. >> $120 a night. usually there's a hub. it's not just skiing. people forget. and by the way, the ski season this year in some locations has been extended. so just plan accordingly. >> a lot of people like to go too europe but the prices can be really high now. >> let me give you the bad news. hotel rates in paris up 37% over last year. >> why? >> because they can and because the airlines have also raised their fares as well. but even in cases where the air fierce aren't as high as last year, the hotel rates have become higher and in some cases the airfares are rid ing lus. proeft the most expensive airline ticket is rome. not just because they have a new pope. not because -- it's a pope deal. the thing is this. i'll give you a comparison. first of all if you want to go to lisbon instead of madrid much better deal. you save $400 $500 and you save. that's where you get the train. same thing in rome. don't go to rome by air. go to milan. i'll give you an example. chicago to rome, this summer the airfare, $2,800. you no what it is from chicago to milan? $1,400. the only problem i have with milan is they named the airport. you know what the airport's name is? mel pen za it means bad thoughts. look at milan. you've got the dwomo, lake como. everything there is a hub. >> and take the train if you want to. >> you should always take the train. i'll give you another example. you want to go to london? that's a $1,600. instead go to new york to london by istanbul. that makes no sense at all except you're going to save $400. the plane lands at 4:00 in the morning and doesn't leave until 4:00 in the evening and you save $400. >> it's great town. thank you so much. >> you got it. up next the multitalented isabellely rossny is here to tell us about her own series mama and about her own mama ingrid bergmen. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." alhl st niarie y h.yoon ar [ female announcer ] the magic begins when jif fresh roasts peanuts to make peanut butter so deliciously creamy. ♪ ♪ it always makes the home team cheer. that's why choosy moms and dads choose jif. day we have a sneak peek at the sundance series, "ma'am mass." the star of the series is isabella rossellini to tell us about it. good morning. >> good morning. >> it's great to have you with us. it's so hard to describe what this series is and your previous series. they're educational, performance art but they're comedy. how do you describe it? >> i think they were performed to be films for the web, so we're all experimenting in this new media, and i do very short films. they're about two minutes long where i transform myself into different animals and tell about their behavior. >> specifically they're reproductive behavior. >> sometimes we do a series on reproductive behavior. we did a series about seduce me about strategy of seduction, birds that sing or grow feather, parade to impress the female or now this new series is about motherhood and all the different ways of being mothers. >> i love that you wrote it you directed it. you also designed these costumes which looks wonderful. it looks like a great deal of fun. >> it is fun. it's a great deal of work but it's fun. i always was interested in animal behavior and i went back to school to study it. >> you're actually getting your master's degree. >> yes, i'm getting my master's degree. while i'm studying i create these little films. i love it. i love to have environmental art if you want to call it that way. >> i think what's so funny about it is people have an image of you being a face of lancome, a gorgeous model, actress, and here you are dressing up in fish costumes. you love fish. you're putting fish eggs in your mouth. where did this idea come from in the first place? >> well, i think that my family's been surprised because i was always interested in animals since i was a little girl. you know, when you're a model and an actress, you interpret what the writer and directors are writing, so when i decided to become myself an author and write and direct i expressed what was interesting to me. so my family's not surprised at all. oh, this film it's completely yours. we can see you in it. but some of the people there you know they're used to seeing me as a model, actress, other directors, so they don't -- they're used to another image of me. >> the costumes as nancy pointed out, play such a huge part in all this. how do you work it up? >> i think of basic solution. to me also this is all the work i've done in the 25 years i was a model. i couldn't have created this extraordinary fantastic costume if i hand worked in the fashion industry for 25 years and if i didn't know the address to call them up and say help me with this. so my collaborator also has a lot to do with this. >> speaking of mothers last night, i was talking with my mother about your mother. she was such a huge fan of hers how real she was, how she was exactly how you wanted her to be. on this mother's day is there a particular memory you're going to be think about about? >> of course i miss her terribly every time i think about her. my mom was infwred bergman, wonderful actress, loved by memory but particularly loved by us in the family, she was charming, beautiful, intelligent, funny, warm. i do miss her. i think my - children her. you know, she died when i was in my late 20s. to me that's the saddest that my children couldn't have met her. they always hear about her because, you know she's still known and she's still, you know give an interview when we talk about her. >> you have two kids right? >> yes i do. >> a daughter and aen so. i was wondering. your films are about maternal instimgts. have you learn anything about the films that you apply to your children? >> no. the sense that my son also shows different ways of being maternal like hamsters heating up some of the babies if there are too many in the litter or spiders dissolving themselves to feed their own body their babies. so i haven't gotten this to the big screen yet. >> and your daughter's actually following in your footsteps. she's gorgeous. >> yes. >> she's a model. >> and so have you been able to give her some advice on that front? >> you know, when she was younger, you know, i really wanted to make sure she finished her study and she has a master's degree in environmental science. i wanted to make sure that she studied, and i wasn't against modeling because it's a fascinating world. you travel all over the world, you learn discipline you learn different aspects of work, you know, who's a stylist, who's a writer. so all that was great, but i did want her to study, and she has. >> really? and you know some of the mothers in these videos are not very mothering. they're kind of scary. >> they're your idea of what mothering is. we always assume that mothering is loving being that is ready to self-sacrifice. but the word is women scientist scientists. that was our preconceived idea that, in fact matters. the best mother a good manager of their resources and they sold that in different species. >> isabella rossellini, thank you so much. so good to have you here. >> thank you. >> we'll be right back. and we're back with isabella rossellini. where did the idea of these films first hatch with you? >> i always worked and hovered around sundance because sundance was founded by robert redford was always a place avant-garde films. format doesn't exist on television. the shortest film you can make besides kmishls is half hour tv. so they commissioned a series of short films and i was one of the afrts that he called so i made my first series which was a very big hit on the web. we won many webbys. i've been asked to do more and now i've done 50. >> some of them are kind of racy. the second in the seer was called "green porno." where did it come from? >> it came from the fact that sundance hat green house, green food green transportation. they're very environmentally concern. they had programming how to use different electric cars or something like that so as a joke i said you don't have green porn. they said that's a catchy name. >> it will get a lot of views on youtube. >> it does. >> you're actually getting a master's degree now. and any big plans for mother's day tomorrow? >> you know we don't celebrate so much mother's day in europe though i live in america. all presidents agree one of the best perks that comes with the job is air force one. it doesn't look like the one you're used to seeing but it has served in that capacity and it's for sale. >> the general services committee, gsa, is auctioning off one of the nine jets that has served in the presidential suites from 1975 to 2005. the bidding starts at $50,000. something tells me it's going go higher than that. >> i'll take that and john lennon lennon's car. welcome back to "cbs this morning saturday," i'm anthony mason. >> and i'm nancy cordes. let's have one final look at the weather for your weekend. the latest film "the great gatsby" is now playing in theaters across the theater. it stars leonardo dicaprio along- with tobey maguire. >> i got all these things for her. i got all these things for her and now she wants to run away. she wants to leave that. >> jay you can't repeat the past. >> can't repeat the past? >> no. >> why, of course, you can. of course, you can. >> hollywood is always trying to spin novels into box office gold, so what are the best and worst literary adaptations of the past 50 years? let's ask matt singer film critic for indywire.com. >> good morning. good morning, old sport. good morning. in a gates by film. >> great sport. >> what did you like? >> i like parts of it. i think baz did too. the guy who puts on this show big lavish parties. he's known for making big lavish movies like rulon rouge. i think he related to that. leonardo dicaprio is very good and very handsome in the movie. >> of course. >> almost unfairly. >> you say he was a real standout and he's going to be a big surprise. >> he's great. that's something that this movie has that the book does not which is leonardo dicaprio. >> will he give robert redford a run for his money? >> absolutely. he's the high light for the show. >> let's look at it. number one. >> number one for me, i'm going go with "jaws." it's a classic. page one is about the shark, how it looks and how it moves. steven steven speelsberg says that's not how it's going to move. keep the shark out of the picture as long as possible and kind of stoke our imagination the way a great book does. put us as characters on the boat and let us feel the terror of that. >> the second pick was "the shining." >> one of the all-time most beloved horror movies except the guy who wrote the book that it's based on steven king. he's not a fan of the movie because he felt it wasn't faithful. he feels like it doesn't represent his version of "the shining." to me if you'd made a great meefb, you've made a great adaptation. that's what "the shining" is. it takes the book and filters it through stanley kubrick's perspective. >> number three is "fight club." >> it's a great example of hollywood taking interesting edgy material about these underground fight clubs with a lot of political commentary and actually keeping it edgy and interesting. again, this is something that movies can do. it's a great performance. brad pitt in this movie is unbelievably magnetic. that's something you're not going get from a book is great starring performance. >> let's take a look at the least. least favorite was "the cat in the hat?" >> definitely not a good one to throw in jokes. when you think of "cat in the hat." i know the person you want to see in the movie is paris hilton and mike myers in that wonderful makeup, so enchanting and delightful. number two, the film i never saw, "scarlet letter" with demi moore. >> you take a masterpiece, a very classic model but puritanism and so boring. i know. let's add a bunch of sex scenes. let's make it all about sex. that ending's all about bummer. i know. let's give it a happy ending. i just showed you the move and i told you to go find the book in the bookstore you'd go right to the remanns and look for something with fabio on the cover. >> it's like the edgy material and don't let out. what you're left with is a very unfunny kind of bland boring comedy. >> one of the great disappointments of all time. matt singer thanks for being with us. >> thanks guys. >> up next the ultimate mother's day brunch of "the dish." sara beth levine is here to show us how. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." new revlon lash potion™ mascara. the triple-groove wand combs through for clump-free length. while a potion with strengthening proteins drenches lashes for spellbinding volume. do you believe in magic? dare to be revlon the acidic levels in some foods... orange juice...tomato sauce... can cause acid erosion. the enamel starts to wear down. and you can't grow your enamel back. my dentist recommended that i use pronamel. because it helps to strengthen the enamel that you have. and i believe it's doing a good job. [ humming ] that was quick. this was you. hm? you've been trying to get me to eat egg whites for years. you went and talked to mcdonald's? [ gasps ] oh, an egg white delight mcmuffin. i knew it. [ female announcer ] the new egg white delight mcmuffin. freshly grilled egg whites and creamy white cheddar. also available on any of your favorites. it's another new way to love mcdonald's. mmm. this is good. yeah. it's better than good. did you remember my latte? uh..yeah... but...it's in the car. mmm! that's good. ♪ ♪ ♪ there's a bonus in store... ...at the petsmart double bonus sale. save and get more free! and save $10 on dog and cat fiproguard® and fiproguard® max which contain the same active ingredient as frontline® brand products. at petsmart®. ♪ the joint is jumpin' ♪ [ male announcer ] osteo bi-flex helps revitalize your joints to keep 'em jumpin'.° like calcium supplements can help your bones osteo bi-flex can help your joints. osteo bi-flex... now available in all major retailers and warehouse clubs. matt singer, thanks for being breakfast. her round i includedes a dozen rerestaurarants, h here in new york plus tokyo. all magnets for ladies and gentlemen who brunch. >> we're delighted to welcome sarabeth levine to a special mother's day of "the dish." it looks spectacular. >> you forget until you see it. >> tell us what you have brought for us. >> i adore the blintzes. i have been eating it since i was yay-high and popeye eggs with a little bit of spinach. my favorite english muffins over there. you always have to have a few cookies so we have our little cookies. >> i have lined up fur edd edd edd up for brunch at your restaurant many times and it always was a delight. >> thank you. >> tokyo. why tokyo? >> we have so many asian customers it's unbelievable. we had been approached a long time ago. e never really thought much about it but the time was right and we did it and it's fantastic. they eat -- they love eggs benedict. >> who knew. >> i think we serve 300 eggs benedict addai in a 6 r5-seat restaurant. it's amazing. >> you have such an interesting story the way you got started. you didn't start out in food. you had gotten divorced. you had two kids. and you were sort of regrouping right? >> i know. and it was probably one of milo times in my life. not too many but at that time that i received this amazing gift of the orange apricot marmalade recipe. >> which you cooked up yourself. >> which i began making high home and selling to various places in the city. and i remember the first pot was 12 jars. >> 12 jars. >> and now you sell how many? millions. >> well, a lot. a lot. >> really? >> and the first time we got a new pot in the kitchen, which was amazingly a candy stove at home, and i would have to stir the pot with a 9 iron. it was yay tall. >> was it a family recipe? >> yes it was my mother's sister's mother-in-law's recipe. it's an old old recipe. >> since we're on the eve of mother's day your mother played a spot in kind of bolstering your morral. >> my mother was such a businesswoman of her own. she had her own career. she was different than all the other mothers. she was out there doing her thing. she was in the fur business. my mother began as a model and had her own fur shop in florida. my mother always encouraged all of us. even at our lowest moments, all of us she would say, come on, you can do it. get out there and do it. you just haven't found yourself yet. >> she must be so proud of you. you're really credited with creating the brunch culture in new york city which obviously spread to the rest of the country. >> my mother was my biggest champion, she was. she worked for me for 20 years. >> that's right. >> she was fabulous. no one better. >> she was your greeter basically? >> yes. and she was a bookkeeper in the early days. >> you have big mother's day plans tomorrow? >> a little bit. >> yes? >> yes. >> we have a tradition. we want you to sign this dish. who would you dedicate it to? >> my mother who taught me how to enjoy the blintzes, plus my first mother-in-law who shared the blintzes. i would love to sit around the table with them. unfortunately they're above. >> thank you so much. for more on sarabeth head to our website at cbsnews.com/cbsthismorning. up next, josh groban performs in our second cup cafe. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." i'll be right back. booop. hi, listen i think you could do better. oh no, he's a nice guy. no i'm talking about your yogurt. see dannon oikos is so rich and thick and smooth. so smooth. in a national taste test dannon oikos fat free strawberry flavor beat chobani 2 to 1. mmmm. stamos? look babe - i'm doing better. she means the yogurt. join us babe. try it for yourself. dannon oikos greek nonfat yogurt. ♪ dannon ♪ . look what mommy is having. mommy's having a french fry. yes she is, yes she is. [ bop ] [ male announcer ] could've had a v8. 100% vegetable juice with three of your daily vegetable servings in every little bottle. our second cup cafe is one of the world's most popular singers, josh groban. an actor, songwriter and record producer as well as a simger. he sold 25 million albums worldwide. >> his latest collection "all that echos" debuted at number one on the billboard chart. here he is singing "happy in my heartache" josh groban. ♪ ♪ oh and i don't take it lightly trouble that i've gone through to get you to know who i am ♪ ♪ o'and i can't find a reason to be happy in this heartache because i should know better than that ♪ ♪ i'm better than that ♪ ♪ wicked winds are blowing through the heart these old familiar faces are clijing to the walls ♪ i know it's cold but i can't feel at all ♪ and i know these walls are crumbling and i won't stay to watch them fall ♪ ♪ oh and i don't take it lightly ♪ ♪ trouble that i've gone through to get you to know who i am ♪ ♪ oh and i, i can't find a reason to be happy in my heartache because i should know better than that ♪ ♪ but i can't stop loving you ♪ ♪ i don't know what to do to keep holding on ♪ ♪ o'and i, i don't take it lightly trouble that i've gone through to i've given you all that i am ♪ ♪ oh and i, i can't find a reason to be happy in my heartache because i should know better than that o' oh better than that ♪ ♪ >> josh thank you. that was terrific. >> thank you. thank you for having me. >> this new album of yours is kind of breakup -- >> not all of them. just that. even the sad ones are about, you know, moving on getting stronger moving forward. >> the last one -- what i was getting at as painful as it is breaking up is kind of good for business. >> certainly for adele. you know, i think i like to find songs that represent the gray area, the in-between. i think love is never kind of one sure thing. there's always questions, always light and dark to it. like the songs that are more rooted in real life and they can be real helpful and romantic too. >> you said you found early on your voice does sad pretty well. >> it does. i do sad pretty well too, but my voice does. >> why is that do you think? >> i don't know. i have a perfect life. i have no idea. it's just so fun to be melancholy. i don't know. >> speaking of a perfect life you're headed to europe this summer for your a series of concerts and then come back here to do a series of concerts in the round. why is that? >> every one of my shows, i love getting out in the audience. it makes me more comfortable to feel the audience around me. i guess it's always been my thought, how to make the arena more intimate. we're going to put the stage in the middle. >> sounds great for the audience. >> it should be a great for the audience. i love theatrical. >> don't go away. we'll be right back with more josh groban. you're watching "cbs this morning." your rheumatologist about trying or adding a biologic. this is humira, adalimumab. this is humira working to help relieve my pain. this is humira helping me through the twists and turns. this is humira helping to protect my joints from further damage. doctors have been prescribing humira for over ten years. humira works by targeting and helping to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. for many adults, humira is proven to help relieve pain and stop further joint damage. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal events, such as infections, lymphoma or other types of cancer have happened. blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions and new or worsening heart failure have occurred. before starting humira , your doctor should test you for tb. ask your doctor if you live in or have been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. tell your doctor if you have had tb, hepatitis b are prone to infections, or have symptoms such as fever fatigue, cough, or sores. you should not start humira if you have any kind of infection. ask your doctor if humira can work for you. this is humira at work. [ jennifer garner ] why can't powerful sunscreen feel great? actually it can. neutrogena® ultra sheer®. its superior uva uvb protection helps prevent early skin aging and skin cancer, josh groban. it's the best for your skin. neutrogena® ultra sheer®. josh groban. ♪ [ richard ] i've never tasted anything so delicious. richard, why are you wearing grandpa's jacket? i'm not richard. i'm grandpa smucker. [ male announcer ] tim and richard smucker knew that just like their grandfather they too would make the world's best jam. with a name like smucker's it has to be good. [ penélope ] i found the best cafe in the world. nespresso. where there is an espresso to match my every mood. ♪ ♪ where just one touch creates the perfect coffee. where every cappuccino and latte is made at home. and where i can have exactly what i desire. ♪ ♪ nespresso. what else? tomorrow on cbs sunday morning lesley stahl introduces the legendary sidney portier. now here's norah o'donnell with what's happening on "cbs this morning" on monday. >> good morning. we go behind the scenes of the cbs hit come by "how i met your mother" as they get ready for the season finale and we'll catch you up on prince harry's visit to the u.s. we'll see you monday. now we enjoy more of josh groban with "the moon is a great mistress." ♪ ♪ see her as she flies golden sails across the skies ♪ ♪ close enough to touch but careful if you try ♪ ♪ though she looks as warm as gold the moon's a harsh mistress the moon can be so cold ♪ ♪ once the sun did shine and lord it felt so fine ♪ ♪ the moon, the phantom roads through the mountains and the pines ♪ ♪ and then the darkness fell and the moon's a harsh mistress it's hard to love her well ♪ ♪ i fell out of her eyes and i fell out of her heart ♪ ♪ i fell down on my face yes i did and i tripped and i missed my star ♪ ♪ then i fell and fell alone and the moon's a harsh mistress and the sky's made of stone ♪ ♪ the moon's a harsh mistress she's hard to call your own ♪ -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com >> announcer: for more about "cbs this morning," visit us at cbsnews.com. voters sound-off on the big shake-up in the oakland police department. at it's three chiefs in three days. city leaders and voters signed off on the big shake up at the oakland police department. you really can't say that it's safe, but that is not stopping people from pushing the limits. >> the fatal crash on the san francisco bay and new concerns about a sailing event that looks a lot more like an extreme sport. looking ahead to warm beach weather and trying to squeeze into swim suits with some time at the gym. the healthy tweaks to your work out routine. thank you for joining us. >> thicks are warming up today. i'm brian and the forecast looks like things will be sunnier after a foggy start this morning. and we'll look at temperatures that ar
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