in our sunday morning cover story. >> reporter: asian carp. mussels from europe. burmese pythons. they're more than making it in america. their numbers are exploding with devastating results. >> when scientists look into the future, they see the potential for many more damaging species. >> reporter: you make it sound like we're under attack everywhere. >> we are under attack everywhere. >> reporter: invasive species. the natural order completely up in the air. later on sunday morning. >> osgood: when you see trick or treat at somebody's doorstep you're hoping for something good enough to eat. but what if the house and the doorstep themselves are a trick, a deception by a skilled photographer. martha teichner will show us a master of the art. >> reporter: no, you're not hallucinating. you're looking at carl warner's edible landscapes. so the sea is made out of little fish. >> yes. because they have that lovely silver in it and they reflect the sky they just kind of look like water at a glance. >> reporter: later this sunday morning, a visit to a pumpkin pair a dice with intermediate stops in london and garlicshire? >> osgood: halloween isn't is only night of the year for horrors. rita braver shows us a man who provides us one night of horror every week. >> my advice: temporary insanity. >> reporter: tv viewers came to know him best as defense lawyer bobby donnell in "the practice." >> you think i'm crazy? >> no. i think you're creative. >> reporter: now he plays psychiatrist ben harmon. >> trick or treat. >> reporter: in the creepy new show "american horror story." i have to confess that i've had a few nightmares after watching the show. >> good. that's great. >> reporter: you want us to be scared. >> very scared. >> reporter: later on sunday morning, dylan mcdore met puts the psycho in psycho drama. >> osgood: nighttime takes on a whole new meaning for the folks our women geist has been hanging around with of late. >> reporter: these guys are not going trick or treating. after four to 500-year down period, jousting is finally making a big comeback. and thaes modern day lance lots take it pretty seriously. >> i am the mersly less god of this universe. if you come in here to play, you will get hurt. the only question is when and how bad. >> reporter: as you'll see later on sunday morning. >> osgood: tracy smith goes ghost huchbting with the experts. michelle miller shines the spotlight on cross dressing. mo rocca travels back in time with the steam punk movement. but first here are the headlines for this sunday morning the 0th of october, 2011. yesterday's freak snowfall in the northeast left more than two million without power, three dead and emergency conditions in four states. and it isn't even winter yet. david brody has the latest. >> reporter: bing crosby sang about a white christmas. as far as we know, no one has sung about a white halloween. one meteorologist called it a once this a 50-jiri vent. >> it's not an incredibly strong storm but it's producing snows that you would typically see heading into december and early january. >> reporter: for many on the east coast it was more of a trick by mother nature than a treat that made the final weekend of october 2011 a cold mess dropping more than a foot of snow in some areas. the storm caused traffic accidents, canceled flights and stranded one jet blue flight on the tarmac in connecticut for more than seven hours. the impact of the storm was intensified by snow falling on trees still thick with leaves. several governors declared a state of emergency. with if storm blasting from south of virginia all the way to the canadian border, it's going to take days to get power restored across the northeast. for sunday morning, this is dave brody in new york. >> osgood: it was a deadly saturday in afghanistan. a taliban suicide bomber rammed a car bomb into an armored nato bus in kabul, killing 17 people including 12 americans. elsewhere in afghanistan, three australian soldiers and an afghan interpreter were killed during a parade. today's "new york times" reports that the united states is planning to boost the nation's military presence in the persian gulf putting forces in kuwait after it completes the withdrawal of troops from iraq. now the weather. today's forecast calls for a return to our regularly scheduled season. the last of the snow will fall this afternoon in maine. with trick or treating weather should arrive in time for halloween. cooler temperatures will move in by the middle of the week. >> listen to me. don't come near me. you bother me again, there's going to be a problem. do you understand? >> osgood: ahead american horror stories dylan mcdermott. but first don't look now but they're here. veritable army of real life monsters is invading whole sections of our country. so far we're not putting up much of a resistance. our cover story is reported by mark strassmann. >> reporter: meet the king of the illinois river. wow. and a big show-off. >> muscular. very muscular. >> reporter: i mean, this thing will hurt you. >> yes. it can jump out of the water at high speeds. they can jump a great distance out of the water up to eight feet out of the water. >> reporter: fast, easy to startle and voracious eaters, asian silver carp are a jarring sight here and a hit on you-tube. >> reporter: but greg sass, until recently with the illinois natural history survey, says in a long history of this water way, what's also remarkable is when this fish got here. just 20 years ago. >> by the nid 2000s, it was becoming a crisis. not only were there fish jumping everywhere but what was showing up in our catches the amount of native carp versus the native fishes. >> reporter: just amazing how wide it is. with no natural predators in this stretch of the river in central illinois, up to nine out of ten fish here are now asian carp. >> we've seen explosive population growth. we've seen a population that is double almost every year since 2000 here. we're fairly confident we have the highest wild densities of asian carp anywhere in the world. >> reporter: which is quite a feat considering this fish is is from china. the illinois river has been invaded. >> the fish are behaving in a way we're not used to. we're not completely sure what kind of effect there will be yet and there's just an incredible abundance of them. >> reporter: it's an invasion from coast to coast, from africanized killer honey bees in the southwest to south american nutria in louisiana to the spread of the burr mean python in the florida everglades. all part of a scary trend. >> everywhere we look, we see species that are spreading and damaging our natural eco systems now. and when scientists look into the future, they see the potential for many more damaging species. >> reporter: you make it sound like we're under attack everywhere. >> we are under attack everywhere. >> reporter: david lodge is a biologist at the university of notre dame. he says our agricultural system depends on plant and animal species imported to america, like wheat and cows and pigs. but that doesn't make them invaders. >> an invasive species is a species that has been transported from one part of the planet to the other by people. and a species that has a harmful impact. >> reporter: typically transported by design, by accident, a little bit of both? >> both. lots of invasive species have been transported by accident in the ball after water of ships or as a hidden pes on plants that have been imported. but many have also been imported intentionally. >> reporter: like the shakespeare fan who, back in the 1890s, set out to bring to america every bird mentioned in the bard's plays. >> i think we can be grateful that he was unsuccessful for a great many of those birds. but he was amazingly successful with starlings. starlings are now one of the most common birds in north america and a nuisance. >> reporter: today they number more than 200 million. most species were introduced for practical reasons, like the asian carp which was imported to clean catfish ponds in arkansas. >> but as is almost always the case, they escaped. and it wasn't really until perhaps the 1980s that biologists in the mississippi basin realized this was a growing problem that was likely to get very severe. >> reporter: asian carp migrated up the mississippi river to its tributary, the missouri and illinois. today only a series of electrical barriers in chicago's shipping canals separate the fish from the great lakes. and its $7 billion commercial and recreational fishing industry. now consider kudzu, nicknamed the vine that ate the south. >> as you can see it's taken over the vegetation that was here. it's overtopping the small tree and the taller trees. it will eventually shade them out. the trees will die. it will all come down to the ground and everything that is here will be kudzu. there won't be anything living here except for that. >> reporter: back in the '0s the u.s. government paid farmers to plant this japanese vine to control erosion. >> it began to exemplify the theory of unintended consequences very well. it got everywhere it wasn't supposed to get. >> reporter: john taylor of the u.s. forest service says it can grow as fast as a foot a day. it now covers up to eight million acres of the south. snapping power lines and blanketing trees and even structures like this barn in rural georgia. >> it will eventually cover the whole building. >> reporter: look at this. >> and it will pull it down. >> reporter:. >> you're getting dkudzu bugs all over everybody. >> reporter: it's known as the stink bug. these little fellow like to overwinter in dwellings. they create a furor when people are not used to having hundreds of thousands of these little critters invade their house. when they're disturbd, their defensive response is a very offensive odor. you might sweep them out but you'll get a surprise in the process. >> reporter: taylor says scientists do know how to eradicate kudzu. >> the problem is spending the money it would take to control large areas and the time it would take over multiple years to control it. it's not a feasible activity. >> reporter: the bill would run into the billions. which brings us to the national tab for invasive species. notre dame's david lodge. >> the cost to the u.s. economy from invasive species generally are on the order of at least $120 billion annually. >> reporter: costs like the $10 billion that cities will spend over the next ten years to treat or replace the millions of ash trees caught in the path of the emerald ash borer, a bug that likely found its way from china on wooden shipping pal lets. or the ten of millions of dollars spent clearing pipes and harbors covered in trillions of zebra and maas he will brought to the great lakes on ships from europe. as the world grows more inter-connected, lodge says the problem on edge grow worse. >> there's just more opportunity now to move species intentionally and unintentionally around the globe. >> reporter: few parts of the country have more experience with that than south florida. >> got a lot of trade, a lot of international tourism, a lot of international cargo, and you have a climate where whatever gets here lives forever. >> reporter: adam putnam is florida's agricultural commissioner. he says that in recent years his state has endured infestations that range from the exotic like burmese pythons and gambian pouch rats to the mediterranean flute fly. on his radar is the giant african land snail which can lay 1200 eggs a year. >> it was like a mythic creature because it was about that big. >> slithery and juicy. they have all kinds of fluids coming out. >> i don't like it. for me it's disgusting. >> with something like snails we have the prospect it carries human meningitis to people are concerned. it eats 500 different plants so agriculture is concerned and it eats houses so homeowners are very concerned. >> reporter: this stucco-eating pest that can grow up to eight inches long has brought together a team of 70 people, including representatives from the u.s. department of agriculture. nationally 30 federal agencies are involved in the plight against invasive species with about 1.5 billion dollar spent annually. federal or state, funding is a struggle. >> it's difficult. screenings at the airport and seaport face other pressures. pressures to look for drugs, to look for bombs, to look for other weapons of mass destruction. so post 9/11 you see less of a focus on snails and citrus kanger and laurel wilt disease and things like that. >> unsuspecting travelers bring in pess and diseases daily. >> reporter: one solution for florida is educating the public. >> wherever you're coming from leave all that stuff behind because any one of those things can carry the larva that is going to become the fly that is going to wipe out $100 billion industry in our state. >> reporter: prevention is key, david lodge argues, but also our biggest challenge. >> for the most part, in the united states we continue to operate under what i would describe as an open door policy. with very few exceptions, it is legal to import alive into the united states almost any plant or animal that exists on the planet. and there are at least 1.7 million species on the planet. >> reporter: so when it comes to invasive species, as we say in the reporting business, this is a story with legs. >> osgood: next talk about an invasive species. ♪ the rich aroma gets you up ♪ looking forward to your first cup ♪ morning! big day, huh? thank you. ♪ oh that mountain grown taste, ♪ ♪ just what you need ♪ for the big race. daughter: morning mom! are you excited? ♪ as you finish every mile... ♪ how rewarding are those smiles... ♪ [ cheers from the crowd ] ♪ the best part of wakin' up... ♪ mommy, you did it! ♪ is folgers in your cup. i find investments with e-trade's top 5 lists and use pre-defined screeners to work smarter. not 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[ bell dinging ] now a page from our sunday morning almanac. october 30, 1938, 73 years ago today. the sunday night before halloween when listeners to the cbs radio network heard this. >> ladies and gentlemen, we interrupt our program to bring you a special bulletin from the inter-continental radio news. >> reporter: it was orson welles and the mercury theater's adaptation of "the war of the worlds" by h.g.wells. >> we take you now to grover mills, new jersey. >> reporter: to anyone who dip hear the introduction to the show it sounded for all the world like real news bulletins. >> ladies and gentlemen, may i? >> reporter: martians invading planet earth. >> they're attacking automobiles. >> reporter: the broadcast touched off a panic and forced an apology of sorts from orson welles himself. >> i was surprised to learn that a show which has become familiar to children through the medium of comic strips and many succeeding novels and adventure stories should have had such an immediate and profound effect upon radio listeners. >> osgood: wells went on to hollywood and his master piece citizen kane. and war of the worlds went on to hollywood too first in 1953 in a version starring gene barry. >> those shells can't get through to them. >> reporter: and then again in 2005 in an updated version starring tom cruise. in the end, of course, it is we who have invadeded mars. the robotic rovers that send back pictures of a barren landscape without an alien in sight. unless, that is they're already on their way to grovers mill, new jersey. ahead, all steamed up. ... i wanted support for my heart... and now i get it from centrum specialist heart. new centrum specialist vision... helps keep my eyes healthy. centrum specialist energy... helps me keep up with them. centrum specialist prenatal... supports my child's growth and development. new centrum specialist is a complete multivitamin that gives me all the benefits of centrum. plus additional support... 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[ busch ] ♪ ...second chance >> there was a time when scientists and vincentors used to dress up in outlandishly old fashioned clothes and employed outlandishly old fashioned technology in their contraptions. what's hold is new again as mo rocca is about to reveal. >> reporter: welcome to the and yam steam punk world's fair in somerset new jersey. only an hour's drive in manhattan but in spirit over a century removed from the present day. >> is it comfortable? >> yes, absolutely. encourages good posture. >> it's like a sports bra. >> reporter: core sets and goggles and gears, oh, my. and weaponry. of all shapes and calibers. what is that? >> this is a ray gun. it's steam powered by my backpack back here. >> reporter: if you came unarmed or underdressed, well, dozens of vendors fill the fair with suitable steep punk wear. by now you're probably wondering, what is steam punk? >> steam punk is yesterday's tomorrow. >> it's almost a science fiction version of victorian. >> reporter: victorians were obsesseded with technology imagining a world of elaborate contraptions, many of them airborne. flights of fancy powered by steam, the fuel behind the industrial revolution. and the steam punk universe, the victorian vision of the future-- adventurous and optimistic-- has come to pass. >> it's the ideal version of the past. >> reporter: it's the victorian era without without all the disease and pestilence. >> yeah, the intersection of technology and romance is what i like to say. >> reporter: jake von slat came to the fair in his steam punk, well, his diesel-powered bus. >> and the keyboard has brass around it. >> the keyboard is brass framed. >> reporter: lovely and expensive. this keyboard sells for over $1,000. >> i wanted a computer that would look at home, say, aboard captain nimo's nautilus. >> reporter: jules verne's 20,000 leagues under the sea is one inspiration behind steam punk. there's the classic 1960s tv show, the wild, wild west. >> when is a ventriloquist dummy not a ventriloquist dummy. >> when it's dr. loveless, of course. >> reporter: yes, that is a steam-powered mandroid controlled by a church organ operated by an evil dwarf. >> i thank you, mr. west. >> reporter: this is a big year for steam punk with dozens of new books out, including the steam punk bible. it documents how imaginative steam punkers can get. behold, robo-elephants, cathedral tanks, tentacled guitars and if a successful steam punker needs a place to hang his top hot.... >> and i love the zeppelin light fixture. >> reporter:... there's a steam punk apartment for sale in new york. >> the asking price is 1-7-5-70. one million 750,000 dollar. >> reporter: 2011 dollars. >> yes it is. >> reporter: if you're shopping for something more practical. >> i actually used it to cure a young lady of hick cups in seattle a while ago. i can demonstrate. >> reporter: okay. >> crank the machine a little bit and charge it up. now if you'll put your finger there. you'll feel a little tingle when you touch it. just a little one. >> reporter: yeah. >> now if you take my hand, we will both get a much bigger shock. >> reporter: ow! oh, my god. wow! . >> can you see how that would cure somebody of the hick cups. >> reporter: yes. the steam punk style is showing up in movies like martin scorsese's hugo. >> i've never seen anything like it. >> reporter: and the robert downey jr. version of sherlock holmes. >> specifically designed to prevent us that. >> reporter: you have a sherlock holmes rap? >> i don't have a sherlock holmes rap but i may steal that idea, thank you. >> reporter: meet paul. school teacher by day but later on you will become. >> i will become professor elemental, a steam punk victorian rapper. >> reporter: professor elemental raps about trousers and splendidness. >> it's splendid. it's splendid. >> reporter: i may need to brush up on my history but there weren't a lot of rappers in victorian england. >> no there wasn't but i like to think if there was one he would have looked like this basically. >> reporter: he's played a lot of steam punk gigs and says this extravaganza is exceptional. >> this one is little bit different from anything else i've seen. the eccentricity dial has been dialed up just a little bit. >> reporter: case in point. >> these propellers propel it forward and backwards. >> reporter: the sky was no limit for the imagination of captain leviticus finch, not his real name. well, i love your air ship. a work in progress, his remote- controlled dir ij i believe flew as high as the ceiling and his gas tank allowed. and yes, my friends.... >> my name is sky pirate. >> reporter: there were jet packs. >> it started out at a... as a ceiling fan. took it apart painted the blades. >> reporter: it takes real imagination the look at a ceiling fan and say, hey, that could be a jet pack. >> thank you. >> reporter: later on, i discovered some really nice jet packs that didn't look like they been hot glued together. >> it's easier to put the right arm in first. we put the helmet on you and then you would be.... >> reporter: wow, i love this. it's a look. >> it's a look. now you can walk around this place and you would fit right in. >> reporter: of course you may ask, would i want to fit in? why do you think they're doing it? >> very good question. i think like a live action role playing games and comic books and movies it's that escapism. you can spend the day as an airship captain or a sky pirate or an evil villain or whatever it you might want to do. >> reporter: does a movement so firmly rooted in the past really have much of a future? i did see a lot of families and quite a few children. in costume and in utero. when is your steam punk baby due? >> august 18. >> reporter: you could call marisa taylor the mother of steam punk but she's a 21st century woman when it really matters. >> we're not going to do it victorian style. i want medicine. i want drugs. i want a bed. >> reporter: how soon are you going to put a top hat on your steam punk baby? >> probably like the day she comes home. >> reporter: meet charlotte adventure zimmerman, marisa's daughter, steam punk baby of the year. >> osgood: next, dressed for success. and later, good enough to eat. >> it's hot in here. (screaming). >> it's sunday morning on cbs and here again is charles osgood. >> osgood: that's robin williams in drag playing mrs. doubt fire in the 1992 movie of that name. once upon a time men playeded all the roles on theater stages. that's the case in our time too on certain stages including the one michelle miller shows us now. >> reporter: the costumes glitter. the lights dazzle. the music is joyous, and the girls... they're not girls. they're guys. starring in the broadway hit priscilla queen of the desert. >> as a token of my appreciation.... >> thank you, bob. don't worry. it happens to everybody. >> even if people come with some sort of reluctance, we sort of win them over because they do realize that these are just ordinary people who want families and friends and love around them. >> reporter: tony sheldon was nominated for a tony award for his portrayal of a down on her life... down on her luck transsexual who along with her-- or should we say his-- pals embarked on a road trip across australia. >> they just happen to live their lives outloud in beautiful flamboyant clothes. that's sort of it. >> reporter: look at that. well, that's part of it. >> there is an attraction of looking at somebody who is apparently a very, very beautiful woman on stage and thinking, that's a fellow. >> reporter: that's why drag is suddenly in the pop cull... culture spotlight. there are tv shows like drag race. >> looking in a mirror and feeling fat and ugly is no way to live your life. >> reporter: and drag you, a makeover show in which men who play women help women find their inner diva. of course, hollywood has always known cross dressing is good for a few laughs. remember tony curtis and jack lemmon in some like it hot. >> i feel naked. i feel like everybody is staring at me. >> with those legs, are you crazy? come on. >> reporter: dustin hoffman in tootsie. >> my name is dorothy it's not sweety or honey. >> oh, christ. >> no, just dorothy. >> reporter: robin williams is mrs. doubt fire. >> hello. >> how are we doing. >> reporter: and most recently. >> are you going bald. >> reporter: adam sandler dons a dress for his new movie jack and jill. >> drag performers will get you laughing whether you're laughing at them or laughing with them. they get you laughing. >> reporter: this man teaches a drag performance class at a college in pennsylvania. yes, really. final assignment, dressing up in drag. yep. that's him. really. ♪ don't be a drag. just be a queen ♪ >> reporter: dwyer says long before there was lady gaga's hit "born this way", an homage to drag, there were men dressing up as women. from greek classic theater to the days of shakespeare to vaudeville and there's a reason. >> the mere notion of a woman performing on stage was unthinkable. it was considered indecent or immoral. >> reporter: of course once women did make their way center stage, cross-dressing moved to the side lines often to the very fringes of society. >> if you're a man and you dress up in women's clothing and you put on the make-up and the wig, you've broken the biggest rule that there is to break. >> reporter: gay or straight, many drag performers are used to breaking the rules. just ask comics lady bunny. >> it's just a question of saying i don't care what society says about me. i'm going to do my thing. luckily from time to time society will catch on. >> reporter: which is how she got cast in "sex in the city." >> look at you. >> reporter: and how she makes a living, a good one. >> there are drag queens who lip sync and drag queens who dj and drag queens who record music. there are no rules anymore. >> reporter: on halloween at the oscars. >> happy birthday to you ♪ > or any other day of the year, drag is no laughing matter. except when it is. >> you don't understand. i'm a man. >> well, nobody's perfect. >> osgood: just ahead, how sweet it is. 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>> beans and just the use of mushrooms that i found in this market that looked extraordinarily like trees. >> reporter: that was in 1999. since then he's done a broccoli forest with its bread mountains, sugar waterfall, potato rocks and cauliflower clouds. and this is his storm-toss cabbage sea. the boat made out of a squash with its green bean cabin and as mast along with a zucchini light house that made a subsequent appearance in another sea scape. >> this is my favorite scene out of everything i've done all made out of fish. >> reporter: the sea is made out of little fish. >> yeah. because they have the lovely silver in it and they reflect the sky, they look like water. >> reporter: in this underwater scene the surface of the sea is a sheet of glass. the big pink fish is a dragon fruit. the green coral is cauliflower. warner has published a whole book of his food landscapes. in it everything from the london skyline with big ben made out of lemon slices and a shredded wheat tower bridge rising from pineapple pilings to garlicshire, self explanatory. do people find it odd that a grown man.... >> plays with his food. >> reporter:... plays with his food? >> (laughing) my kids don't seem to find it odd. they've just gotten used to me. to be honest i think it's nice to hang on to a bit of your childhood. >> reporter: which is where all the orange fruits and vegetables come in. when we met him, warner was at work on the children's book about color. assisted in his london studio by his model maker paul baker who likes being called a food sculptor. although styrofoam torturer is more like it. >> i've made this sketch here which basically shows the scene i'm looking to create with this little hillock with this wonderful pumpkin sitting on top. and the sides of the bank here are going to be cheese, like an orange-colored cheese that will kind of have been eroded away by this orange juice stream. i know it's madness. >> reporter: to turn an empty table into a fantasy in orange. >> you have a look, yeah. >> reporter: it took ten hours. at first the thing had a kind of makeshift elementary school art project look to it. but not for long. >> i'm just thinking about whether we put crumbles of cheese in the river rather than the dumb caughts. they're like smooth stones. >> reporter: yes, that's what grown men play ing with food talk about with a straight face. >> i get really serious about these things. it's actually suppose to be fun. >> reporter: soon a little lentil pathway appears. this is a cheese cliff in the making. do you find yourself eating your.... >> we do. >> reporter:... output? >> we do seem to kind of get a bit peckish. no, don't touch that. we have to be very careful that the crew catches a nibble at this things they shouldn't. >> reporter: the urge to eat the ingredients led an italian meat company to commission an environment village fashioned from sill a.m.y and sausages and ham for an ad. crockerville is almost entirely made out of bety crocker cookie mixes. carl warner worked in advertising for about 25 years, but art and movies often inspire his landscapes. like cow boy valley. >> we actually use a great big rib eye steak that is about this big. this is also an ox tail. we have the lovely wagon made of a tortilla shell. >> reporter: people marvel at how clever and even realistic warner's edible land skips can be. >> somebody came here to the show two years ago and looked at the salmon sea and he came past and said i've been there. i was there a couple of years ago. there's portugal. he said we stayed in a village just up the road from there. i know exactly where you took that. i said unless you are living in a pastel villa with sun dried tomato roof, i think not. >> reporter: warner lost his sense of smell a few years ago. though he didn't notice the fishy odor. meanwhile back at the pumpkin patch. >> have a look at the camera and see what you think. better? >> reporter: you can see it taking shape. never mind how the table really looked. what mattered was that through carl warner's camera lens, there was a fairy tale village, a pumpkin paradise complete with electricity. but because food spoils it had to be captured quickly. >> it's all being held together at the moment with pins and glue and things. it's a very precarious thing. it's a transient thing. it's gone by the end of the day. >> reporter: divvied up to be eaten or thrown out, leaving only the photograph. >> the final shot. >> reporter: and the fantasy. >> i could have you arrested, you know. peeking in people's windows is still a crime. >> osgood: coming up actor dylan mcdermott. >> i'm a doctor. >> osgood: and layer, knighthood. still flowering. acting dylan mcdore met serves up horrors to his audience every week on the appropriately named tv series. now with halloween fast approaching he sits down for a sunday morning chat with rita braver. >> wave bye to your wife and world. this district attorney isn't good. he is great. >> my advice, temporary insanity. >> reporter: many of us came to know him as bobby donald. >> bonnie, got a second. >> reporter: a ruggedly handsome defense lawyer who babbled the system and his inner demons for seven seasons on "the practice." >> are you taking your medications. >> reporter: this season dylan mcdermott takes on a new role. a psychiatrist ben harmon in the epic psycho drama american horror story. (screaming). >> reporter: this time he's battling different kinds of demons and they're everywhere. >> my dream is chasing you. >> me. >> reporter: how do you describe this character that you play? >> i think that he is a person who is haunted. >> reporter: literally. >> the light is different out here. >> reporter: the harmons buy a new house in l.a. in an effort to start over after ben's affair with one of his patients back in boston. they get a great price on the place because it's, well,. >> speaking of the last owners? full disclosure requires that i tell you about what happened to them. >> oh, god. they didn't die in here or anything, did they? >> yes, actually, both of them. murder-suicide. >> this is always the beginning of any horror movie is that don't go in the house. get out of the house. so here we are again. >> reporter: you actually know that there have been murders in the house. >> yes. >> reporter: and yet? >> and yet the deal was too good. >> there's always room in my home for morning reels. >> reporter: the place comes complete with a creepy and murderous next door neighbor played by jessica lange. >> we have to get rid of the bodies. >> reporter: the creators of american horror story are ryan murphy and brad foster who you may be surprised to know brought us glee. are you going to be singing? >> i actually, you know what in the next episode i will be but not the glee singing. it will be a little darker. (screaming) >> reporter: besides demons and ghosts, the show features plenty of skin. there are some scenes that show quite a lot of you. >> yes. >> reporter: did you have any trepidation about doing that? >> it didn't bother me at all because there's an aspect to ben harmon that is a sex addict. you know, i think that's very important to his character. i think a lot of actors who had read this script and maybe wanted to do it wanted to soften that aspect of him but i was actually the guy, you know, running into the burning building. as they were coming out. >> i think one of the greatest gifts you could ever have in life is to be born poor. >> reporter: with his gq good looks and piercing blue eyes dylan mcdermott's own past my surprise you. he was born in water bury, connecticut. when he was only five years old, his mother was shot to death when her boyfriend's gun went off. it was ruled an accident. mcdermott was raised by his grandmother. >> we lived on $100 a week. my sister and i. my grandmother worked two jobs. she rescued us in many ways. she became our mom. >> reporter: he spent his teen-aged years working in his father's saloon in new york city. i heard you used to like help pick fights with your dad. >> yes. this was an irish brewery. >> reporter: what did you get from all that? >> wow. you know, the thing i learned about the most was know... was that there were so many actors who were waiters and bartenders. they would always be drunk. it would be like, "i don't know where i can get a job." so i decided, you know, i'm not going to go down that path. >> reporter: it was his father's third wife famous for the vagina mono logs who put him on a different path by introducing him to acting. >> she saw something in me before i did when i was about 16 years old. and she put me in class. >> reporter: he got his screen name dylan from her too, mcdermott's original first name was mark. >> she and my father were going to have a baby. they were going to name the baby dylan. around the same time i had to change my name. she miscarried so i took the name. >> reporter: mcdermott landed his breakthrough role in the 1987 film hamburger hill. >> closing in on your position. >> it's night. look at me. i'm going to save your life and you're going to save mine. >> reporter: he played julia roberts' husband in steel magnolias. >> say you're going to marry me. >> reporter: were you engaged to her at on one point? >> yes, way. >> reporter: what happened? >> clearly it didn't work out. >> reporter: mcdermott's 14-year marriage to actress shiva rose ended in 2009. but he remains devoted to his two daughters, colette 15 and charlotte 6. >> the great joy of my life is loving them. and being there for them and showing up for them. >> reporter: do you let your daughters watch the current show? it's a little x-rated. >> my eldest daughter came to the premiere with me. >> reporter: do they get upset when they see their father in sexy scenes? >> you know, she didn't say anything. they didn't bring it up. >> babe, have you seen my razor blade. >> reporter: how do you stay in such great shape? >> i have a couple of really good trainers who keep me in shape especially when i got this role, i knew when i read that script you're going to see a lot of me. >> reporter: by the time of this series you're going to have another major birthday. >> i knew you were going to bring it up. the big 5-0. >> it's kind of freaky. i mean, you don't know your age really or at least i don't until i read it like in a newspaper and it says a 50-year-old man. you're like, oh, wait a second. that's me. i guess this is the journey. i mean, you know, the journey of getting older. sort of embracing it because if you fight it, that's when the suffering starts. >> reporter: these days you might say dylan mcdermott is very comfortable in his own skin. >> osgood: still till come. >> reporter: this is where you had an experience. >> this is where it happened. >> reporter: meet the real life ghost busters. >> we were right up the stairs as fast as we could go. there's nothing there. mary? what are you doing here? it's megan. i'm getting new insurance. marjorie, you've had a policy with us for three years. it's been five years. five years. well, progressive gives megan discounts that you guys didn't. paperless, safe driver, and i get great service. meredith, what's shakin', bacon? they'll figure it out. getting you the discounts you deserve. now, that's progressive. call or click today. >> hello. i'm peter. where are you from? originally? >> it's sunday morning on cbs and here again is charles osgood. >> osgood: the 1984 movie ghost busters offered a hollywood vision of hunting down ghosts. tracy smith is on the trail with some real ghost hunters. >> reporter: the end. that's where so many ghost stories begin, isn't it? they thrill us with thoughts of life after death and restless spirits wandering the earth. even if we know they're only make believe. or are they? is it haunted? >> yeah, it's haunted. >> reporter: if ever there was a real haunted house.... >> i get excited coming to places like this. >> reporter:... it would be this one. >> i'm ready. >> reporter: if anyone should know, it would be this guy, jeff bow langer, author of the world's most haunted places. >> there's a nursery rhyme that is pretty popular around here. it goes lizy boarden took an axe and gave her mother 40 whacks. when she saw what she had done, gave her father 41. >> reporter: lizy lived her with her dad and step mom. >> that's right. >> reporter: this house in fall river, massachusetts.... >> this is where andrew boarden was murdered. >> reporter:... is where lizy boarden was accused of brutally hacking her parents on death in 1892. >> if nothing else, you know, we are standing exactly where a man lost his life. you know, right here. >> reporter: a form earl journalist, bow langer is 100% convinced he's both heard and scene a ghost. >> i mean it's a rush. it's incredible. it's a big question. you know, is there life after death? when you go looking for ghosts, when you have that experience, something happens after we die. >> reporter: this is where you had an experience? and it was right here in lizy boarden's basement. >> four of us standing right here. right above us where we just walked we hear this (footsteps) and we were right up the stairs as fast as we could go. there was nothing there. >> reporter: and bolanger is not alone. new cbs poll shows that fully 40% of americans believe in ghosts or spirits. and of those believers, 51% say they've actually seen or been in the presence of a ghost. which means roughly 60 million americans believe they have had a para-normal encounter. ghosts and ghost stories have long been a part of our culture. and are a hollywood staple. but.... >> there is some noise going on out here. >> reporter:... that is breathing new life into the dead. shows like ghost hunters. >> is there anybody here? >> reporter: ghost adventures. >> this isn't funny. >> reporter: para-normal state and most haunted just to name a few. >> get me out, please. >> reporter: the world, it seems, is crawling with ghosts. and everyone with a video camera or an i-phone is out looking for them. here's the catch. despite all the attention they're getting there's not one shred of scientific evidence that ghosts really do exist. >> so over the years how many haunted places have you visited? >> oh, scores upon scores. it must be in the low hundreds. these were spirit pictures that supposedly materialized. >> reporter: former private eye turns para-normal investigator joe nickel works for the center for inquiry in buffalo, new york. >> even if i tell them that this is a fake, some people probably wouldn't believe it. >> reporter: he's been tracking ghosts for 40 years. and how many has he found? >> approximately zero. in round figures. the idea of a ghost's energy leaving your body and death being able to walk and talk, have a brain, is scientific nonsense. it's a romantic idea, but it's scientific nonsense. typical of the... i've been haunted by the spirit for the past eight years at least. >> reporter: he believes the vast majority of ghost sightings can be attributed to a common phenomenon called a transition state between wakefulness and sleeping. >> thousands of stories of people waking up and seeing a ghost near their bedside or gliding by or their dead father standing beside the sofa where they dozed off. you're experiencing a waking dream. >> hello. >> reporter: but the current crowd of ghost hunters spooking up reality tv.... >> did you see that. >> reporter:... are wide awake when they see ghosts. you believe in ghosts. >> yes. >> reporter: and their hair- raising tales have inspired a wave of converts. do you believe in ghosts? >> i believe that there's a middle. people haven't crossed over yet. >> reporter: these folks are hoping to have their own ghost stories to tell after a recent visit to another of the world's most haunted places. the waiverly hills san tore yum in louisville, kentucky. >> let's have a look at one of these san tore yums or tuberculosis hospitalss as they're called today. >> reporter: in the 1920s and '30s waverly hills was one of the largest tuberculosis hospitals in the country. thousands of patients never made it out alive. do you believe this playing is haunted? >> i know this place is haunted. >> reporter: tina mattingly and her husband bought the abandoned building in 2001 with the original intention of restoring it. >> at one point people didn't want other people or people to know that it was haunted snrbt being haunted wasn't a good thing. >> it wasn't a good thing but now everybody wants it to be haunteded. >> reporter: ghosts are big business. and waiver lae hills offers regular ghost tours. with solid bookings through next year. >> we're going to go into the body chute. >> reporter: one of the highlights is the body chute, a 500-foot tunnel used to transport bodies of deceaseded patients out of the building. >> have people seen ghosts in here. >> reporter: sure. >> like what? >> full bodies. they get them in photos. they get them on video. >> reporter: do you see them? >> now i do. there's a guy sitting there. >> reporter: tina has amassed quite a collection of video and photos taken by people touring the five floors of the hospital. >> that's a spirit. this is a long shot from inside what we call the chapel. then if you blow it up.... >> reporter: it almost looks like two figures. >> there's on two figures there. you can't deny know there is something there. it was no live person there. >> reporter: it's fascinating stuff. all these tales from the dark side. >> not one ghost has ever been authenticated by science not one. >> reporter: but for joe nickels who has seen it all, it's all just make believe. >> the para-normal promises these huge things. if ghosts are real, then we don't really die. but there is no scientific evidence, not a scintilla. >> reporter: so next time you hear something go bump in the night or see a strange glow in your local cemetery, try to get it on film. you may end up convincing some people that spirits do exist. with others you won't stand a ghost of a chance. >> take a look at me. i'm an ogre. >> osgood: ahead, a halloween pet peeve. i couldn't breathe... i couldn't sleep and mornings? 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in some cases, yes says our contributor conor knighton. >> dogs and kas of america, come towards the tv. on behalf of all humans i want to apologize for what's going to happen to you tomorrow. today you nap peacefully, blissfully unaware that in 24 short hours you will be forced to dress up like cowboys. i know it's degrading to have to walk around as a talk owe or a caveman or whatever this is supposed to be. and there's no way that can be comfortable. i can only imagine the identity issues this raises for you. you spend all year being told you're a good dog and then we want you to be a bee, a chicken, a frog, a staying a saur us? those of you who are especially unlucky will get dressed as your sworn enemy. how are other cats supposed to take you seriously when you're dressed as a dog and vice versa. you didn't even like shrek. now you have to waddle around the neighborhood as him. >> take a look at me. i'm an ogre. >> i wish i could save you from tomorrow. i'm afraid that dressing animals up in ridiculous costume is human nature. when i was little my parents dressed me up as a little newspaper reporter and a baby on the pampers box. knew what? i put up with it. they gave me food, water, shelter and unconditionable love so it seemed like a fair trade. your owner, yes, the one dressed up like a sexy kitten, well, they love you too. so just let the people have their fun. it's only once a year. pose for a couple of pikts and maybe do a trick. i promise, you'll get a treat. >> coming up, we go jousting with bill geist. to the doctor today, then picked up a few extra things for the baby. oh boy... i used our slate card with blueprint. we can design our own plan to avoid interest by paying off diapers and things each month. and for the bigger stuff, we can pay downalance faster to save money on interest. bigger? bigger. chase slate with blueprint helps you save money on life's little surprises. trip...lets... start your path to saving today, call 855-get-slate. we're taking silk soy milk and silk pure almond to your cereal bowl. i like it! most people prefer the taste of silk vanilla in their cereal over dairy milk and love that it has fifty percent more calcium than milk. i think it's great. taste for yourself switch silk for milk in your cereal. 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>> yes, we do 14th, 15th in europe. >> reporter: jeffrey was supporting the spoked italian armor, circa 1470 that he made himself. you can't just buy armor off the racks these days. moreover, there is is a severe shortage of knights so jeffrey trains them and their horses. at this tournament, they attack three feet of soft bals a wood at the business end of the lances to diminish the risk of injury. >> usually it's relatively minor injuries. i've broken my thumb a couple of times from the recoil of the lance impact. i hit my big toe on a post. >> reporter: jeffrey emphasizes schiff alry, penalizing those who dehorse their opponents. call this jousting light. and call this ultimate extreme jousting. the whole point is to dehorse the opponent with bonus points if he's physically unable to remount. >> time to go to war, boys. >> reporter: this is jousting as practiced by the knights of mayhem. this man is is the co-founder. >> this ain't no dinner show. this isn't no bals a chip re-enactment. this is the real deal. i am the merciless god of this universe. if you come in here to play you will get hurt. the only question is when and how bad. >> when you clyde a medieval train wreck. >> reporter: it's jousting raw. no pretty pageantry. no talk of schiff alry around here. >> you have concussions. you have broken collar bones, separated shoulders. i broke ribs, punctured a lung and then ended up with a pulmonary em bolism. >> reporter: nice. charlie is truly larger than life. a big man.... >> you know, i'm really lucky.... >> reporter:... with big armor. how much does this weigh? >> my suit is about 130 pounds roughly. the hef heavier the better, you know. you can take more blunt force trauma. >> reporter: charlie has big plans too. >> i'm trying to take jousting to the masters and launch it as a professional sport. i believe that the brand of jousting i do and the style is what the world wants to see. >> reporter: after 11 years charlie seems to have finally caught a big break. his knights of mayhem have their own six-part reality series beginning next month on the "national geographic" channel. >> it is fricking high octane action. who doesn't love horses? who doesn't love knights? a guy wants to be a knight in shining armor. little girls want to be a princess, little boys want to be a knight. some little girl want to be a knight. some little boys want to be a princess. i don't really care as long as they buy a ticket and come to the show. >> reporter: do you consider yourself a modern day knight? >> i absolutely consider myself a modern day knight. >> reporter: do you think you would have fared well back in the old days. >> i would have been king and ruled the rules. >> reporter: alas in these modern times this knight of mayhem may have to settle for conquering the world of cable tv. >> osgood: ye ol bill geist. now to old bob schieffer in washington for a look at what's ahead on face the nation. >> good morning, charles. our guest today is the republican frontrunner herman cain. the question, is he for real. >> osgood: thank you, bob. we'll be watching. next week here on sunday morning (ticking) insomnia. no rest for the weary. and everything changed. ♪ i saw what my life could be... and found the strength to make it happen. ♪ i lost my leg serving my country. now i serve in a new uniform. 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