Transcripts For KPIX CBS This Morning 20180106

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is the multibillion dollar poet business going up in smoke? we'll explore a serious new threat to the industry that just saw one of its biggest successes. we begin this morning with a look at today's eye opener, your world in 90 seconds. >> happy new year. >> this book is buzz, buzz, buzz. >> already sold out this book stores around the country. >> mr. president, have you r the book? >> the president isn't talking, but he is tweeting. >> president trump unleashing a new twitter tirade. >> michael wolff is a total los loser. >> he was walking around with a pass. >> this is nothing but a left wing "la la land" stuff. >> passengers were evacuated safely after a plane struck an arriving jet in toronto. [ screams ]. >> much of the east coast to the mid atlantic in a deep freeze today. >> over 110 million americans impacted by this cold stretch of weather. >> really cold, like ice. >> it's colder in minneapolis than mincing, numb is the word in north dakota. >> the nor weej on ship was rocked by the bomb cyclone. >> dangling in danger during extreme weather in austria. >> quinn quinn showed off her somersau somersaults, a winter wonderland. the australian shepherd loves sledding so much, she does it all by herself. her owner posted the video on instagram, saying she went down the hill about 50 times today. >> spinning is in mather son. gorgeous play and he scores! you got to be kidding me. mike matherson hits the high late reel. >> on "cbs this morning saturday." >> the president has certainly gone after michael wolff, now nasty tweets about steve bannon, his new nickname sloppy steve. >> i have to admit, it's a good one. of all the good names, i don't know what to say. sloppy steve fits. welcome to the weekend everyone. i'm anthony mason. >> i'm alex wagner. we begin this morning with what could be a record cold weekend for many americans. temperatures will dip even lower today for more than 100 million people from the great lakes to much of the east coast with windchills making it feel well below zero. >> at least 20 deaths blamed on the weather. the arctic blast is hampering air travel. more than 240 flights today have been canceled. brook sill f brag ga is in new york where the high temperature is expected to be 13 degrees. brook, good morning. >> reporter: it feels like it. good morning. pretty much every sidewalk in new york is still covered. clearing it more away has been made more difficult by single-digit temperatures and dangerously low windchills. >> it's crazy out here. >> reporter: all across the northeast the big digout began. >> i've got good neighbors. if it wasn't for my neighbors, i don't know what i would do. >> reporter: some parts of massachusetts saw 17 inches of snow. when shovels weren't enough, snowblowers fired up. wind intensified the brutal cold, almost knocking people over in boston while crews tried to keep sidewalks clear. >> i kept seeing it come closer and closer. >> reporter: scituate, massachusetts was still dealing with flooding after powerful 15-foot waves slammed over the seawall, slamming ice and degree against homes. >> it was pounding, hitting the saw wall and going up against the telephone polls. >> reporter: in new york city children had to bundle up and get to school. the 20 inches of snow that fell in parts of new jersey was followed by windchills of 11 below zero. that's why fire turned to ice at this blaze in newark. >> reporter: passengers on the norwegian breakaway say their ship sailed into the storm tuesday night. they say 20 to 30-foot ocean swells caused flooding and made many people sea sick. >> this was the worst moment of my life. >> reporter: they apologized calling conditioning stronger than expected. at chicago's lincoln park zoo, general curator explain why bird keepers got into the pond to break up thick ice. >> it's important for water fowl, they need open water to stay warmer -- it's warmer than the air temperature. some of our dives are diving ducks. they need to dive to feed. >> reporter: no surprise. the one animal that seemed truly in its element was seku, the polar bear. >> we want more snow because he loves the snow. we'd like more snow and less cold. >> reporter: unlike the polar bears, most people in the northeast would be happy to see an end to this wintery weather. the problem is, alex, winter is barely two weeks old. >> brook, painful. thank you. >> i wish i was a polar bear. >> me, too. >> for the latest let's go meteorologist rob ellis from our chicago station wbbm tv. good morning, rob. >> good morning. it looks like the coldest of the air will be into new england. we do have most of the country now below freezing, but that pattern may change soon. it's not going to happen tonight. potentially the coldest night expected right now for tonight into tomorrow early morning where the temperatures are likely to be in the single digits or below zero, for new england, for the northeast and even into the east coast. however, we could see a warmup as we get into sunday afternoon and evening with many locations finally getting above freezing. it will be a nice change from the pat ternt in place. high temperatures on sunday could get into the 30s and 40s for locations that haven't seen that temperature so warm since christmas, since before christmas. the problem is, it comes with this, a chance for some rain, a little wintery mix and, yes, even some snow as the system moves east into sunday and monday. unfortunately that wintery mix is going to cause some problems and even some storms in the gulf coast. anthony? >> meteorologist rob ellis from wbbm tv, rob, thank you very much. a nightmarish scene unfolded for 174 people on board a passenger jet that just arrived at toronto's pearson airport last night. [ screaming ]. >> stay seated, stay seated. >> a sun wing plane being towed away from the gate struck their west jet flight while it was preparing to pull up to the gate. the sung wing jet which was empty burst into flames. the west jet passengers had to evacuate into the cold using the plane's inflatable slides. >> all of a sudden it started venting fuel all over the wing, in about a second or two later, not even a second, it just kind of all ignited and there was a big fireball and everyone started yelling and panicking. >> that's not what you want to see out of your plane window. 168 passengers and six crew members on board the west jet flight got to safety and no one was hurt. the incident did cause some delays. president trump is sizing up the new year during a working weekend at camp david. mr. trump and vice president mike pence are gathering with republican congressional leaders to discuss their legislative agenda for 2018. >> before leaving the white house friday, the president touted gains in the stock market and claimed his tax cut bill is going far beyond what anyone thought possible. but the release of a new book detailing the inner workings of the trump white house is serving as the latest distraction for the administration. errol barnett is at the white house. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. president trump is taking power players to camp david this weekend. vice president mike pence, secretary of state rex tillerson, defense secretary jim mattis and cia direct mike pompeo will address legislation, while mitch mcconnell and paul ryan will address plans on the legislative front. >> we're going to camp david, a lot of things to work on. >> reporter: president trump is hosting a retreat at camp david to discuss his 2018 priority. >> we're making america great again. >> reporter: the white house says among the weekend's topics will be the economy, national security, military funding, infrastructure and immigration reform, including funding for a border wall. >> we're cleaning out towns of those ms-13 gangsters. that's why we're calling on congress to fund the border wall which we're getting very close to. >> reporter: cbs news confirmed the administration wants congress to allocate approximately $18 billion for funding for a wall on the southern border and enforcement measures. >> we will build a great wall along the southern border, and mexico will pay for the wall. >> reporter: top democrat nancy pelosi called the $18 billion in funding alarming and urged party members to speak out. since the trump administration ended daca, the deferred action for childhood arrivals program, democratic leaders have been noepgting additional border security measures as a way of passing the d.r.e.a.m. act, a more permanent solution. in a statement, dick durbin said the border wall demand is outrageous and makes a government shutdown more likely, adding, the white house was putting, quote, its entire wish list of hard line anti immigrant bills on the backs of these young people. before leaving washington, the president ignored questions about his former chief strategist steve bannon who was quoted making damaging remarks about mr. trump in a new book "fire and fury: inside the trump white house." last night on twitter the president called the author michael wolff a total loser and said his former ally bannon begged for his job when he was fired. the president added, now sloppy steve has been dumped like a dog by almost everyone. in an interview this morning with the bbc wolff stands by the content of his book and believes its revelations can ultimately harm the trump presidency. >> the story i've told seems to present this presidency in such a way that it says he can't do this job. the emperor has no clothes, and suddenly everywhere people are going, oh, my god, it's true, he has no clothes. that's the background to the perception and the understanding that will finally end this presidency. >> reporter: one cabinet member not invited to camp david, attorney general jeff sessions. mr. trump has openly criticized him and "the new york times" reports mr. trump sent a lawyer to disswaj sessions from recusing himself from the russia investigation last year. the department of justice denies that report. >> errol barnett at the white house, thank you. two republican senators taking aim at the author of a dossier filled with damaging allegations ability president trump's ties to russia. chuck grassley and lindsey graham referred former british spy christopher steel to the department. the senate says they have reason to believe steel lied to the fbi. >> republicans have argued that steel's work which was paid in part for by the democratic party in the clinton campaign may have been used by the fbi to open an investigation into the trump campaign. they say the senate's action is attempt to discredit the on going russia investigations. the fbi is once again investigating the clinton foundation charity and whether the foundation accepted donations in exchange for political favors while hillary clinton was secretary of state. president trump and congressional republicans urged the justice department to renew the investigation. here is justice correspondent jeff pegues. >> this program has created more and more opportunities. >> reporter: cbs news has learned in recent weeks fbi agents have been reexamining the clinton foundation's finances. agents want to know if donations were made in exchange for political favors between 2009 and 2013 when hillary clinton was secretary of state. >> my theory about all this is disclose everything and then let people make their judgments. >> reporter: since president clinton left office, his foundation has grown into a multibillion dollar enterprise with significant donations from foreign governments and businesses. the investigation into its fund-raising started well before the 2016 presidential campaign, but no charges were ever brought. >> it's a shame what's happened with the fbi -- >> reporter: president trump, himself, under investigation for obstruction of justice in the russia probe has repeatedly criticized the fbi for its investigations of the clintons, and in twitter messages he has called on his attorney general jeff sessions to prosecute crooked hillary. in a statement clinton spokesman called the case a sham that was being used to distract from the indictments, guilty pleas and accusations of treason from trump's own people. >> it doesn't look appropriate. here, you know, appearance is everything. >> reporter: bill matay is a former federal prosecutor. >> it's not necessarily unusual to reopen the investigation, it is unusual for the white house to be calling for the reopening of the investigation. >> this probe is separate from the fbi's investigation into hillary clinton's private e-mail server. she was also cleared in that case, but some republicans are asking for it to be reopened as well. for "cbs this morning saturday," jeff pegues, washington. >> we've got a lot to cover this morning. for an in-depth look, joined by kathleen kingsbury from "the new york times." good morning. >> good morning. >> let's start with "fire and fury" since it seems to be what everybody was talking about. the president was tweeting rather late last night for him about this book and particularly about his former chief strategist, steve bannon who is at the heart of this account of the white house. how significant do you think is the fallout from the breakup of this relationship? >> i think the fallout is still to be determined. bannon is clearly the one who is suffering the most right now. we've seen people like the mercers, his financial backers, already start to distance themselves. the future of his website, breitbart remains to be seen. i think we'll see more in the next weeks. >> the revelations in this book, if they are accurately reported are scathing as far as the president's fitness for office. michael wolff is on national television saying president trump has lost it. is there a reconciliation that needs to happen in the republican party as far as this is concerned? >> i think that -- yes, absolutely. that said, i think that this book, while it lays out incredible details, specifically details directly from the white house and quotes staffers in ways that we haven't heard before, it really echoes a lot of reporting we've heard over the last year. the president has been erratic since he came into office. a lot of the concerns right now are how do we minimize the damage, particularly on the world stage. >> how big a threat do you think it poses on the world stage? >> we're talking about nuclear war with north korea right now. do we really want the north koreans to think this is a president who is impatient and unwilling to have dialogue? no, absolutely not. we're seeing south korea make efforts at trying to reach out to the north. so the u.s. really needs to back that effort. >> let's turn the page a little bit to more white house intrigue. "the new york times," your paper, is reporting that president trump refused to accept potential recusal from attorney general jeff sessions as far as the russia investigation. what are the implications here as far as obstruction of justice and collusion which seem to be the main prongs of robert mueller's investigation? >> i think the biggest questions of that reporting this week by michael schmidt, did the president try to obstruct justice? that's really the main question here, a huge legal question. it's one we've seen in the past lead to impeachment hearings. so i think that is one of the things that we really need to look on the radar in the next few weeks, whether or not that reporting is collaborated and whether or not the doj starts digging into it. >> it sounds like there might be mourp more of a case to be made if you're mueller on the obstruction of justice rather than the collusion -- >> exactly. i think right now the clearest reporting we have does show a white house that's really been trying to stop this investigation, trying to do whatever it can to prevent hearings in this matter. >> statement, as we heard jeff pegues report, the justice department is actively investigating the clinton foundation, whether donors got preferential treatment while hillary clinton was secretary of state. this isn't the first time the foundation has been investigated. what's going on here? >> i think given the fact that there doesn't seem to be new evidence on the table, the on conclusion we can come to is this is a political vendetta brought on by the white house. i think the president has made it clear that he wants the clintons to be investigated over and over again over the past year. but the fbi looked into these allegations in 2016 and said there wasn't enough evidence to actually bring charges. so what's new now? >> speaking of political football back and forth, we know the president and some of his top republican leadership are meeting at camp david to discuss the 2018 legislative agenda. immigration is a football tossed back and forth. the white house seems unrelenting in its desire to have a border wall. what is the future for young dooemers a d.r.e.a.m.ers and daca? >> i think the president has suggested he'd like to find a path forward for the deemers. but the border wall is one of the things he says has to be part of the deal. that's a non-starter for i think that what we really need here is a compromise, and this is a group of talented young people that america really can't afford to lose. so it would really be wonderful to see the white house find a solution that everyone can live with. >> we will see how that all plays out. kathleen kingsbury with "the new york times." thanks for your time. >> thank you. >> tomorrow morning on "face the nation" john dickerson's gaeft includes republican senator rand paul of kentucky and cia director mike pompeo. it's time to show you some of this morning's headlines. our affiliate in orlando reports on the bombshell revelation by the wife of the pulse nightclub gunman. noor salmon told the fbi she knew her husband was going to the club in june of 2016 and says she now wishes she had alerted police before he shot and killed 49 people and injured 50 others. mateen pledged allegiance to isis and was shot and killed by the police. salman was arrested seven months later, facing charges of aiding a foreign terrorist organization and obstruction of justice. u.s.a. today reports u.s. ambassador nikki haley put iran on notice during an emergency session of the u.n. security council called by the white house friday. haley suggested the international community will not tolerate attempts by the iranian regime to silence the will of its people, as protesters demonstrate against the country's economic troubles. the iranian government called the meeting a blunder. "the cincinnati enquirer" reports republicans in ohio are scrambling to find a new candidate for u.s. senate after state treasure josh mandel quit the race on friday. he said he ended the candidacy to take care of his wife suffering from an undisclosed health issue. the gop has one month to put a new name on the ballot as it looks to unseat two-term democrat sherrod brown. "entertainment weekly" reports david letterman has a new talk show. his first guest will be president obama. the former cbs late show host will return to the screen on netflix next week with a one-on-one with the former president who will be letterman's first appearance since signing off three years ago, and mr. obama's first talk show interview since leaving the white house. >> i'm excited to see dave letterman back on the air. >> i am, too. wondering about the beard and its length. >> it will be like father time. it's about 22 after the hour. here is a look at the weather for your weekend. the the fbi says an alleged terror plot against an amtrak train was narrowly avoided. ahead, we'll tell you about the suspect in the case and whapt he had with him when he was arrested. plus, is it a dose of weed killer? fresh off california's legalization of recreational marijuana, the trump administration throws uncertainty and legal riskothe pot. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." ♪ from super fast laptops to super thin tvs, still ahead this morning we'll see what amazing new products will be unveiled in las vegas tomorrow at the world's largest showcase of consumer electronics. plus, is this bitter cold weather getting you down? we'll look at winter travel destinations including some places once considered second tier, now oughtdrawing their better-known rivals. we'll be right back. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." you knew you knew you wanted to do this at 11 years old. >> i did. my mother -- we lived in cincinnati at the time. we moved a lot as a kid, which was great for sports. i said to my mother -- i was like 10 or 11. i said, you know what? i want to be a sports writer. my mother -- at that time women were three things, nurses, teachers or home makers. my mother, instead of saying, what, are you crazy, she said, great, sometimes you have to cross when it says don't walk. >> but truly it was not an easy journey to get from that 11-year-old to where you are now. talk about the doubt. your mother was obviously an -- she empowered you in a lot of ways. how much skepticism did you meet along the way when you said this is what i wanted to do? >> plenty. i was sharing with someone that when i started there were no ladies rooms because there were no other women. what's the great movie "hidden figures" where kevin costner says, where do you go for 40 minutes, that was my life. i would sit in the patriots press box and say, do i have have time to go down the elevator, across to the other public restroom and get back before the patriots punted? humor was my default -- i don't know what you guys use, but humor was mine. >> that's how you got through it. >> that's how i got through it. other people use other mechanisms. for me, humor worked. >> when you see -- when you talk to kids who want to go into this business today, what do you say about how things have changed? >> i just want people to, like you guys have, a passion for what you do. if you don't love it, don't do it. ♪ talk about a wild ride, this is actually my nightmare. the twists and turns came in a hurry for skiers in the austrian alps, the ski lift swinging from side to side as their skis dangled from the open car. they were brought to safety without injury. >> looks like an amusement park ride, and not a fun one. >> not at all. >> welcome back to "cbs this morning saturday." coming up this hour, as proponents of legalized marijuana celebrate a milestone, the trump administration says, wait a second. we're look at what may be a looming clash over the booming business of legalized pot. >> and it is not your typical las vegas show. it's a showcase for innovation, and we will get a preview of what's new in consumer electronics. that's ahead. we be again with a new foiled terror plot. a missouri man who authorities suspect was planning an attack, turned away from the cameras as he was hauled into court to face terrorism charges. >> the subject had white nationalist leanings and was arrested after trying to derail an amtrak train in the fall. story. >> it was in the middle of the night. 200 miles from omaha when 26-year-old taylor wilson allegedly pulled the emergency brake on amtrak's california zephyr train traveling between sacramento and chicago. there were 175 passengers on board last october when the train abruptly stopped. it took the nearest sheriff's deputy an hour to get on scene. amtrak employees restrained wilson for an hour until the deputies arrived. wilson had a handgun, ammunit n ammunition, a mask, gun, knife and scissors. he is now facing terror related charges for allegedly trying to wreck, derail and disable the train. wilson's cousin told investigators the suspect expressed an interest in killing black people. >> the indicators are this perp was a ticking bomb. we just don't know in what direction he was going to explode. >> reporter: former deputy director of the fbi -- >> this easy ak seps to a sensitive area of the train is very troubling. >> you would think you would make it very difficult to access what is essentially the cockpit of the train. >> it should be akin to the october p cockpit of a plane, that there are barriers, barricades, hardened entryways that only a few people can have access to, weather key or some other access code. >> reporter: his cousin told the fbi he attended the rally in charlottesville. white supremacist materials were found on his phone. when officers searched his home, they found a hidden closet with a stockpile of ammunition. his family later turned over a bulletproof vest and 15 firearms, one modified to be fully automatic. amtrak denied comment. wilson's attorney says his client plans to plead not guilty. for "cbs this morning saturday," kris van cleave, washington. he kre eated the sound behind countless hit records. we'll look back at the man who courted the world's greatest mu musicians and created one of the most incredible musical legacies. first, here is a look at your weather for the weekend. note noet . as more americans are lighting up, could the federal government say lights out to the marijuana legalization movement? up next, we'll hear how the increasingly booming business of legalized pot may be headed for a major confrontation with the federal government. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." enamel is the strong, white, outer layer of your tooth surface. the thing that's really important to dentists is to make sure that that enamel stays strong and resilient for a lifetime the more that we can strengthen and re-harden that tooth surface, the whiter their patients' teeth are going to be. dentists are going to really want to recommend pronamel strong and bright. it helps to strengthen and re-harden the enamel. it also has stain lifting action. it's going to give their patients the protection that they need and the whiter teeth that they want. ♪ there'that only uses 100% american oranges.and simply orange and tropicana ship in juice from overseas. only florida's natural grows all of our oranges in florida. great taste. naturally. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ the all new 2018 camry. toyota. let's go places. what's cool is, today, we have 400 people working across the globe. with office 365, we can all stay connected, from vietnam, to boston, to new york. now with whiteboard, we can all work together at the same time. and 3d in powerpoint shows clients exactly what our cards look like. yeah, having everyone working together on the new teams app is really awesome. seeing all these people react to our cards? that's what makes it all worth it. you or joints. something for your heart... but do you take something for your brain. with an ingredient originally found in jellyfish, prevagen is the number one selling brain-health supplement in drug stores nationwide. prevagen. the name to remember. with expedia, you can book a flight, then add a hotel, and save. ♪ everything you need to go. expedia ♪ ♪ the national movement to legalize marijuana took a big step forward this week and a big step back. california became the largest state in the nation to permit recreational pot use. >> but on thursday, attorney general jeff sessions threw major uncertainty into the legalization movement rescinding obama-era guidelines meant to limit federal prosecutions. that's a big issue, because as far as the federal government's concerned pot remains an illegal drug. here to talk about the developments and the business of marijuana is derek thompson, senior editor at the clique. good morning. >> good morning. >> there is a lot of confusion regarding this federal directive. what's going on here? >> it's extremely confusing. according to federal law, it is illegal to buy, sell, possess marijuana and that goes back to the 1970s controlled substances act. according to six states it is legal to buy, sell and possess marijuana. you should probably give pref reps to the states over the federal law and now the trump administration is saying, no, you should give pref reps to the federal law over the state law. this is one of those situations is if you are confused you are paying attention. confusion is not good for what is very clearly, as you can see right now on your screen, a burgeoning pot movement and pot business in the u.s. >> it is a reversal of the traditional roles that democrats and republicans always play, right?blics are now arguing for federal oversight to trump statism which is an inversion of where they usually are. are republicans at the state level really going to pursue this? >> republicans at the state level are furious. this is absurd, this is disheartening. we should absolutely not be pushing back against a growing business. in colorado alone, marijuana is a $1 billion business. it brings in $200 billion of tax revenue that goes towards schools and goes toward health care and so this is not a situation where the states who are seeing this money, this activity and health, as well. they don't want to go back to the 2000s and 1990s, they want to, as alex said, give preference to state's rights over u.s. laws. we have the constitution and there is a supremacy clause that says federal law does reign. >> it's a legal issue and economic issue, but if you're running one of these new, young, marijuana businesses, what do you do? >> it's extremely confusing. it's not altogether clear what's going to happen. we need to see more time for the state attorneys general to essentially say are we going to take any direction from this federal law change, this federal rule change. technically it's wantnot a law we have the growing business and the state senators don't want to change it. we're wanot going to do anythin. the upshot is removing the 1907s with federal law on marijuana, exactly right. if there's going to be a change, it has to come from congress. the idea of marijuana users is that they're slow and indolent and lazy and the congress which is being too slow, indolent and lazy. >> do you think it ultimately results in a push for broad, federal legalization? at the end of the day because someone's going to have to pass a law somewhere at the federal level and politically, economically and culturally, the tide is moving in the direction of legalization, doesn't this ultimately end in legalization? >> that's exactly it. it has to end in legalization. here's a really important statistic. in 1969 americans didn't think american should be legalized. the next year they passed the controlled substances act which caused marijuana a schedule 1 drug and criminalizes it. today 64% of americans think marijuana should be legalized. you can see it on the screen. this is where the population has quintupled since we had a congressional law. it is time to re-write the law because the people have moved. this is a different country than it was in 1970s. >> is there any movement in washington to do that? >> there is movement now to change the doj ruling from jeff sessions on marijuana. you see this in not only among democratic senators like cory booker, but republican senators like cory gardner. you finally have people in washington saying this is absurd. we have to act. we're the congress and we write the federal law and it's time for us to write the new one. >> we got through the segment without a single cheech and chong segment. >> that's a record! >> derek thompson with "the atlantic." it is always a pleasure, my friend. the world's big of the show case of electronic technology opens its doors tomorrow. up next we'll head to ces and see what incredible new products will be showing up on shelves. you're watching cbs this morning saturday. ♪ ♪ shelve you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." managing blood sugar is a series of smart choices. and when you replace one meal... ...or snack a day with glucerna... ...made with carbsteady... ...to help minimize blood sugar spikes... ...you can really feel it. now with 30% less carbs and sugars. glucerna. but when we brought our daughter home, that was it. now i have nicoderm cq. the nicoderm cq patch with unique extended release technology helps prevent your urge to smoke all day. it's the best thing that ever happened to me. every great why needs a great how. yeeeeaaaahhh! uh oh...a painful sore throat? 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right. let's start first with augmented and virtual reality. vr people know about to some degree. ar, is this the year for it? >> last year was kind of the year for it, to be honest. >> i'm late. >> ar is -- it projects a virtual world on top of the reality world. imagine if i'm looking at you right now and i see, i don't know -- >> a lion. >> a lion exactly, but i can still see the set behind you. so it puts a digital layer on top of the real world. the real breakthrough was when apple released ar kit, which is part of its new iphone suite. so you can hold up your phone and sort of see a virtual world on top of the real world. most recently magic leap, which is a company that has gotten a ton of press, announced they are releasing their headset in 2018. so there's a lot of energy and excitement around ar. i do think we haven't yet -- i'm not sure we know what the killer app is. what are these things actually good for? i don't know yet. >> seeing me as a lion. >> lg is showing an 88-inch 8k tv. >> yes. >> but you see the really exciting thing is flexible small screens? >> yeah. every year or every few years there's the new -- it's hd, it's 4k, now it's 8k. >> why do i need 8k? >> i have no idea. i want things to be less realistic, not more realistic these days. but what i do find interesting, we've started to see prototypes of fendable, foldable screens. you know, people have been talking about this for a while but we've seen these from companies like lenovo. you can bend them around your wrist. and that actually does open up some ideas about if we -- >> this video is amazing. >> isn't it crazy? if screens were not just giant rectangles but were things that you could turn into glasses, you know, other kinds of lenses, other kinds of form factors, what could you do with that? i think that's a pretty interesting intellectual exercise. >> jason, there's something called an always connected pc which sounds intriguing and slightly terrifying. >> i don't think it's any more terrifying than a phone. these are basically a new breed of computer that operate like a phone but with the power of a pc. imagine a computer that logs on instantly, boots up instantly, i could say, that has l.e.t. connection that lasts for 20 hours battery life, that operates like a phone but with the power of a pc. we've just started seeing the first ones roll out. we're going to see a few of those devices this year as well. >> amazon had a huge christmas with its virtual assistant echo. google has home. apple is expected to launch something. are these things gaining really broad acceptance? >> absolutely they are. last year i think i was on talking about who needs an internet-connected washing machine. this has been the big question forever. you take a device and stick the internet on it because you can, but who cares? i do think that with voice commands, suddenly that does start feeling a little more interesting. if you're in your living room and say, hey, google, how much more time is my wash cycle going to be, that's at least sort of interesting. but i do think that there is some resistance to all these connected devices over the last year with all the security breaches. i'm curious to see if any of that works its way into ces as well. >> i want to say, hey, google, fold the laundry. >> give it a couple days. >> next year. >> jason tan, great to see you. >> thanks. he ran a small recording studio with a huge impact on american music. up next, we will remember music pioneer rick hall, founder of the muscle shole sound which influenced artists from aretha franklin to alicia keys. you're watching can the cbs this morning saturday." to everyone ee everyone else. but on the inside, i feel chronic, widespread pain. fibromyalgia may be invisible to others, but my pain is real. fibromyalgia is thought to be caused by overactive nerves. lyrica is believed to calm these nerves. i'm glad my doctor prescribed lyrica. for some, lyrica delivers effective relief for 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can't get anywhere. they have to come here. >> it's that old, deep down, into your stomach coming up out of your gut, coming up out of your heart. it's that muscle shoals sound. >> rick hall died this week at the age of 85. cbs' mark strassman toured fame studios with hall last year. >> why muscle shoals? >> well, i couldn't get a gig in new york city. i couldn't get a gig in memphis, tennessee. i couldn't get a gig in nashville, tennessee, which is 120 miles down the road, and so i said, well, i'm going to build myself a studio and cut some hit records. >> hall's muscle shoals sound often teamed white session musicians with black singers all while recording in the still-segregated deep south. >> george wallace was making a statement of segregation now, segregation tomorrow and segregation forever i was in this studio in muscle shoals cutti cutting around with wilson picket. >> in 1968 hall gave a young guitarist named dwayne a shot, using him on wilson picket's version of "hey jude." ♪ ♪ >> the muscle shoals sound spread as others opened studios in the area. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> with acts like the rolling stones. ♪ ♪ what's your name, little girl ♪ ♪ lynyrd skynyrd. ♪ ♪ >> and paul simon all recording hits in northern alabama. in 2015 we visited fame studios with singer/songwriter jason isbomb where he recorded his album "something more than free" ". >> he grew up just a few miles from muscle shoals has deep connections to the studio and to rick hall. >> what does it mean for you to come here? it is a real big deal. this is the gateway to everything we wanted to do. >> after hearing of hall's death, he tweeted, rick hall and his family gave me my first job in the music business and nobody in the industry ever worked harder than rick. nobody. american music wouldn't be the same without his contributions. ♪ ♪ >> he is so right. if you get a chance see the muscle shoals documentary on netflix right now which tells the whole story and it's a rich history. >> and the music of muscle shoals is an american treasure. >> it sure is. it absolutely is. >> he, too, is a pioneer in a language that is all, but dead. coming up, meet one of reportedly only 100 people known to speak latin fluently. hear what he's doing to save the language and hear how this man who wrote for four different popes angered the vatican. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." the recordings of president richard nixon. >> no reporter of the washington post is ever to be in the white house, is that clear? with portrayals like reporter ed beckdigian, and the nixon administration's attack on the media who helped track down the classified documents. >> the media, already vulnerable are being made a scapegoat for ironic reasons and a scapegoat quite clearly. >> i'm proud of showing a bunch of professional journalists at work, arguing and fighting and trying to figure out what they have a right to do and what's right. >> you celebrate the best part was journalism which is finding out what the truth is. >> my character is the true believer, the reporter who just wants the story and just wants to tell the public the story. >> there are no page numbers. >> that's where the top secret stands for. my source says to cut them off. >> if you have the truth, you should print it. that's an easy, strong opinion to have when you don't have the responsibility of actually keeping the paper alive and you're not the one who will go to jail. >> facing a possible criminal contempt of court charge graham chose to stand up to the government and to forces within her own industry. >> the only reason she's running things is because phil died. >> like post, board member arthur parsons played by whitford who felt she was unqualified to be publisher because she was a woman. >> thank you, arthur, for your frankness. >> it never occurs to my character that a woman should be able to do this. i am absolutely on the totally wrong side of history which makes her decision all the more incredible and brave. ♪ welcome to "cbs this morning saturday. i'm anthony mason. >> coming up this hour, learning a cold, hard lesson. kids in baltimore try to press on amid freezing temperatures inside their classroom. why it's part of a bigger problem. and the golden globe awards are tomorrow night, but unlike the boozey fun affair of the past, this year's show take a more somber tone in everything from the red carpet to the stage. >> and in this bitter cold winter they are the hot spots for travel. we'll take a look at lesser known places around the globe drawing visitors like never before. the record freezing weather in the midwest, anyone outdoors faced brutal polar temperatures that were made worse by below freezing windchills. firemen battled flames and ice at a blaze in chicago on friday. the detroit river froze over and the chicago river looked well on its way. >> a cruise ship sailed through thursday's massive storm on the north atlantic from the bahamas was battered by 30 foot waves for two days. it had water pouring in from the ceilings while winds were howling outside. some passengers said they were terrified. >> i was holding on for dear life. i honestly wasn't sure we were going to make it through the night. the boat was tilted like crazy. >> i'll never go on any type of boat again in my life after this. >> wow. the ship docked safely here in new york on friday. >> and in boston, the charles river was frozen solid. state police warned people against walking on the river. >> for the latest on the forecast, let's go to rob ellis from our chicago station wbbmtv. good morning, rob. >> good morning. the cold air that's in place for much of the country where a lot of folks are dealing with temperatures below freezing, that is about to change, but probably the coldest night on tap for areas of new england, the east coast where the numbers are likely going to be below zero or single digits as you wake up sunday morning. but a little bit of relief as the temperatures are expected to warm up. some folks will stay below freezing but i do think the temperatures will get above freezing over the next several days. the pattern is about to change. if you don't get there on sunday, over the next several days we do expect a warmup. it comes with a wintry system that could bring rain, snow and ice to the midwest. >> rob ellis from our chicago station wbbmtv. thanks. the freezing temperatures have disrupted large parts of the country, nowhere more than baltimore. students there were kept loam this week not because they couldn't get to school but because the buildings were barely warmer than a refrigerator. michelle miller has more. >> reporter: the conditions inside baltimore's public schools this week were so frigid you had to see it to believe it. >> i'm here at school with my two coats because it's freezing. >> reporter: which is why teachers posted video showing buckled floors and burst pipes. >> it flooded the first day and moved to another class and then that class flooded. >> reporter: former nfl linebacker may have gotten used to playing on the frozen tundra. >> you guys are cold? >> yes! i have frostbite. >> you had frostbite yesterday. >> reporter: but it's not a lesson he expected to teach his students. some baltimore schools got as cold as 44 degrees indoors before schools were closed thursday and friday. the ceo of baltimore city schools. >> some of this is about also taking into account that young people need to be fed, that we have a lot of young people who are frankly safer in school than they are out o. >> reporter: since 2009, the school system has returned roughly $66 million in state funding for repairs. according to the baltimore sun, that's because contracts did not comply with regulations. but the schools tell cbs news that's misleading and say specific requests for school heating systems including one for douglas high school were deferred by the state. >> i'm outraged at the failures in baltimore city. >> maryland governor larry hogan disagrees and blames the city for mismanagement. >> they're one of the few jurisdictions in the state that hasn't addressed these problems in spite of the fact that i believe they may be the most highly funded school system in america. >> it was almost as cold in there as it is out here right now. >> reporter: for now there will be a morning temperature check at each school so decisions to close can be made on an individual basis rather than at the district level. for cbs this morning saturday, i'm michelle miller. >> as a proud graduate of the public school system this is unacceptable and the finger pointing needs to end. >> it's a disgrace and all the kids are victims. >> it's wrong. alabama investigators suspect a fire that destroyed the home of a woman who accused roy moore of sexual misconduct was intentionally set. however, authorities do not believe there is any indication the torching of the home on wednesday had anything to do with the allegations. it is all little comfort to tina johnson. >> it's too coincidental to me but whatever they say i'll go with. but right now i'm so devastated that -- i -- i can't -- i'm devastated. >> johnson is among the women who publicly accused moore of sexual misconduct. moore denied any wrong doing, but lost the race to democrat doug jones. president trump is fine tuning his legislative priorities for this year as he meets with congressional republicans and members of his cabinet at camp david this weekend. their to do list includes the budget, infrastructure, immigration, and the midterm elections. the meeting follows the passage of the tax overhaul bill last month and ahead of the latest government funding deadline on january 19th. the notable absence from the get together is embattled attorney general jeff sessions who was not invited. the president is lashing out at the author of a new book about the trump administration. "fire and fury" by michael wolff went on sale early on friday after the president's attorney threatened to take legal action against its publisher. the book extensively quotes steve bannon. in one passage he says a 2016 meeting between donald trump and a russian lawyer was treasonous. a tweet calls the book untruthful and claims bannon cried and begged for his job when he was fired from his white house position. >> twitter says it will not censor the president or any other world leaders. in a statement the company said blocking a world leader from twitter or removing their controversial tweets would hide important information people should be able to see and debate. the statement did not mention president trump specifically. >> very interesting dilemma twitter has. someone in florida is waking up a megamillionaire this morning. a single winning ticket was sold in last night's megamillion's drawing. the jackpot, an estimated $450 million, the tenth largest in history. the winning numbers are 28, 30, 39, 59, 70. and the megaball is 10. if those aren't your numbers you have another shot tonight. the jackpot in the powerball drawing is even bigger, $570 million. >> can't win if you don't buy a ticket, anthony. >> got to be in it to win it. it's about 8 after the hour. i never win it. now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. his mastery of his mastery of latin had him writing official documents for four popes. now a retired milwaukee priest is focused on his students and the quest to keep the near dead language of ancient rome very much alive. we'll meet him next. you're watching cbs this morning saturday. mayhem? what are you doing up there? no more mayhem. it's my new year's resolution. so what are you now? i'm a lightning rod. waiting to protect your home from a lightning strike. that's boring. you know what, tell me something i don't know. i'm allergic to pet dander. i was being sarcastic. i thought you were being a lightning rod? you're cute. whatever. can you get my plane? yeah, i don't do planes. i just do lightning. ♪ it takes a lot of work to run this business. but i really love it. i'm on the move all day long... and sometimes, i don't eat the way i should. so, i drink boost to get the nutrition i'm missing. boost high protein nutritional drink has 15 grams of protein to help maintain muscle and 26 essential vitamins and minerals, including calcium and vitamin d. all with a great taste. boost gives me everything i need... to be up for doing what i love. boost high protein. be up for it. save seven dollars. look in sunday's paper. outer layer of your enamel tooth surface. white, the thing that's really important to dentists is to make sure that that enamel stays strong and resilient for a lifetime the more that we can strengthen and re-harden that tooth surface, the whiter their patients' teeth are going to be. dentists are going to really want to recommend pronamel strong and bright. it helps to strengthen and re-harden the enamel. it also has stain lifting action. it's going to give their patients the protection that they need and the whiter teeth that they want. ♪ (hard exhalation) honey? can we do this tomorrow? 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is it just the time you put in. >> you see what i'm sitting on? my butt? you sit on your butt and study latin as long as i have, you'd be a master too. >> it just seems too hard. >> no. every poor person, derelict, prostitute -- >> if they can do it -- >> if they can do it, i also say when the romans say to their dogs, to their pets, come here, sit down and eat your dinner. and take your dinner in latin. the dog picked it up. >> as a young man, foster, the son of a milwaukee plumber became a priest in rome with a knack for the language and in 1970 he got a call from the vatican. they wanted him to translate latin for the pope. for the next 40 years he wrote speeches and littetters in the names of four popes. >> what would you say? i said well, i have some ideas. >> reporter: one of the ideas was rejecting the trappings of the church. instead of a priest he dressed like a workingman. instead of a mattress, he slept on the floor. the high profile job didn't quite satisfy him. >> because upstairs in the office, it was useless. no one's reading those letters so i said, i want to do something useful. teaching latin. in my way -- >> reporter: his way meant scrapping the traditional method of memorizing tables of text and treating it as a living spoken language. >> something out of the world of fantasy, a monk in rome speaking latin. >> reporter: he had studied latin by rote but never heard anyone speak it out loud. >> he has scores of students who have become latin teachers, several who have become ivy league professors. that as effected a change on the culture of the way latin was taught. >> reporter: foster would still be teaching and translating at the vatican if a bad fall hadn't landed him in a wheelchair just as a documentary landed him in hot water with the church. >> when you look at a building like that, a giant palace does it seem at odds with the message of the founder. >> certainly. >> does it bother you? >> i mean, well, yes, it does. >> yeah. but there's nothing -- >> if i were the boss i wouldn't be living there. >> foster was flown home to milwaukee never to return to rome. >> the third chapter. >> now 78 he's working on textbooks to share his method. >> here i am 19 years old. >> reporter: but is devoid of sentiment. we asked if he had photos of his life and he said he'd thrown them all in a dumpster years ago. luckily a neighbor claimbed and saved them. >> why would you throw all this out? this is the history of your life. >> i never want to look at that. it's past, gone, over with, done, forgotten, good-bye. >> reporter: except it isn't, really. >> foster's old students not only carried on the latin summer classes in rome, jason's nonprofit now brings latin into underserved american classrooms helping these kids' english vocabularies in the process. on a recent today, high school students swept through new york's metropolitan museum of art for a latin scavenger hunt. the gospel of father reginald foster is winning converts. >> how long have you been studying now? >> 567 days. >> reporter: so she won't forget she wrote the date on her shoes in roman numerals. >> september 2nd, 2016 and i walked into that classroom and my entire life changed. >> people say it's a dead language. >> it's roaming around. it's not dead. >> you were ready for that. >> i am always ready for that. >> this is fun. >> seeing a young person that excited, even if she doesn't want to admit it i think would make reginald really, really happy and i think that in her it will live on and the tradition will live on. >> latin is easy if it's taught right. >> that's what you've tried to change. >> i am changing. i'm going to teach right now. >> and foster is willing to teach anyone who shows up in milwaukee, no experience needed. his method is also taught in a london summer program and his second book in that five volume series is now headed to the printing press and he says he has no plans to stop teaching. >> amazing. >> car pe diem. >> i took it all the way through high school and it was murder. >> people are learning it the wrong way, he says. >> i think he's probably right because it didn't work for me. thanks. with the hustle and bustle of the holidays behind us, maybe you need a vacation. up next, travel editor peter greenberg shows us the latest travel hot spots around the world. and here at home. you're watching cbs this morning saturday. i have type 2 diabetes. i'm trying to manage my a1c, then i learn type 2 diabetes puts me at greater risk for heart attack or stroke. can one medicine help treat both blood sugar and cardiovascular risk? 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>> strange enough it is not but it is in north america. what's great is you're dealing with hundreds and hundreds of miles of great coastline, it's all drivable. but the big secret is the wine. their wine production is so cool and the quality of their wine is so cool, little known fact, 75% of their product is exported to france. what do the french know that you don't know? take the wine tour and find out. >> i went to baja and i imbibed a lot of tequila but i'll have to go back to the wine. >> okay. >> detroit, michigan, why is this on the list? >> motor city is back. after decades of neglect, they have come back. they have restored all the buildings, they have restored all the parks. there's a great restaurant scene along the river. yes, they have got a great baseball team, we won't talk about their football team, but they are really coming back in a big way. >> one last one and this is one that i have to say surprised me. york, pennsylvania. >> it is. great american history there from the revolutionary war to the civil war. and great food scene, great gallery scene. if you take your kids and ask them where does food come from and they tell you the store, take them to york, pennsylvania. it's the factory tour capital of the world. you get to see how things are actually made from motorcycles to potato chips. >> york peppermint patty? >> yes, but it's no longer made there. i'm sorry. >> but potato chips. >> yes. >> you win some, you lose some. peter greenberg, always good to >> when you walked away in 2005, you were still working. we didn't know all the things that you were doing. you really stayed low. >> i found an altitude i was comfortable with. i found a way to do what i liked to do and avoid some of the parts of it that i was uncomfortable with. >> what were you uncomfortable with? >> well, i mean if you look at me right, physically, like now, i'm like 40 pounds heavier than i was when i did the chappelle show. people are like how did you gain all of that weight s? by resting and eating and paying attention to myself. i have actual relationships with my kids. i've been all over the country touring all of my life but i never saw anything. now i've seen everything. i can talk to people. i have time to stop, if people said they liked me, it wasn't like a brushed past them but i have time to say you do? the way that i engaged the world was different. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ hollywood is gearing up for the 75th annual golden globe awards tomorrow night in beverly hills. the event usually known as one of the industry's biggest parties is taking a more serious tone after explosive revelations about sexual harassment and assault rocked the entertainment world. leonard villarreal has the story. >> reporter: host seth meyers helped roll out the red carpet. it's part of the preparations for the first major awards show forced to confront an industry-wide sexual assault scandal. >> you want to talk about the elephant in the room and this year is about the movies and television shows they were made and they were made under worse circumstances than we understood. >> one of the noticeable differences will be on the red carpet where stars including allison gianni and sersha ronan will be dressed in black to show support for victims of sexual harassment and assault. it's part of a larger movement called time's up. an initiative to advocate for gender equality. it includes a legal defense fund of $15 million to protect women. >> i particularly love that initiative because it deals with people who are not in front of the camera, who are not high profile, workers in this country who totally feel underrepresented and this kind of empowerment, i think, i think it's crucial. >> this is an unprecedented initiative. >> matt bellamy editorial director of the hollywood reporter say some stars are doing more than changing their outfits. >> stars will accept money to wear certain dresses or suits and what we've seen so far is a lot of people are pledging to donate that money to the time's up movement. that's a way of still dressing the part on the red carpet and going through the motions, but helping a cause that the industry really cares about right now. >> a cause actresses hope to talk about on the red carpet. >> i know from interviewers who are getting ready for the red carpet that there's a little bit of nervousness about how to approach the issue. it's supposed to be glamour and front and this is an issue that the industry is confronting. >> do you think this will translate to the stage as people are getting their awards. >> i think this issue of sexual harassment is going to dominate the actual show. >> think this adds an element of intrigue and interest to what can be a predictable awards show. >> for "cbs this morning saturday" videa villarreal, hollywood. this year it will be very interesting. >> the atmosphere will be interesting. >> now here's a look at the weather for your weekend. ♪ ♪ kristen kish has made an unlikely journey from a korean orphanage to a star american chef. she's known for unique and inventive creations and she'll care some of them, next. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday. " how do you chase what you love with moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis? do what i did. ask your doctor about humira. it's proven to help relieve pain and protect joints from further irreversible damage in many adults. humira works by targeting and helping to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. humira has been clinically studied for over 20 years. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. ready for a new chapter? talk to your rheumatologist about humira. this is humira at work. you wof your daily routine, so why treat your mouth any differently? complete the job with listerine® help prevent plaque, early gum disease, bad breath and kill up to 99.9% of germs. listerine® bring out the bold™ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ the all new 2018 camry. toyota. let's go places. but when we brought our daughter home, that was it. now i have nicoderm cq. the nicoderm cq patch with unique extended release technology helps prevent your urge to smoke all day. it's the best thing that ever happened to me. every great why needs a great how. . this morning on "the dish," a chef whose journey in life began half a world away. kristen kish was born in seoul, south korea. adopt at 4 months old from an american couple in michigan, she grew up in a typical suburban midwestern home and at age 5 fell in love with cooking shows and tv chefs. >> after culinary school and jobs in some of boston's most acclaimed restaurants, she had her own tv success gaining fame as the season 10 winner of "top chef." and now she can add author to her career achievements. "kristen kish cooking" was just published. welcome to "the dish." >> thank you for having me. >> tell us about this spectacular table. >> the front part is the stuffed cabbage and that's a dish that my grandmother would make with me. i would stand on the step stool. a simple, very beautiful ribeye with garlic and shal olotshallo. we have fancy onion rings and coffee cake. >> when people are here, they think korean foods but here we're talking about stuffed cabbage. talk about your early culinary education in michigan. >> i grew up watching great chefs of the world so it would be all these amazing chefs and very little were from asia, to be honest. so i started to pick up and i learned through them. that's how i started kind of developing my sense of what cooking meant to me. >> you developed an early affection for knives. >> i did. a 10-inch chef's knife, luckily it was quite dull, but that's the first thing that you see the chefs do is prep their food. and so -- >> you started cutting everything? >> i did. my mother would always go in the refrigerator and go why are all of our groceries. i cut them up. >> why do you think you were into cooking? what was it about the field that was so interesting to you? >> i think when i watched something and somebody does something really beautifully and competently with their hands, i zone into it immediately. and traps like had i watched like woodworking videos as a kid maybe i'd be a woodworker but i zoned into the cooking shows. i think that's kind of where it started. >> you went to college, though, to study business. >> yeah. >> but you hated it. >> awful. i hated everything about the college experience. i didn't want to go to any more frat parties. i wanted nothing to do with it so i dropped out after a year and decided to go to culinary school. >> so let's talk a little bit about korea because you were adopted from seoul. at onee kim chi i read. what did tha like for you and did it resonate at all? >> i went to a grand rapids food festival and it was one of the foods being featured. so my mother brought me to that. she didn't know much about it either. the smell was quite offputting as a kid but when i tasted it, i thought if we put this on top of a burger, that all makes sense to me and i think that was probably one of the first dishes that i built in my head. >> what took you to boston and barbara lynch? >> after culinary school in chicago, being an irresponsible college student, my parents were like, okay, you've got to get your life together. >> buckle down. >> we're going to give you one more try to get this right. so you can go to boston for three months, get a job, we'll help you out, and i ended up staying. eventually it led to barbara and working for barbara lynch. >> and barbara lynch is the one who ultimately recommended you for top chef? >> she did. i didn't understand what she was doing. she literally came back and was like i put your name in, i hope you're okay with that. i'm like no, i'm not. i don't want to do it. i don't want to do tv, i don't want to go on a competition show. but the timing worked out perfectly and i just said yes. >> what did you learn on that show? >> i learned that it was okay to be myself. and i learned that i was capable of doing more than what i ever thought i could do, which then built confidence and that obviously helps going going on to cook. >> the cookbook is three years in the making? >> three years. from proposal to publication, yeah. so if i knew what birthing a child felt like, i would say this was my child. >> for someone who has a book coming out, the book is harder. definitively, you heard it here. >> if you could share this bounty with any figure past or presenting, who would it be? >> i thought about that answer and i would have to say probably my birth mother because i think there would be a lot of great stories told through a meal shared with her. >> for sure. kristen kish, thank you. for more on chef kish and the dish, head to our website, cbsthismorning.com. up next, the barr brothers make a return to studio 57 on the heels of their new album the critics call rich and compelling. hear them perform after the break. this is "cbs this morning saturday." match, is this for real? yep. we match all the cash back new cardmembers earn at the end of their first year, automatically. whoo! i got my money! hard to contain yourself, isn't it? uh huh! let it go! whoo! get a dollar-for-dollar match at the end of your first year. only from discover. but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. the name to remember. wiback like it could used to? 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[ both laugh ] here, blow. blow on it. you see it, right? is there a draft in here? i'm telling you, it's so easy to get home insurance on progressive.com. progressive can't save you from becoming your parents. but we can save you money when you bundle home and auto. yeeeeaaaahhh!an't save you from becoming your parents. uh oh...a painful sore throat? not now. take cépacol instamax. look! unlike regular cough drops it contains 2 max strength pain relievers and cools in seconds. bye bye sore throat. take cépacol instamax. ♪ this morning on our saturday session, the barr brothers. real-life brothers brad and andrew barr have been playing music together since childhood. originally from providence, rhode island, they formed their band after a move to montreal and in 2011 released their debut album, winning acclaim for their combination of folk, rock and the blues. >> and now from their new album "queens of the breakers" performing the song hideous glorious here are the barr brothers. ♪ did you come here for an ambush ♪ ♪ did you come here for the truth ♪ ♪ did you come here to tighten it down or to turn it loose ♪ ♪ running out of reasons ♪ for keeping it neat ♪ running out of ground beneath my feet ♪ ♪ darling, i'm not saying that you are not ♪ ♪ the best thing i've got ♪ and that's saying a lot ♪ i could still feel that oh ♪ the revelation nailed me to the wall ♪ ♪ now i can't recall ♪ there was any revelation there at all ♪ ♪ just some kids getting high ♪ about it all ♪ ♪ there's nothing easy about it ♪ ♪ don't know which way i should run ♪ ♪ maybe go to mississippi ♪ get a ruide, get a song ♪ ♪ remember how we did it ♪ the first thousand times ♪ wannabe a thousand people living a thousand different lives ♪ ♪ and i could still feel that ♪ the revelation nailed me to the wall ♪ ♪ now i can't recall that there was any revelation there at all ♪ ♪ just some kids getting high about it all ♪ >> don't go away, we'll be right back with more music from the barr brothers. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." >> announcer: saturday sessions are sponsored by blue buffalo. you love your pets like family, so feed them like family, with blue. 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(avo) to help control cravings. one ingredient in contrave may increase suicidal thoughts or actions in some children, teens, and young adults in the first few months. serious side effects are mood changes like depression and mania, seizures, increased blood pressure or heart rate, liver damage, glaucoma, allergic reactions, and hypoglycemia. not for patients with uncontrolled blood pressure, seizure history, anorexia, bulimia, drug or alcohol withdrawal, on bupropion, opioids, maois, allergy to the ingredients, or pregnant. may cause nausea, constipation, headache, and vomiting. reduce hunger, help control cravings with contrave. now you an talk to a doctor online and get free shipping at getcontravenow.com. what's cool is, today, we have 400 people working across the globe. with office 365, we can all stay connected, from vietnam, to boston, to new york. now with whiteboard, we can all work together at the same time. and 3d in powerpoint shows clients exactly what our cards look like. yeah, having everyone working together on the new teams app is really awesome. seeing all these people react to our cards? that's what makes it all worth it. ♪ ♪ where do you go when you have no one to see ♪ ♪ what do you see when you have not -- >> have a great weekend, everyone. >> we leave you now with more music from the barr brothers. this is "defibrillation." ♪ ♪ you draw the line ♪ you draw it again ♪ follow the light to my closest friends ♪ ♪ sfrat as an arrow ♪ well that depends ♪ you hit the road and the road bends ♪ ♪ i have no quarrels, no enemies ♪ ♪ i know my failures, my expertise ♪ ♪ the righteous gambling of '82 ♪ ♪ you came to me but i was born to you ♪ ♪ where would you wander ♪ what would it mean ♪ there might be saviors but no guarantees ♪ ♪ when we needed something kind of like love ♪ ♪ we fell together i guess just because ♪ ♪ oh my friend sorry, you are relieved ♪ ♪ i no longer need your company ♪ ♪ and what's stuck in my throat is a mystery ♪ ♪ and what it is is a heart breaking, sole shaking, overwhelming undertaking ♪ ♪ hit me once again ♪ island to island breaking my silence ♪ ♪ something inside you is bending like i do ♪ ♪ it's like that song ♪ i just thought i'd save you some time ♪ ♪ straighten it out here and make it rhyme ♪ ♪ it's not in my nature to pretend ♪ ♪ that any one road leads to any one end ♪ and make victory's too heavy for arms like these ♪ ♪ and freedom's too loaded with the speak of destinies ♪ ♪ you just try to see the thing for what it is ♪ ♪ and what it is is a heart breaking, soul shaking, overwhelming exhalation ♪ ♪ that hit me once again ♪ ♪ >> for those of you still with us, we have more music from the barr brothers. >> this is "queens of the breakers." ♪ ♪ it'll never come easy ♪ baby they don't come clean ♪ they won't come sweeping ♪ but sometimes it comes mean ♪ it's trying to put a fire out ♪ ♪ with matches and gasoline ♪ we've been going around and around ♪ ♪ have you really been ♪ you know we were good friends ♪ ♪ it's funny how we don't talk ♪ i flew over your city last night on the red eye back from new york ♪ ♪ i was looking for you down on the ground ♪ ♪ wondering if you still remember ♪ ♪ the way that we just walked around ♪ ♪ like the queens of the breaker ♪ ♪ and i've been making up time ♪ i've been finally in tune ♪ and i've been sales of legal pot start today. but there's a cloud of confusion in san francisco: mitted to sell it? illegal battle to start today, but there is a cloud of confusion and semper cisco. who is permitted to sell the legal marijuana? >> fire and theory, trump administration has broke a bear -- bay area maker -- record. we will get you started with our breakout news this morning. we are still seeing if you lingering showers but it is very light. here's the high death doppler to give you an idea of where that is. a lot of clouds in the higher elevations in foothills but let's take you down to the south first, they just passed through morgan hill's anok

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