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fingers to save a baby with just seconds to spare. but first we begin this morning with today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. everybody up here, by the way, is united, no matter who wins this damn thing we'll all stand together. >> the democrats debate ahead of the new hampshire primary. >> we're g to hav to take mr. trump down on the economy because if you listen to him he's crowing about it every single day and beat us unless we can take him down on the economy, stupid. >> japan and the u.s. reporting their first fatalities from the coronavirus. two victims were both in the city of wuhan. that, of course, the epicenter of the outbreak. >> president trump firing two top officials who testified in the house impeachment inquiry. >> i'm deeply concerned about the effect that this is going to have on accountability for the president going forward. >> i'll always feel responsible as the man out front. >> a. j. hinchize apologizes. >> you're in the dug out? >> i heard it. >> nasty storm cell caused tornadoes, flash flooding and heavy snow across the country this week. >> new record for most fans to watch tentennis. >> all that -- >> packers fan woke up from surgery with a message. >> bill nye, some sort of fashion show as he's walking down the catwalk. >> and all that matters. >> a rough week. i feel like nancy pelosi's copy of the state of the union. >> yes, now we'll look back on this and think hey when do we get the results of the iowa caucus? >> on "cbs this morning: saturday". ♪ a young boy just sang. ♪ >> announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places. >> what a voice. >> made my morning. >> i imagine i sound like that. do not sound like al attiyah all. welcome back to the weekend everybody i'm dana jacobson along with jeff glor and michelle miller. it's oscar weekend. this weekend we'll go nice. while most of the nominated films are widely acclaimed it often seems that film that truly have staying power either lose the award or weren't critically acclaimed to begin with. we talk with experts why award shows get it wrong. >> nominated for 11 academy awards back in 1975. "chinatown" with jack nicholson the best screenplay of all time. one author calls it a canary in the coal mine. we'll explore the film and this fascinating theory. then what would it be without ordering a little delivery. restaurants have done it for years. this year for the first time restaurants expect to make more money from take out than from dining in. we're looking the at the proliferation of food delivery apps and hear the simple idea that helped start billion dollar businesses. that's ahead. we begin this morning with a first in the deadly coronavirus outbreak. the u.s. embassy in beijing confirmed overnight that the first american has died from the virus at the epicenter in the chinese city of wuhan. the outbreak is responsible for more than 720 deaths, all but two occurred in mainland china. more than 34,000 people have been infected with the virus worldwide, including at least 12 confirmed cases of the virus right here in the united states. michael george is here with more details on the latest death. michael, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the embassy offered very few details on the american who died but we do know he was 60 years old and died on wednesday in wuhan at a hospital. hundreds of american evacuees prepared for their return to the u.s.. roughly 300 american evacuees arrived at military bases around the u.s., all of them coming from wuhan, china the epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak. >> certainly, it's concerning. >> reporter: this doctor leads the coronavirus response team at travis air force base in california where 200 passengers are quarantined. he said five disdisplayed symptoms and were hospitalized. >> fever or shortness of breath. along with cough. >> reporter: other flights loaded with evacuees landed in omaha, nebraska and stein, texas where officials wearing hazmat suits escorted passengers off the plane to start a 14 day quarantine. >> we did not find any illness among the passengers. >> reporter: the largest single group of confirmed infections outside of china exists in japan on the diamond princess cruise ship. at least 3400 passengers and crew are currently on board. the ship has been docked in yokohama since wednesday. >> when you take the temperature three times a day. >> reporter: in china 60 million people are on some kind of partial or total public transportation lockdown to try to contain the virus. new research suggests an endangered mammal whose scales are valued may have passed the virus to humans. u.s. based cruise lines are taking their own precautions. royal caribbean and norwegian issued ban for any guests holding a chinese, macao or hong kong passport. >> joining us now to discuss the global health crisis in detail is dr. david agus. good morning. so a lot we don't know about corona. >> the different the types of coronavirus the common cold a third after type of coronavirus. this is an aggressive type of coronavirus that classically goes to the lung and causes an immune response. as it gets greater it's harder and harder to breathe. patients are admitted to the hospital and slowly get worse and that's why they pass way. >> most vulnerable are the young and elderly. >> we're seeing 20, 30 and 40-year-olds die. someone admitted to the hospital with abdominal pain and 12 health care workers have died. >> it's estimated 12,000 death from the flu. how worried should americans be about coronavirus. >> coronavirus is not going to cause a major issue in the united states. we have health care institutions that can cordon people off. give them supportive care. this happened in a part of china where there wasn't great medical systems which is why they had to build the these thousand bed hospitals in the matter of a week. it begs you, pushes you, why isn't everybody getting a flu vaccine? we're going to have 40 to 60,000 deaths in the united states from the influenza and it's preventable. >> there are only 12 confirmed cases of coronavirus here in the states. >> no question. notorious difference in numbers and we have to step up as a nation and start to prevent. >> is there a vaccination, something that's working to stop this? >> we have treatments that we think work. they work for similar viruses and some data they worked in asia in certain patients and those are generic drugs that are available that were meant to treat hiv or influenza they work against this coronavirus. the clinical trial is ongoing in china. my gut is there will be some benefit there. supportive care we have and vaccines are being developed. it will be at least a year and a half until we have a real vaccine. there's hope here we have these drugs that work. >> along the lines in trying to stop the spread we see people wearing masks. is that enough? >> it's n95. prevents 95% of thing going in. what it doesn't prevent is small thing. viruses are small. they will not prevent viruses from getting in but prevent droplets. so it's not wrong to wear a mask but they don't do that much to stop the spread of virus. they look kind of cool. >> not really cool. how much worse does this get in china before it gets better? >> that's the million dollar question is that there's -- the epidemiologists are saying it will peak in the next week and then go down and a second peak in the fall towards the end of the year classically happens with outbreaks like this. there's not a lot of transparency in china. they are only testing people who are ill. people mild to moderate are not tested. when you are not told you're positive you can go out and spread to somebody else. this is a public health nightmare. dr. david agus, thank you. leading democratic procedural candidate are spending the weekend crisscrossing new hampshire. ahead of that state's first in the nation primary on the tuesday. the latest poll shows bernie sanders, senator from neighboring vermont leading the pack. he's followed by former south bend, indiana mayor pete buttigieg and massachusetts senator elizabeth warren. while former vice president joe biden slipped to fourth place. last night seven of the candidates debated one last time before new hampshire voters make their choice. nicole kikole killion is in man. >> reporter: the candidate will share the stage once again today both at a presidential forum and a democratic dinner and of course they will don't make their cases directly to voters here over the next several days. meanwhile the emerging front-runners in this race, bernie sanders and pete buttigieg spent most of last night fending off attacks from the other candidates. >> the field of democratic hopefuls once numbering more than two dozen now down to a handful. and with three days to go before the new hampshire primary the remaining candidates clashed over each other's electability. >> is anybody else on the stage concerned about having a democratic socialist on the democratic ticket? >> i'm not. >> bernie is labelling himself not me, democratic socialist. that's the president that will label on bernie. >> the candidates took shots at bernie sanders embrace of democratic socialism and pete buttigieg's relative lack of experience. >> we have a newcomer in the white house and look where it got us. i think having somebody with experience is a good thing. >> the front-runners answered those charges and took aim at each other. >> the biggest risk we can take at a time like this would be to go up that fundamentally new challenge by trying to fall back on the familiar. politics says it's my way or the highway. >> the way you bring people together is by presenting an agenda that works for the working people of this country, not for the billionaire class. >> while the candidates disagreed over issues like health care. >> what medicare for all will do is save the average american substantial sums of money. >> bernie's plan costs double, double what the taxpayers are paying for every single program we spend on in the united states of america. >> and campaign finance. >> everyone on this stage except amy and me is either a billionaire or receiving help from p.a.c.s that can do unlimited spending. >> donald trump according to news reports and his allies raised $25 million today. we need to go into that fight with everything that we've got. >> they agreed on one thing. whoever emerges as the democratic nominee must beat donald trump in the general election. >> donald trump is not the cause of all of our problems and we make a mistake when we act like he is. >> that's right. >> he is a symptom of a disease that's been building up in our communities for yearser and decades and it's our job to get to the harder work of curing the disease. >> donald trump's worse nightmare is a candidate that will bring people in from the middle. >> you have to have experience to take him down. this is not a question of he's a nice guy who will listen. we need people with experience. >> we're going to force this president to stand on that debate stage actually next to somebody who lives in a middle class neighborhood in the industrial midwest in the exact kind of community he pretends to speak for but turns his back on. one candidate not on the debate stage, michael bloomberg. he just picked up an endorsement from president trump's former navy secretary richard spencer. bloomberg is not on the ballot here. instead he's focused on the 14 states that southeast super tuesday. >> made it clear that's where he wants his money to go. president trump has begun his revenge in the wake of his impeachment trial. yesterday he ousted the two witnesses who provided some of the most damaging testimony against him. gordon sondland, the ambassador to the european union and lieutenant colonel alexander vindman who was the top ukraine expert on the white house's national security council. both were removed from their posts on friday. this comes two days after the president was acquitted by the senate. paula reid is at the white house. paula, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, michele. after ousting these two key impeachment witnesses the president appears to be on a campaign of post-acquittal retribution. as he arrived back here at the white house last night he ignored questions about whether these firings are meant to send a message to anyone who was the against him. >> was there a quid pro quo? the answer is yes. >> reporter: late friday gordon sondland revealed he's been recalled from his post as a u.s. ambassador to the each u. nearly three months after he testified that top administration officials knew about an alleged campaign to pressure ukraine to investigate the bidens. >> everyone was in the loop. >> reporter: in a statement gordon sondland said he was advised that the president intended to remove him effective immediately. the announcement came just hours after lieutenant colonel alexander vindman, who also testified against the president in the impeachment hearings was escorted from his desk at the white house. >> it's a message to those who testify against you. >> reporter: alexander vindman a purple heart recipient and iraq war veteran was assigned to the white house's national security council and wasn't due to leave until july. in november he testified about listening in on a call where mr. trump asked the president of ukraine to investigate former vice president joe biden and his son. >> improper for the president to request -- to demand an investigation into a political opponent. >> reporter: in a statement, alexander vindman's lawyer said the truth has cost alexander vindman his job, his career, and his privacy. during his testimony alexander vindman had a message for his father. >> do not worry. i will be fine for telling the truth. >> reporter: the white house has said for months it wanted to down size the nsc and denied inventory would be retaliated against. but late friday trump's son said thank you for unearthing who all needed to be fired. alexander vindman will go back to the pentagon for reassignment. defense secretary mark esper said he'll be welcomed. >> we protect all of our persons, service members from retribution or anything like that. >> reporter: at last night's debate former vice president joe biden led a stand ovation for alexander vindman and even suggested he should receive a medal. meanwhile alexander vindman's brother who worked at the national security council as a lawyer, he too was escorted off the premises yesterday and he too will now return to work at the pentagon. paula, thank you very much. evacuation orders have been issued in parts of the northwest where steady rain and melting psnow caused dangerous flooding. this morning helicopter crews will return to flooded parts of oregon to rescue anyone trapped by high water. more than two dozen residents have been airlifted to safety. a stretch of the highway will be closed up to two weeks because of water damage. a powerful storm system is causing dangerous driving conditions. jeff berardelli has more on the nation's weather today. jeff good morning. >> reporter: good morning, everybody. we have weather whiplash here in the northeast. record highs. temperatures in the 50s yesterday. blustery and cold air this morning. the snow is moving out after a foot in northern new england. the within will still be with us today. take a look at this storm. this is bombo genesis. intensified rapidly. urd i eastern new england. again this achieved bomb strength. combining with a polar vortex pulling the cold air to the south. wind chills are cold across the northeast and upper midwest and collagen tomorrow morning. look at tomorrow morning in burlington. 15 below. run-of-the-mill snowstorm runs across the upper midwest and great lakes with four to eight inches tonight and tomorrow. not a big deal. but some powder. this is exciting for us meteorologist. an atmospheric river moving across hay into united states. this is what powered our storm. it will come together with the polar vortex and produce a mega record breaking jet stream across the north atlantic and that means these flights will have a tail wind. they could reach record speed of 081 miles per hour. sad to say but this is the most exciting thing that's happened to me all year. >> all right, jeff, thank you. federal air safety investigators say they found no evidence of engine failure in kobe bryant's deadly helicopter crash. the lakers legend, his 13-year-old daughter and seven others were killed when the helicopter went down into a rocky hillside outside of los angeles. kris van cleave has more on the final moments of the flight. >> reporter: it appears the engines were working that from a new ntsb report citing evidence the rotors were still spinning with kobe bryant's helicopter crashed killing all nine aboard. a witness told the ntsb he saw the helicopter emerge from the clouds. it was moving fast and descending. it rolled to the left such that he caught a glimpse of its belly. one to two seconds later the crash. he took this picture of the burning wreckage. the ntsb, jennifer last week. do you have a sense if the helicopter came down in one piece? >> preliminary information is that the helicopter was in one piece when it impacted the terrain. >> reporter: a doorbell camera captured the sound of the chopper flying overhead just beforemeensly released image from the security camera was taken. it's the last known image of the helicopter as it disappeared into the clouds about two miles from the crash site. n.tsb said the pilot was climbing to 4,000 feet to get above the clouds. he made it to 2300 and began a left turn. eight second later the helicopter began to descend and then plummeted. the safety board's investigation will take up to a year. we're learning some new details about a public memorial for kobe bryant and the other victims of this crash. february 24th, at the staple center where kobe played as a laker. for "cbs this morning: saturday," kris van cleave, washington. when we first got news about that memorial you saw the 2 and 24 for gianna and kobe and vanessa put out a post. still sad. >> i know it's been a little while, almost two weeks. >> you can imagine how many people will be inside the staple center and outside. >> they talked about making it to the coliseum. >> i'm certain there will be a large crowd wanting to mourn together. >> 22 minutes after the hour. here's a look at your weather for the weekend. it was literally touch and go in a georgia parking lot. where a police officers used his fingers to tap a baby back to life with a delicate form of cpr. we'll show you how this dramatic rescue ended. plus there's an app for that and that includes your appetite. we'll look at the explosive growth of home delivery in the restaurant business and the little known story of how it all began. and it is oscar weekend. we're going to look at the many cases of different actors nominated for playing the very same roles. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". millions of am obama: he's been a leader throughout the country for the past twelve years, mr. michael bloomberg is here. vo: leadership in action. mayor bloomberg and president obama worked together in the fight for gun safety laws, to improve education, and to develop innovative ways to help teens gain the skills needed to find good jobs. obama: at a time when washington is divided in old ideological battles he shows us what can be achieved when we bring people together to seek pragmatic solutions. bloomberg: i'm mike bloomberg and i approve this message. fisn't just about polar bears. we're fighting for our lives, we're fighting for clean air and clean water. that's why i wrote the law to send billions from polluters to communities suffering the most. and only one candidate for president was with us back then, tom steyer. and he's still fighting for us, pledging to make clean air and clean water a right for everyone, o. that's the truth. that's tom steyer. i'm tom steyer and i approve this message. it is considered one of the best movies ever made but how "chinatown" came to be is intertwined with one of the darkest parts of history. we'll hear how an education with humble begins is engaging people all across the country. this is cadre. you chose to focus on hopeful immigrant stories in this? >> yeah. a little bit we felt like, you know, we're in an era where the immigrants have been demonized and marginalize and we felt like we needed to hear stories that sort of portrayed a different version of immigrants. as an immigrant i hear it all the time. >> you said hollywood really seems to portray the imgrant experience in a single way. >> that was the main thing we wanted to do. immigrants, their stories of struggle, absolutely but they have humor in them and they can be romantic and bleak and warm. there is no one immigrant experience. we really wanted people to see that there are these eight stories, there's a variety of experiences. >> not monolithic. >> i feel north what side of the immigration debate you're on, when people hear immigrants you get one image in your head. we wanted the to show different sides. >> as we saw in the clip, fantastic acting in this but not necessarily actors you've seen in a ton of other projects. i guess that's an intentional choice. why do that? >> also big ups to apple we want to make a tv series no stars in it. they said let's do is. >> they said yes right away? >> yes. we thought, hey if we cast known actors, it would kind of take you out of it, one. we wanted to be as close as possible to the actual people whose stories we were portraying. obama: he's been a leader throughout the country for the past twelve years, mr. michael bloomberg is here. vo: leadership in action. mayor bloomberg and president obama worked together in the fight for gun safety laws, to improve education, and to develop innovative ways to help teens gain the skills needed to find good jobs. obama: at a time when washington is divided in old ideological battles he shows us what can be achieved when bloomberg: i'm mike bloomberg and i approve this message. in turkey the driver of a bread truck barrelled through a railroad crossing and then paused on tracks. that was long enough for a speeding freight train that hit the truck sending debris flying and dragging the truck some 1600 feet. the truck driver survived that crash, if you can believe it. he was injured and taken to the hospital eatmen >> he's okay. >> like a cat that has nine lives. welcome back to "cbs this morning: saturday". we continue this half hour with the college admissions scandal. the information ceo of one of the world's largest investment management companies was sentenced in boston to nine months in prison as carter evans reports it's the harshest penalty handed down to any parent in the scandal so far. >> reporter: of all the parent swept up in the college admissions scandal, douglas hodge was especially active. for nearly a did he masterminded a fraud $850,000 to get four of his children into georgetown and usc as phoney athletic recruits and wiretapped allegedly trying to get a fifth school into school. the retired chief executive of investment giant pimco begged the judge for leniency. judge nathaniel gorton called the conduct appalling and mind-boggling and sentenced him to nine months in prison, fined him $750,000, and ordered 500 hours of community service. that same judge will oversee the case of lori loughlin who is charged with even more crimes. >> should lori loughlin be concerned? >> of course. she's freaking out. she's concerned that what happened to hodge will happen to her. >> reporter: the judge said he would have given hodge a year in prison but his $30 million in charitable donations over the years earned him a discount on his sentence. hodge will now report to federal prison on march 20th. for "cbs this morning: saturday," carter evans, los angeles. she's got to be thinking, lori loughlin -- >> what's my sentence. we have a lot more news ahead but first here's a look at your weather for the weekend. it was a harrowing ordeal for the patent and their baby. up next the story of how their child is alive and who came to their aid in the nick of time. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". mornings were made for better things than rheumatoid arthritis or psoriatic arthritis. when considering another treatment, ask about xeljanz xr, a once-daily pill for adults with moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis or active psoriatic arthritis for whom methotrexate did not work well enough. it can reduce pain, swelling, and significantly improve physical function. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections like tb; don't start xeljanz if you have an infection. taking a higher than recommended dose of xeljanz for ra can increase risk of death. serious, sometimes fatal infections, cancers including lymphoma, and blood clots have happened. as have tears in the stomach or 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only seconds between life and death, the collins family finds an angel in god police sergeant harold drummond. >> when i looked down at that baby a. j. i looked down into my son's face, my grandson's face. >> reporter: his knowledge of two finger infant cpr will save the life of a. j. who suffered from a respiratory infection. >> he was in the right place at the right time. and he allowed god to use him to help us save the baby. >> if he can make this sound he's breathing. >> reporter: the what ifs are unimaginable and life would be unthinkable without one of her twins. >> when you heard that baby cry and you know he's going to be okay. >> hard. >> it's hard. >> it is hard. this is what we do. a lot of people don't realize that we're human also. >> this is my future partner. >> reporter: once strangers now connected forever. for "cbs this morning: saturday," janet shamlian, georgia. okay. >> right. >> nothing more beautiful. >> there isn't. >> and hearing that scream. >> oh, gosh what relief. >> wonderful, wonderful. >> yeah. a new source of switching gears quite a bit here after that beautiful story pap new source of revenue for restaurants is cooking, home delivery apps have opened up whole neighborhoods and potential diner. we'll look at the origins of this booming new trend. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". in one week... a lot will happen in your life. wrinkles just won't. neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair's fastest retinol formula works so fast. it takes only one week to reveal younger looking skin. making wrinkles look so last week. rapid wrinkle repair® pair with retinol oil for 2 times the wrinkle fighting power. neutrogena® or more on car insurance.s could save you fifteen percent everybody knows that. well, did you know pinocchio was a bad motivational speaker? i look around this room and i see nothing but untapped potential. you have potential. you have-oh boy. geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. 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partly due towarding apps such as door dash, grubhub, uber eats and many others. restaurants are projected to make more money from food consumed outside their doors than inside. but behind the seemingly overnight success of these apps is more than a two decade effort to change the way we get food. brook silva-braga is here with the origin story. >> reporter: these apps facilitate deliveries from high end venues to chan restaurants like mcdonald's down to your local diner. grubhub which helped launch the industry said it now processes 500,000 orders every day. a remarkable leap from its very modest start. >> how many people do you now have in this building? >> about 1,000. eight floors. >> reporter: for grubhub founder, the road to success started with long walks through the streets of chicago. >> just like this restaurant, we come up and go in and get the menu. >> reporter: in a way, this is what transformed the restaurant industry. menus. >> generally it's the paper ones not these nice laminated ones. >> reporter: you get the menus, sitting in front of a computer creating a list that we take for granted. >> whole new database of all the restaurants. >> reporter: grubhub.com at least a version of it for part of chicago went live back in 2004, the same year facebook launched. >> like repository for menus that were delivered to you based on where you were. >> reporter: grubhub wasn't delivering the food. that was up to the restaurants. they ginned up business. >> we were able to go to restaurants for every dollar of currents. >> reporter: idea for online food delivery dates back to 1999 when seamless web began delivering to law firms in new york. buoncept caught on prettthmaloyt and said what's grubhub, no one would know. >> reporter: this woman was hired to help sell restaurants on the idea in 2011. >> you call your parent. you say i'm working for this thing called grubhub and they say what? >> they thought i said groupon. my first selling experience. >> selling your parents. don't worry. >> yeah. >> reporter: but then something changed. >> you pick the menu items you want to order from. >> reporter: maybe the rise of the smartphone. online ordering mushroomed. by 2014 grubhub had gone public. today it's worth $4.5 billion. but it's battling for business with new competitors with big investors behind them including uber eats, postmeates and door dash who is valued$12 billion. in brooklyn, new york they use all the apps to sell their rice bowls. kathy valera bought the restaurant in 2018. >> you seem pretty busy. why bother with theps>> ar >> reporter: she signed up with grubhub. >> first $300, then $400. then $500. this is amazing. today it's $3,000. so that's why i like it, i'm in love with all the type of apps we have. >> reporter: all those orders are not free. >> what do you pay? >> reporter: 20%. restaurants complain that commission is too high. they provide the food you make the match. is that worth 20% of what i pay for a meal? >> we don't define our prices. we define a minimum. in most places it's 10% to receive orders on grubhub. >> reporter: they are choosing to pay that. >> the restaurant's competition are choosing to that ike you need to do this? is this good to have or a must have? >> i think in theestaant siss i. it'sot wh these people withhisype of you need it. >> reporter: that's in part because grubhub is so good at something called search engine optimization. >> i goggled -- >> reporter: when you search for family corner top results take you to grubhub or seamless page for the restaurant and if you call the number on that page it gets to george only after it's routed through grubhub. but not everyone realizes grubhub charges for that too. if they call-up and place an order you get hit with a fee. if i call the seamless number. >> it comes directly to me. >> reporter: most restaurants are paying a fee for these phone calls. >> not that i know of. >> reporter: after looking at his statement george told us he's paying those fees and will stick with grubhub. in a way maloney walking into all those restaurants helped usher in the to a world where people are less likely to walk into a restaurant. >> they are not looking in the phone book. they are looking on their app to find out who delivers. >> the relationship between humans and their local restaurants is changing and has been changing, really ever since we started this business. >> reporter: one interesting direction this could be heading is what's called cloud kitchens. these are basically restaurants that only delivered. not even a store front to walk into. the founder of uber is one of the big investors. >> my son uses this app or all three of those apps like nobody's business. just doesn't seem fair, though, that they get that much out of the business through the cut. >> it's not just with restaurants. we're seeing push back to something called be flash pass. it can change a whole business model. >> we did a story on some of these apps. they don't have to pay benefits to a delivery driver or worry about some of the other things that go with it. while you look at that cut, for some businesses, there's that reason that they want to also. thanks, brook. sunday will be a busy night for restaurant delivery. it's oscar night. while all the nominated films are newsome characters are awfully familiar. we'll look at how apprising roles is a feature of the academy award. >> if you're heading out the door, set your dvr to record "cbs this morning: saturday". coming up, its production is the end of a remarkable hollywood story. we'll tell you about the background of "chinatown". how a program is changing young lives. why big name supporters are singing its praises and our own taste of musical inspiration as christopher paul stelling performs in our "saturday session". you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". these are real people, not actors, who've got their eczema under control. with less eczema, you can show more 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shampoos and conditioners. hungry for more? try our treats mask 3-in-1 conditioner mask or leave-in new fructis treats by garnier, naturally! when you bring me out can you introduce me as "jocker." >> joaquin phoenix is a favorite to win an oscar. >> you know, you remind me of my father. >> heath ledger was awarded best supporting actor in 2009 for playing the joker in "the dark knight." not the only double take. it's actually happened more of then than you might think. robee niroo best robert die supporting actor for playing the dom in "godfather ii." >> i'll make an offer you can refuse. >> presidents are popular. anthony hopkins was nominated for playing richard nixon. while raymond massy and daniel day-lewis were recognized for important training honest abe. it was good to be the queen in 1999. judy dench won best supporting actress for playing elizabeth i in shake spears in love, that same year cate blanchett was up for that role. two actresses in the same movie playing the same role. glia stewart and kate winslet receiving nominations for the character in "titanic". one film in particular shows oscar loves great characters. even the same ones over and over. in the 1937 movie ""a star is born"" both leads got best acting nomination. ♪ with my someone >> so did judy garland and james mason in the 1954 version. and most recently lady gaza was nominated for their 2018 performance. born, 1976, barbara streisand, kris kristofferson. >> just listen. pay attention to what's on the screen. >> one role that remains memorable jack nicholson. we'll look at the story of the acclaimed film and why the author said it signals the end of an era. for some of you your local news comes for the rest of you you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". me a. h in real life a female chief of police. if you play this part well it could soften the ground for someone coming along in real life and taking the part. >> i think it's a way that the populace becomes open to the ideas. i don't know. it's a theory. if they see it on television, like i guess it's possible. i saw it on cbs. >> even though it's based in l.a. you shot it in new york you wanted to be with your kids. >> i have to. i can't pick up and do a series. >> first she turned it down because it has to be based in l.a.. that shows the power you have. you first turned it down. >> they've been driving around with palm tre of the trucks. >> i'm going to get in trouble for guesting all the secrets out of the bag. >> no, you're not. >> we had west coast foliage in the back of a truck parked in front of the house. put it back triangle. go to the next place. so far, so good. >> leave the one outside my house. i'll take it. >> you should have sign by the end of the season. it wasn't so pretty. >> the first episode tackles the issues that's very much in news about undocumented workers, about migrants. why of it important to tackle something like that right off the bat? >> kind of with any of the episodes issues could have been right off the bat. there is no derth of issues in this country right now. some specific to the west coast and some just nationwide. a lot of stuff. a lot of chaos around the way these things are tom steyer: listen, every democrat running for president is better than the criminal in the white house. we all have progressive plans to address the big challenges facing our country. what makes me different, is i've been working for ten years outside of american people.o the i started need to impeach to hold this lawless president accountable. i'm proposing big reforms like term limits... ...a national referendum... ...and ending corporate money in politics. as president, i'll declare climate change an emergency on day 1. and, use those powers to finally address the climate crisis. and, i've spent 30 years building a successful international business. so, i can take on donald trump on the economy - and beat him. i'm tom steyer and i approve this message - because there is nothing more powerful than the unified voice of the american people. hey, everybody. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday". i'm michelle miller with dana jacobson and jeff glor. and on this oscar weekend we'll help celebrate the movies. coming up this hour it was a great screenplay made into an even better film. the story of how it got made is a saga all its own. we'll look at the creation of "chinatown" with the author of a new book. >> impressions of films can vary through the years. some that failed to wirp us over the first time can later be embraced as classics. and turning to music and lessons legends, we'll see how some big industry names have given back through a music education program that's spreading nationwide. that's all ahead. >> first our top story this hour the first death of an american citizen from the coronavirus outbreak. u.s. embassy in beijing says an american diagnosed with the virus died in wuhan, china on thursday. that's the epicenter of the outbreak. more than 720 people have died from coronavirus in china since the outbreak began. china's government is reporting number of cases. had more than 34,000. but health experts believe the actual number could be much higher. 12 cases have been confirmed here in the u.s. ramy inocencio is in hong kong, just one of the places around the world where the alarm is being raised over the spread of the virus. >> reporter: we're outside the world dream cruise ship where about 4,000 people have been quadranted for the past four days. the good news is that all crew members who said that they were feeling sick with symptoms that included coughing or fever have all been declare negative for the coronavirus. and this morning, in the united states more than 300 additional americans are now one quarantine after arriving from wuhan, china. that's ground zero of the coronavirus outbreak. they were on the final evacuation flights from china according to the state department and landed in omaha, nebraska and san antonio, texas on friday. health officials wearing hazmat suits could be seen escorting passengers to start their 14 days apart from everyone else and for observation. meanwhile in japan the diamond princess cruise ship has been docked in jokohama since wednesday. 60 passengers including at least 11 americans tested positive for the virus. that's the largest single group of confirmed infections outside china. while inside china nearly 60 million people are still on some kind of partial or total public transport lockdown to try to contain this virus. the government is spraying disinfectant on the streets as the army has converted buildings in to makeshift hospitals and with beds for thousands of people. now new research suggests an endangered mammal whose scales are highly valued in chinese medicine may have passed the virus to humans. and cruise lines are clamping down even harder on passengers as coronavirus infections continue to rise. royal caribbean and norwegian are banning all passport holders from china, hong kong and macao until further notice. for cbs "this morning" saturday, ramy inocencio, hong kong. breaking news this morning. in thailand a thai soldier went on a shooting spree. it happened in the northeast part of the country, about 155 miles from bangkok. ten people are reported dead. many at a shopping mall. the soldier reportedly live streamed some of the attack. he's not been apprehended. >> president trump appears to be cleaning house by ousting two key witnesses who testified against him during the impeachment trial. gordon sondland, the ambassador to the european union, and lieutenant colonel alexander vindman who was the top ukraine expert on the white house's national security council were both removed from their posts on friday. former vice president joe biden mentioned alexander vindman's firing during last night's democratic presidential debate. >> they should be pinning a medal on alexander vindman and not on rush limbaugh. i think we should all stand and give colonel alexander vindman a show of how much we supported him. stand up and clap for alexander vindman. >> the president's son donald trump jr. tweeted his thanks to adam schiff the democrat who led the impeachment inquiry for helping unearth quote who all needed to be fired. >> it is about three minutes past the hour. here's a look at the weather for your weekend. unlikely alliances and sensational crimes that's the plot of the movie "chinatown" and the story of how it got made on this oscar weekend. we'll look back on the film and why one author takes it stands as the turning point in the history of hollywood. you're watching "cbs this you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". what they wa and so do we. that's why you'll find natural ingredients like real meat, poultry or fish as the number one ingredient plus vitamins, minerals and nutrients in delicious rachael ray nutrish recipes. and, there's no artificial flavors or preservatives. give your pets the 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battles he shows us what can be achieved when we bring people together to seek pragmatic solutions. bloomberg: i'm mike bloomberg and i approve this message. this is oscars weekend. movies biggest night of the year. award will be given out in hollywood. that hasn't changed. hollywood has changed dramatically and that's the focus of a new book just out. it's called "the big good-bye" and explores the end of an era in hollywood, a change that gave us the hollywood we he today through the lens of a watershed film, "chinatown". >> people only come to me when they are in a desperate situation. i help them out. i don't kick people out of their houses. >> from it's earliest scenes "chinatown" is a metaphor for futility of good intentions. for a private detective james j.j. gittes. played by nicholson. nicole "sopranos" was part of a hollywood system about to come crashing down. why is it the big good-bye the? >> good-bye to a holod de lge a great product. >> for over a decade sam watson has been writing about hollywood and the film business. his 2010 best seller told the story of audrey hepburn and breakfast at tiffany's. he's now the author of "the big good-bye." >> a big good-bye to america before watergate and america before vietnam. so it's a big good-bye to innocence. >> set in 1937, the corruption at the center of "chinatown" is inspired by real events from the early 1900s when powerful city officials and businessmen seeking water for rapidly growing los angeles obtained rights fropo rural farmers. the movie focuses on nicholson's character who stumbles on a similar scheme on a wealthy businessman. >> you may think you know what you're doing but believe me you don't. >> faye dunaway as a classic femme fatale with a twist. hawk koch was an assistant director. >> did you know something special was happening? >> oh, yeah. the script w we we excited hasn't the best of the best in every department. >> the movie was written by robert towne and is considered the greatest script in history. it won an oscar for best original screenplay in 1975. conceived at the height of watergate it mirrored reality. the more editions for truth more darkness he finds. >> did it get any better than this >> i don't know if it got better, it dot different. >> koch and towne were part of hollywo hollywood. >> when robert evans got the script for "chinatown" it didn't make any sense to him. it was incomprehensible. he bet on it because it was a robert towne script and robert towne meant talent. >> he said i don't know what this is about but you guys i trust so go do it. caare you going tg to mianag a little blue pablo here? no. >> j.j. gittes to see mr. murray. >> at the peak of his powers jack nicholson is in every scene of "chinatown". but koch says one of the most important parts about economic kcold -- nicholson cultivated off-screen. >> you fell in love with him. jack had that sparkle in his eye you want to be around him. >> the other central player iran "chinatown" was the director, roman possible land i can who also has a cameo in the film. >> next time he'll lose the whole thing. >> this was polanski's first film in hollywood since his pregnant wife sharon tate was murdered by chafrls manson followers in 1969. three years after "chinatown's" release polanski was charged with drug and sexually assaulting a 13-year-old girl. he pled guilty to a lesser crime of sex with a minor but fled the country before sentencing. >> it's impossible for a lot of people to have any discussion of polanski the filmmaker given what happened. >> i would encourage people as a lover of film and someone who believes polanski may be our greatest living filmmaker, i would encourage those people to look at the work and hopefully be able to hold both truths in their hearts and minds that he did this horrible thing, and made these beautiful films. reality includes both. ♪ >> in relatively short order after "chinatown" came out, polanski was out of the country, bob evans was out at paramount, robert towne began battling drug issues that prevented him from writing ever the same way again. and a landmark hollywood movie arrived. >> you're going to need a bigger boat. >> "jaws," the original blockbuster . >> you see a lot of money that would normally be allocated for production not going on the screen but going into marketing campaigns. the actual artistic component becomes less and less and less important to the bottom line and that's given way to the world that we have now. it's a sad book. >> now you're making me sad. >> it's sad book. >> i disagree. >> thank you for saying that. >> i think it's energizing to read about something that somebody is passionate about. doesn't mean it's sad. >> you're right. you have to be passionate in order to be sad. you have to love something. it's losing if it means anything. that's what "chinatown" is. "chinatown" is loving something and losing something. >> he has a grim view of whether today's hollywood can ever produce original movies like it did in the early 1970s. hawk koch is a little more hopeful. >> put that gun away. let the police handle this. >> he owns the police. >> can a movie like this be made today >> boy, i hope so. i would hope so. there are still people in our town that to make really good stories. we're story tellers. i'm very proud to have been part of this film. very proud. >> it's chinatown. >> that famous final line. sam and hawk aren't saying great movies aren't being made but not coming out of the hollywood system. >> movies like "parasite." >> that's how harvey weinstein made his, you know, made his name because he knew,000 market films in a situation that a lot of people are saying, you know, maybe some of those films that were well marketed didn't deserve some of the oscar attention that they received. >> sam watson does a wonderful job with this book. it's called "the big good-bye" meticulously researched. bringing everything inside one book. >> end of an era. >> music greats are giving back through a unique program of music jaeeducation. we'll hear how it grew from a simple idea to an enterprise in cities. you're scratching "cbs this morning: saturday". >> announcer: this portion sponsored by toyota. let's go places. i got room. hop in! go! i'll hold it off! mondays, right? you guys go! 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( ♪ ) the all-new highlander. toyota. let's go places. ocean spray farmers harvest we save every drop of rain. study every bite of frost. because the good things we do today can help harvest a better tomorrow. ocean spray. harvest goodness. month after month i'm doing it all. the supplements... the veggies... the water. but i still have recurring constipation, belly pain, straining and bloating. my doctor said i could have a real medical condition called ibs-c. for my recurring constipation and belly pain from ibs-c... i said "yes" to linzess. linzess treats adults with ibs with constipation. linzess is not a laxative. it works differently. it helps relieve belly pain and lets you have more frequent and complete bowel movements. do not give to children less than six. and it should not be given to children six to less than 18. it may harm them. do not take linzess if you have a bowel blockage. get immediate help if you develop unusual or severe stomach pain. especially with bloody or black stools. the most common side effect is diarrhea. sometimes severe. if it's severe, stop taking linzess and call your doctor right away. other side effects include gas, stomach area pain and swelling. i'm doing it all. and i said "yes" to linzess. ask your doctor about linzess. ♪ ♪ so iand saw officer wilsonil-a for come in. i decided to place a dine in mobile order and have a cookie delivered to him just to show appreciation for his service for our community. a few minutes later i noticed that officer wilson had gotten up and left, and i knew he hadn't gotten his cookie yet. and i'm headed to my car. i turn around and see allie and she's running after me. mr. policer officer! mr. policer officer! usually when someone yells, "officer, officer!" they want to ask me about a ticket they got. i absolutely wanted the cookie. this cookie is delicious. the impact of music education on children and young adults is well documented. mae. ctive and say improves rots hepp t have fiedi one that offer budding musicians a stage and a list of mentors that need no introduction. not every day a pop superthe star walks into a boys and girls club and commences a jam session. >> my mom always told me i was rapping. >> listens in on a rap demo. >> with the message. get out of here. >> panic at the disco is a mentor in a movement. >> you got all time and all this stuff. >> bringing state-of-the-art access to young people. >> if i had access to this studio at these kids' age i would have been much more well prepared and well versed for the music industry. we started it. head dive first in. not knowing anything. would have helped to have some kind of guidance the this is how you write a song. >> this is our jam room. >> this brand-new recording room in las vegas is the latest venue in notes for note. >> legitimate pro studio. >> and the brain child of philip gilley. he came up with the idea in his 20s while mentoring a student through big brothers, big sisters. >> it was something we could learn something side-by-side. maybe as a musician he could play music but there was no place to go and do that. >> he created one. >> you convinced the city of santa barbara to give him a little place. >> and caught the eye of rod heir. >> this is an idea like i had 20 years ago. i said we can do this anywhere. you can put this in any city in america. would you be willing to make this your life's work. >> at the time gilley was parking cars at lucky's steakhouse a famous watering hole in santa barbara, california. >> a lot of celebrities, a lot of musicians coming through. the beauty of that lane i see people continually. i met jeff bridges, carol burnett, connections that led me to saying here's what we do for children and any musician you say that to wish they had something like that. >> and notes for note took off. >> every neighborhood in the united states. >> 13 years later notes for notes has 25 studios in 16 cities. >> i know who i want to be. >> partnerships with the boys and girls clubs and state farm which showcases the studios and its mentors. >> what? >> the point was to have a space to be a good mentor, music is like the platforms they engage right away. they can get all the instruments, they can get all the resources for free. no barriers to entry of not being able to afford something or not being available in cool. then sort of that way you learn, be more about building a bond with someone as you're focused on learning something together. >> i got a whole lot of loving. >> nice. >> whether they ever become the next brandon murray, they will come to a place that they can build confidence through participating,g something. >> before this people looked down on me. they doubted me. now they are proud of me. >> even before the las vegas stal this gift. >> access to something like this is -- >> with that kind of power i can change what's around me. >> for this woman. >> i definitely was writing but didn't know my genre or style as an artist. >> time spent in the nashville studio produced her voice and this song "time." ♪ >> it's not just like walking in to usual school band room it's more like here's what you can get out of all of this stuff, express yourself better as an artist and as a person. >> was there promise in what you saw in these youth? >> i was so floored by the talent i saw. when i got to visit chicago these kids were so catchy. the song is still in my head. i can't get rid of it. ♪ >> when are we going hear it on the radio? >> i hope we hear it soon. these kids are phenomenal. >> and with the celebrity as big as brent john brennabrent -- br. >> it can continue now that precious resources are at their disposal. >> really at the end of the day we believe music has the power to change lives. that means many different things for some children. we give them those tools of confidence, creativity, compassion and community that if they know it can exist here then it can exist wherever they go next and that transpires in their lives. >> when i heard these kids sing, not kid, young teens, look, i have goose bumps here. you know it just is so refreshing to see them creating and guess what? this program is going for the first time to a public school in greensboro, north carolina where it will be there 24/7. power in music. >> wonderful voices. like the word of a great artist on film you loved in time others find appreciation decades later. still ahead we'll look at film that failed to impress the first time around. >> next week on "cbs this morning: saturday," he starred on the football field as a defensive back for more than a decade and now going for the big lights of broadway. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". how does it feel to go into the final scene? >> oh, my gosh. a lot of feelings. a lot of feelings. it's been as you said, you know, almost a decade of my life. i was barely married when we started. >> now you have two kids. >> i have two kids who we dragged all over the planet as we filmed this thing. >> they are happy it's over? >> maybe. but it's been a wonderful gig. it's been just the best experience and the quality of material has been so excellent throughout. i'm going miss that. >> certainly life changing for you, claire. she's so intense and complicated and very patriotic. i know it's acting and i get that. is there a part of you that takes on part of the character that seeps into your dna? how do you reconcile that? >> i wish i knew myself. i had to compartmentalized because she's so loaded. >> yes. >> but, of course, it's also -- she's in me like on a monthly can you l -- molecular level. >> when you start playing a character like that is there a part where you realize she's in me now? >> i think it will be a slow shedding process. i don't think it will happen instantaneously. it can't. we've been cohabitating for so long. >> you said at the beginning you were intimidated by her darkness. >> whenever you read a pilot you have to imagine what it will end up being which is a deep commitment. and she seemed like she was under a lot of duress and never not be. that was daunting. i'm just trying to make people laugh. >> how is that going for you? [ laughter ] >> with 11 nominations including one for best picture t"joker" i a cher shall smash hit earning more than a billion dollars worldwide. it only has a 68% fresh rating on rotten tomatoes. that makes it the most nominated and lowest rated of the best picture nominees. ainu book "the folks behind rotten tomatoes" look how critics, audiences and award voters can disagree what movies will stand the test of time. jamie wax has the story. >> reporter: when it comes to nominees for best pictures, rotten tomatoes editor says one film caught the attention of academy voter as well as critics and audiences. >> i honestly think you could argue one of the best films of the decade maybe all time and that's "parasite." it is 99% certified fresh on our tomato meter. it couples that with a 93% verified audience score. >> reporter: but that kind of consensus isn't always the case. >> at a basic level critics are a different level. >> reporter: joe mears is editor-in-chief of rotten tomatoes. >> the academy is made up of people who work on films themselves. there's a different kind of audience that doesn't always see eye to eye. if you think last year rhapsody was nominated. not a film universally embraced by critics. ♪ >> reporter: in their new rook "rotten movies we love" the editors pay tribute to films that had staying power but got little or no respect from critics upon release. >> the impetus of the book was to look at films that had a rotten review. maybe called classics. maybe movie from our childhood that were not received right by adult critics. >> one of the film that really stand out for me from the book is the one we chose to put on the cover "step brothers." >> i know you touched my drum set. i want to hear that dirty mouth said. >> it's strange when you watch. undeniably hilarious. >> reporter: the book is fill of films now widely considered >> one thing that surprised me is "out of africa." people speak about with reverence but not beloved by critics even though it won best picture. >> people were in love with the performance but found it boring which i can't understand. it's a powerful film. ♪ >> reporter: no matter which film takes home the big prize, joel meares will debate the winner and lowers for a long time. >> and the oscar goes to "crash." >> reporter: like "crash." >> we talk about these movies as if they premiered yesterday. >> i think the conversation between what people incredible think of a film, what critics think of a film, what time does the appreciation and story of a film is all fascinating, especially because we take movies so personally. you look in the comments about outside or what people say, screening on academy award night when things don't go their way or how someone feels. they connect with us wane that's extraordinarily and deeply personal. >> reporter: if you need further evidence that awards don't always indicate how a movie will be thought of in the future, remember "citizen zin -- "citizen kane" did not win best picture. >> a lot of great movies. >> movies are a personal experience. >> yes "saving private southern u.s. isn't one region but many of each with its own special cuisine. that's the philosophy anyway and the subject of his newest cookbook "sampling the best of the south." join us for a sample next on "the dish". you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ tosave your way make more of what's yours. that's ensure max protein, with high protein and 1 gram sugar. it's a sit-up, banana! bend at the waist! i'm tryin'! keep it up. you'll get there. whoa-hoa-hoa! 30 grams of protein, and one gram of sugar. ensure max protein. 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on it with jardiance. ask your doctor about jardiance. ♪ this morning on "the dish" a chef who has traveled far and wide but always stayed close thois southern roots, rob newman was born and raised in arkansas. after a tour in duty he headed off to cooking school. he had a long career in new york and most recently asheville. now his passion is sharing the foods of his native region with the world. >> this fall he released "seeking the south" making it clear there's just not one southern cuisine but many. he's drawn together the best southern recipes to inspire everybody. tell us what we have in front of us. >> surreal to see it all. i spent so much time work on it. start with collard green arugula salad. big old pork roast. you sear it. this is a turnip pancake but also people would know it as a latke. >> this business right here >> peanut butter parfait. chocolate and peanuts. this is deli show you. i'll drink this all at once. a sorghum old-fashioned. not from sugar. >> it's a grain. like really drought resistant in case you wanted to know. >> cheers. >> wait a minute. >> so you take a very untraditional sort of look at southern food. how would you define it? >> sort of landed on the idea of breaking the south down in subregions and i wanted to do a restaurant that xenophobic the south the way i see it as opposed to a big bowl of grits and hush puppies and shrimps which is the stereotype. i didn't know what shrimp and grits and yat lot of thatowund ozarks. that grew what became this book and how i see the south as not one big thing. it's these microregions. >> do you think people appreciate that and get that now >> i hope so. i wrote a book about it. >> i love your back story in that you dropout of college, you go into the army and write about -- you made a list about how to figure out what to do. >> i don't know where that came from. i was sitting around. i wasn't -- i hadn't told my parents i wanted to dropout of college yet. i'm thinking what interests me and how can i possibly make a living doing it. >> which is a great question to ask. >> i went to culinary school in vermont which was a big shift and i wouldn't up in new york. >> wanting to the do southern cuisine doesn't always fit. >> eventually. but i think a lot of chefsos far away from the foods they grew up which is what die. i really wanted to continue to explore asian food even then. >> you recently went to asia. you see a lot of commonality between there and your hometown. >> yeah. totally. i think that's part of what has set me on this path. i mean i'm not trying to say southern food is asian food. when i go there and see the obsession with fried over. they are both not the same, obviously but use a lot of same ingredients. one of the most amazing markets in the south happens every saturday morning at 7:00 a.m. outside of new orleans. real vietnamese market. >> you got it. >> i lived there. >> you know that place. so good. >> i was the first -- >> 8:00 a.m. it's over. such a vietnamese move. >> sign "the dish". >> i got called bo and i lost my mind. >> sign it. then -- >> tell us -- >> can you have it. >> if you can have this meal with anyone past or present who would it be. >> probably my dad because he passed away. and i always wanted to meet the dali lama. i think that would be dinner ta. >> why did you pick the dali lama and your dad. >> he's a vegetarian. they both like beans. >> dali lama, dad and you. sound like a great book title. >> go for it. you got to sign. >> let's do it. >> am i making it too small. >> no that's perfect. >> thank you so much. and for more on chef rob and "the dish" head to our website at "cbs this morning".com. >> up next christopher paul stelling made his tv debut in 2015. he and his band will perform right here in studio 57 as i n'wfood. wching "cbs this morning: saturday". she's in li? it's lil j even he knows that. thanks, captain obvious. don't hate-like their trip, book yours with hotels.com and get rewarded basically everywhere. hotels.com. be there. do that. get rewarded. somebody burned down my she shed nobody burned down your she shed cheryl well my she shed's on fire your she shed was struck by lightning zachary is my she shed covered by state farm? your she sheds covered, cheryl you hear that victor i'm getting a new she shi-er she shed she shi-er? mhhm that's wonderful news home insurance trusted by more people than any other. state farm. go to the pharmacy homecounter for powerful...ore congestion and pressure? ndicor 6 sym.. clin-d is indicated for 8... it. more but maybe not for people with rheumatoid arthritis. because there are options. like an "unjection™". xeljanz xr, a once-daily pill for adults with moderate evto sere ra fm did not work well enough. xeljanz xr can reduce pain, swelling and further joint damage, even without methotrexate. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections like tb; don't start xeljanz if you have an infection. taking a higher than recommended dose of xeljanz for ra can increase risk of death. serious, sometimes fatal infections, cancers including lymphoma, and blood clots have happened. as he tears in the stomach or intestines, serious allergic reactions, and changes in lab results. tell your doctor if you've been somewhere fungal infections are common, or if you've had tb, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. needles. fine for some. but for you, one pill a day may provide symptom relief. ask your doctor about xeljanz xr. an "unjection™". ♪ >> this morning in other "saturday session" return visit christopher paul stelling. he won praise. his album "best of luck" was released yesterday as he kicks off a big nationaltour. here's christopher paul stelling with "trouble continue to follow me." ♪ ♪ you're going to shine ♪ like a diamond ♪ you got to stretch like the sea ♪ ♪ you got to keep keep on moving ♪ ♪ singing trouble continue to follow me ♪ ♪ if you're going to shine ♪ like a diamond ♪ you got to stretch ♪ like the sea ♪ you got to keep ♪ keep on moving ♪ singing trouble continue to follow me ♪ ♪ it's a long and lone some road ♪ ♪ don't have to walk alone ♪ scorched earth and buried fields ♪ ♪ don't have to walk alone ♪ you're on the mend ♪ don't have to walk alone ♪ you're going to shine ♪ like a timed ♪ you got to sletretch like the sea ♪ ♪ you got to keep ♪ keep on moving ♪ trouble continue to follow me ♪ ♪ can you see it up ahead don't have far to go ♪ ♪ when i get there i sit right down don't have far to go ♪ ♪ we're searching ♪ don't have far to go ♪ don't have far to go ♪ you're going to shine ♪ like a diamond ♪ you got to stretch ♪ like the sea ♪ you got to keep ♪ keep on moving ♪ singing trouble ♪ continue to follow me ♪ this life and sea put sorrow away ♪ ♪ push sorrow away ♪ there's no room for those kind of lies ♪ ♪ push sorrow away seven♪ ♪ you're going to shine ♪ like a diamond ♪ you got to stretch ♪ like the sea ♪ you got to keep ♪ keep on moving ♪ singing trouble ♪ continue to follow me ♪ if you're going to shine ♪ like a diamond the ♪ you got to stretch ♪ like the sea ♪ you got to keep ♪ keep on moving ♪ singing ♪ trouble continue to follow me ♪ ♪ continue to follow me [ applause ] don't go away. we'll be right back with more music from christopher paul stelling. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday". 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( ♪ ) juvéderm it. talk to your doctor about the juvéderm collection of fillers. talk to your doctor so why isn't it all about you when it comes to your money? so. what's on your mind? we are a 97-year-old firm built for right now. edward jones. it's time for investing to feel individual. for adults with moderately to severely active aay low your ability to fight infections and may increase your risk of infections and cancer. some serious infections require hospitalization. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you have an infection or flu-like symptoms or sores, have had cancer, or develop new skin growths, or if anyone in your house needs or recently had a vaccine. alert your doctor of new or worsening problems, including headaches, seizures, confusion and vision problems. these may be signs of a rare, potentially fatal brain condition. some serious allergic reactions and lung inflammation can occur. talk to your doctor today, and learn how janssen can help you coplor post se up ♪ don't you go ♪ babe ♪ >> have a great weekend everybody. >> we leaf you now with more music from christopher paul stelling. >> this is "lucky stars." ♪ ♪ thank my lucky stars ♪ never let me down ♪ up in the sky ♪ keep me on the ground ♪ thank my lucky stars ♪ whisper do not beai ♪ this is what we are ♪ the waters we wade ♪ my thing my thing my thing ♪ thank my lucky stars ♪ thank my lucky stars ♪ look after a you do ♪ just because you are mine ♪ i am yours too ♪ thank my thank my thank my t♪ ♪ thank my lucky stars ♪ ♪ thank myucky l poke holes in ♪ may be far away ♪ but they still hold the spark ♪ ♪ thank my thank my thank my ♪ thank my thank my thank my ♪ thank my thank my thank my ♪ thank my lucky stars ♪ thank my lucky the stars ♪ [ applause ] -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com for those of you still with s, more music from christopher paul sinte"hearll me calling." ♪ ♪ been out here hollering ♪ ♪ don't you get so distracted ♪ the way i'm acting ♪ no ♪ way ♪ do ♪ change ♪ a singing feeling ♪ just what i need ♪ don't you hear me calling ♪ i've been out here loc hollering ♪ ♪ don't you get so distracted ♪ don't you see how i'm acting ♪ ♪ no ♪ way ♪ do ♪ change ♪ singing feeling how are you feeling only be alone ♪ ♪ what i need

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