Transcripts For KYW CBS News Sunday Morning 20240622 : compa

Transcripts For KYW CBS News Sunday Morning 20240622



actually just as strong in the mountains of the west. barry peterson will report our cover story. >> it's out there somewhere a treasure chest filled with gold worth a million dollars or maybe more. just follow the clues. >> i'm not going to put it on the map. >> why? >> they have to figure it out for themselves. >> modern day treasure hunt later this "sunday morning." country singer alan jackson has been picking his way through summer for years writing songs gives him peace being on stage not so much. he's ranked as one of the best selling vocalists of all time. but even after 25 years of performing a country almost end alan jackson is as shocked as ever. >> bac k stage simple singer of simple songs and passions beyond a little later. >> summertime brings to mind host of childhood games one which really is played for keeps. bill geist found out firsthand. ♪ >> dream of boardwalk on jersey shores liza stadium. home of the 92nd national marbles tournament. >> who knew. >> don't knock it until you try it. >> rolling to victory later on "sunday morning." >> just when you think ice cream can't get any better it's available now in more flavors than ever with nancy giles will be sampling. >> so many flavors, so little time. vanilla, chocolate. bacon? >> oh, my, god that's crazy. >> we'll pork out on latest in ice cream ahead on "sunday morning." >> tracy smith looks in on some kids looking after endangered sea lyons. christine johnson found a roadside survivor. and a glass of iced tea and mo rocca finally explains how they got that ship in a bottle and more. but first, let's go to the newsroom for the sunday morning headlines. >> good morning, it's july 1 2015. leaders of the european union are meeting in brussels to discuss greece's financial reform. could be the nation's last chance to convince creditors to find new financial assistance. reported greek banks have barely enough cash to last through the end of the week. john kerry continues talks in vienna aimed at agreement with iran over the nuclear program. yesterday the islamic republic supreme leader said whatever the outcomea long struggle against the united states will continue. >> make america great again. we have to. >> republican presidential hopeful donald trump spoke to supporters in las vegas, he believes his comments on illegal mexican immigration have been embraced by a number of americans. the naacp yesterday announced it is ending 15-year-old boycott of south carolina. the action came day after the state took down confederate flag that had been displayed on grounds near the state house. you may recall all the fuss over last year's elaborate u.s.-mexican operation leading to the arrest of notorious mexican druglord el chapo he has escaped from a maximum security prison near the city of taluca. here is one for the record books. evelyn jones celebrated her 108th birthday by tossing out the ceremonial first pitch at the seattle mariners game. that makes her the oldest person ever to do so. the previous record was held by a 105-year-old. now today's weather thunderstorms threaten large section of the midwest scattered storms are likely parts of the southeast and southwest. while blazing heat will make the plains sizzle. and week ahead chance of more scattered storms mostly sunny and hot from compost to coast. >> next -- ♪ the colorful history of grey gardens. and later -- >> there's 265 and hundreds and >> cowan: this wood shingled summer house is considered almost quaint. but it was a proper 14-room mansion when it was built in 1897. >> an imam could you lat garden bloomed out back. sheltering from the grey stormy winds of eastern long islands. the home's reputation came not from that grey garden, but from he can senn particular inhabitants. >> you have to be real individual. >> they were the two edies big edie beale the mother and little edie beale the daughter. >> you know what they said. >> perhaps albert and david never would have shown up to make the 1975 documentary "grey gardens" but they were somebody. the black sheet of the bouvier family. and cousin to none other than jacqueline kennedy owe insurances. bought the home in 1923 for his wife. back then lives were full of high society must haves, country clubs, debutante balls and the like. when beale divorced his wife little edie came home to take care of her mother. and for the next 40-some years their lives and the house unraveled together. >> any little rat hole even on 10th avenue i would like better. ♪ >> film finds them living in sickle room eating liver pate and ice cream. superior round the by trash cats and other wildlife. including raccoons living in the walls who they fed like pets. it was big news when the country board of health tried to evict them. they refused to leave. their famous relative did pay to have the homemade at least san tore but soon it began to decay all over again. it's a tale so odd it's become pop culture. ♪ in 2006 grey gardens was made into a tony award winning musical. and after that hbo turned it into a movie. starring very convincing jessica lange and drew bury mother of. >> you can't have your cake and eat it to in life. yes, i did. i had my cake. loved it. masticated it. chewed it. >> real big edie died in 1977. little edie left alone and penniless finally agreed to sell her crumbling we'd-choked breck. but who would buy it? >> walked in the in transhallway i said, this is the most beautiful house i've ever seen. and little edie said it's yours. >> journalist salie quinn and her late husband ben bradlee, the famed editor of the "washington post," bought the house for $220,000 in 1979. with the agreement that they wouldn't tear it down. >> the back of the house was flapping in the wind. i walked over to the piano i sort of went dink dink dink, the whole piano collapsed. >> that room now looks like this. the rest of the home does too. even that bedroom the two had shared now been restored back to its 1920 glory. >> in order to get rid of the cat smell we had to tear out the floors and the walls. ♪ not far down the road at the bay street theater in sag harbor yet another play is in production. more proof the story of grey garden lives on. as for little edie she died in 2002. after finally leaving the hamptons for florida. but inside the home that will forever bear the grey gardens name, some say the walls still speak two of the who would never leave. ♪ >> cowan: something's fishy. ahead alan jackson explains. i try hard to get a great shape. this... i can do easily. new benefiber healthy shape helps curb cravings. it's a clear, taste-free daily supplement that's clinically proven to help keep me fuller longer. new benefiber healthy shape. this, i can do. [ female announcer ] when you're serious about fighting wrinkles, turn to roc® retinol correxion®. one week fine lines appear to fade. one month deep wrinkles look smoother. after one year, skin looks ageless. high performance skincare™ only from roc®. >> cowan: hid some of his treasure right here on long island. the certain for hidden wealth stretches far and wide. barry peterson now with a story that took some digging. >> ever since i was a little kid i always wanted to go out and find treasure. >> it is so much more than just a stroll in the montana woods for dal neitzel. >> i read all those pirate magazines and comic books. now i look for one for real. >> like thousands of others in the rocky mountains this summer he's here on a hunt for this treasure chest. fit for a pirate. filled with gold, precious medals and ancient artifacts. its exact dollar value is in the known, some say a million, some say millions. how long have with you looking? >> i've been looking now for about five years. >> aren't you getting a little discouraged at this point? >> no. nothing to get discouraged about. >> but this isn't some long lost treasure. that is hidden treasure, placed by an eccentric millionaire five years ago. its there for the taking, if you can figure out the clues. >> i believe that his secret place where there is some kind of running water. >> on this day the clues have taken near yellowstone national park. to this rock. maybe dal just steps away from life-changing wealth or -- >> i don't think this is it. maybe not. dal had long career as professional treasure hunter salvaging sunken ships but this is his toughest quest yet. this trip was his 64th attempt. there's no guarantee it's going to be found even in our lifetime. >> that's right. but that doesn't stop me from looking for it because it's town look for it. and there's always the chance. always the chance. >> which no one knows better than the man who hid it. 84-year-old forest fenn. who made career out of collecting treasures of his own. >> well mr. peterson, let's go. >> that's right. the pipe from the endian chief who bested george custer and his men at little big horn. fenn grew up in texas explored the american west. learned a lot about life's value as a fighter pilot in vietnam where he was shot down twice. eventually moved to santa fe and made his millions as a successful art and antique dealer. the idea of a treasure hunt started after he survived a bout with cancer. >> i said i've had so much fun collecting all of these things. why not let somebody else have the same opportunity that i've had. >> he drove out across the rockies and left the chest. >> when i walked back to my car i talked to myself out loud nobody was around i said, did you really do that? i started laughing. with my treasures bold -- >> fenn then wrote a poem with nine clues. placing the fresh sure where in the rockies in one of four states. montana, wyoming, colorado or new mexico. >> there is no place the end as they were drawing nigh, no paddle up the creek just heavy loads and water high. >> do you want to add anything to the hips? >> the fresh suffer not hidden in a mine. lot of these old mines are dangerous. they have snakes black widow. >> that's a good hint and good piece of advice. >> did i give you a hint? really? you're not being fair to me barry. >> i don't think that narrows it down a lot i got to tell you. >> it turns out launched a lot of lookers. what has been the response from people who are trying to find this fresh newer. >> i stopped keeping e-mails at 65,000. >> 65,000? add to that -- the countless more on youtube. with their own plans to find the treasure. >> if you look at first line as i have gone alone in there. if you count the number of syllables. count those for us. >> but is it really out there? >> assure me somehow that this fresh surreal. how do i know that? >> only way that i can prove to you that the treasure is hidden is to take you there. >> what are my chances that you are going to do that? >> there's old saying two people can keep a secret if one of them is dead. >> okay. >> if i take you out there i wouldn't want to be your insurance agent. >> to avoid that deadly fate we opted to just ask someone who knows a lot about secrets. his friend, valerie plame. you may remember her a former cia agent, plame's cover was compromised in 23003 by white house official. scandal ensued. and plame and her husband eventually moved to santa fe where she met fenn. you were an ex-cia operative do you give forrest credit for keeping his secret for so long? >> apparently not even his wife. >> not iep his wife. >> that is something. >> do you believe snip do you think that fresh suffer out there? >> oh, absolutely. i think that this is something that forrest has done to completely amuse himself. >> another friend meyer michael mcgarrity agrees, he's one of many people who say they saw the treasure before fenn hid it. >> forrest loves attention. but he denies it. >> he has this awe-shucks personality. >> we don't way that -- no. >> his ego is involved. who he is, what he comes from. his whole life has been one big adventure after another. >> adventures that he loves. and hiding the treasure was a way to pass that love on. in your mind who would be the best person or family to find this treasure? >> a family that is joined together and looking for the treasure for five or ten or 50 times. take a tent and sleeping bags and fishing pole, go out looking. that was my primary motive. >> and that is exactly the motive driving the dunstan family of city slickers who are slip sliding through the southern colorado back woods. >> look. >> this is terrifying. >> last month they left their home in orange county california. on their own search for fenn's treasure. what is the moral of this treasure hunt for you? >> the adventure of it. the fun of it. the riddles. solving muzzles. >> parents marlene and mark, along with amanda and amber audrey and aislyn are far from their comfort zones. >> there might be bears. there might be wildlife. we might get lost. it's super fun. i feel like i really bonded with my older daughters doing it. >> if only you could see the expressions on their faces. >> i know they're teenagers. like indiana jones. careful, mark. >> oh, my, god. >> the family trip ended with photos and memories but alas no treasure. as for forrest fenn who launched a thousand dreams on a hunt yet to end he has no regrets for what is out there, somewhere for any of us to find. >> you would do it again? >> i would do it again in an instant. listen good, your effort will be worth the cold. if you have been brave and in the wood i give you title to the gold. >> cowan: ahead. kids to the rescue. and later here come the sun clouds. brandon thinks hellmann's is heaven in a jar. that's because our ingredients come from... farmers committed to responsibly sourced oils... blended with ingredients like cage-free eggs. mmm. heaven. real ingredients. that's how we're working to bring out the best. thanks for calling angie's list. how may i help you? i heard i could call angie's list if i needed work done around my house at a fair price. you heard right, just tell us what you need done and we'll find a top rated provider to take care of it. so i could get a faulty light switch fixed? yup! or have a guy refinish my floors? absolutely! or send someone out to groom my pookie? pookie's what you call your? my dog. yes, we can do that. real help from real people. come see what the new angie's list can do for you. the taste of light and fit greek non fat yogurt gives you the power to help make temptation shrink away! with irresistible flavors never have 80 calories tasted so satisfying! light and fit greek. taste the power of satisfaction. >> cowan: summer at the shore is lot more than sea and sand. cease smith explains for some kids in california it involves taking care of sick sea lyons. >> for a few seconds after they were set free last week the four young sea lyons paused. almost as if they were reluctant to say goodbye. not long ago they all looked a lot more like this sick emaciated and near death. but now they were back, fat happy and healthy enough to scamper down to the water's edge and beyond. it was just another happy ending, thanks to a place that makes these kinds of things happen all the time. this is the pacific marine mammal center in laguna beach, california. keith runs a rescue station that is often the last best hope for animals in distress. what happens when they come here? >> when they come here they are basically on their last legs. they have had a rough life. so what we have to do is bring them in, start them over again and give them a second chance on life. >> that means round the clock care. heated floors for fragile animals like this little pup. and plenty of fish. even for youngsters still struggling to eat solid food. the center is also a wildly popular summer day camp for young humans. for one glorious week campers ages 8-12 learn the finer points marine mammal compare like cleaning animals after an oil slick or making a fish frappe. >> how to make fish smoothies. >> it's a tasty mix of herring and karo corn syrup. pureed in a blender before its tube fed to the youngest, weakest patients. for 12-year-old kiley shaffer this was the fun part. what was it like when you first came here, that smell? >> it was really gross and disgusting. but i've gotten used to it. >> notice that they're only working on stuffed toys. the first rule of seal camp is you don't touch the animals at seal camp. education director kristin. >> we need to keep the animals wild so they can go back out in the ocean without dependency on human beings. is. >> also the animals might nip ya. >> yeah. >> baby sea lyons are like baby rattle snakes. >> they are kind of vicious. they can bite. >> i like all five of my fingers. >> you like all five of your continuingers. >> i like all ten. >> so the kids simulate feeding and cleaning and capturing stranded animals. just in case they ever have to do it for real. they may get their chance. in the first five months of 2005 there were fewer than 300 sea lion strandings on the shores of california. in the first five months of this year there were more than 3,000. and experts say we ain't seen nothing yet. scientists believe unusually warm water in the pacific brought on by a wetter pattern called earl knee know is driving away the fish sea lyons usually eat. so the young pups, who can't hunt for themselves, are often left to starve. and the forecast is pretty grim. next year is looking worse? >> yes. we'll havoline know that will be stronger next year. this is going to happen again. >> are you guys overtaxed at this point? >> we're not overtaxed. our resources are being stretched. we can release some animals make some more room but we have been at capacity for at least last two to two and a half months. >> it hasn't always been quite this busy. the center was founded in 1971 by two laguna beach lifeguards and veterinarian as place to take sick animals that would occasionally wash up on the beach. it was popular with the local kids then and now. >> this is one of my favorite camp, is that i've ever done. i just think it's town get messy. >> the chance to get messy runs about $325 per kid a week. not exactly cheap. but keith says that is one summer dream you can't put a price tag on. >> i mean, who doesn't want to be here looking at the animals? there's no feeling better than watching rehabbed sea lyons run down the beach into the ocean and disappear again. >> so for a kid to experience that -- >> it's pretty amazing. >> for campers the work with sea lyons is mostly pretend. but the thrill of watching them go home is about as real as it gets. [ cheering and applause ] >> bye, guys! >> cowan: look. isn't that ho howard johnson's. next. >> here again is lee cowan. >> cowan: it's a guest cottage with a thatched roof. aren't many around. turns out thatched roofs aren't the only kind of roofs disappearing. with christine johnson we take a tour back in time. >> there's a place in lake george, new york, where the past is a thing of the present. that is the original roof? >> that is the original orange roof. >> you have the weather vane up there. >> howard johnson's founded near boston by howard d. johnson was once the biggest restaurant chain in the country. ♪ with roughly a thousand locations during the 1970s. >> could i bring some dessert? >> no, just orange sherbet and two spoons. >> the sherbet and ice cream were staples for so many americans growing up in the "mad men" era. >> welcome to howard johnson's. >> and even younger ones, too. >> i remember howard johnson's. we used to pile in the car as kids. >> oh, yeah. that's what they did. pile in the station wagons. we're all going to howard johnson's. >> and businessman john larock is betting they will do it again. howard johnson's restaurants all but disappeared by 1909 eaten up by the competition. but larock recently spent more than $200,000 to reopen the last free standing hojo's location that dates back some 60 years. was there any hesitation on your part? >> no. not really. if you believe in it you can make it work. >> he believes in it. because he's lived it. starting right here as a dishwasher three decades ago. >> still feels like the original restaurant. >> very important to keep that? >> veryn't. >> he's preserved authentic details. >> these are the old tables. they don't make them like this any more. >> of course the menu. with classics like root beer float and the clam fry d. we mention liver and onions? is. >> holy moly look at my plate. 2004 plates. >> many customers relished most are the memories. >> i grew in in howard johnson's track particularly. >> it feels innocent to me. feels like an innocent time of my life. >> does it feel like you're getting old? >> feels like that every day. >> new owner here. >> they come from all over, simply for serving of nostalgia. >> even ask for my autograph because i think maybe one time, howard johnson's itself may be gone. >> but save that thought for another summer. right now the hot cakes are still selling like hot cakes. >> cowan: coming up. sailing in style. >> cowan: their own boat can set sail any time they want. those who get a little seasick maybe try something a bit more contained. mo rocca sets sail in a bottle. ♪ >> what kind of a person puts a ship in a bottle? >> wow. you could say someone that's insane. >> or, someone with a steady handa keen eye and a peculiar passion. >> the type of person that pursues this art they're into puzzles, because it is a puzzle on how to get something big through a small opening diameter. >> jim goodwin is a ship in the bottle builder in charlotte, in this case. for how long have you been putting ships in bottles? >> pushing 15 years. i've been hitting the bottle for that long. >> and in that time he's launched hundreds of ships into glass. >> it's difficult for me to walk into the liquor store because i will go on the shelf and turn the bottle sideways. and of course, the people at the lig or store are going, can i help you? >> have you ever put a steamboat in a bottle? >> i have. >> kayak in a bottle, that would be easy. >> it would. >> that's for beginnersz right. >> but goodwin is no beginner he's gone well beyond the sea. doesn't seem very hard to get a lighthouse in the bottle. >> hardest part is carving the light making sure that it fits through the mouth of the bottle. if it doesn't fit through the mouth you know what you got? a cork. >> goodwin's shipyard, aka his garage a stocked with liquor bottles. begins all of his projects with a block of wood. taking each and everyone by hand a process that can take more than 30 hours. >> the art is known as patience bottle. i joke say well, yes, you either have it or you lose it. the building of patience bottles began in 1700sa solitary craft practiced by monks and miners. who would create whole keeps inside of bottles. it became the pastime of sailors out at sea for months at a time. >> they were built mainly for sweethearts, loved often lot of times sailors would sell them to clear up their debts for when they were in port. >> robert hughes works at savannah, georgiaa he is ships of the sea museum, home to a small permanent collection of ships in bottles. >> it's the mystery. how do they do it? do they cut the class? once you handle it you'll notice on the glass no cuts. there are all bottles and you cannot figure out how to get them in there. it's an amazing thing. >> but even in the world of ships and bottles, there are sharks. what do you think of the cheaters in this trade? the people who actually saw the end off of a bottle and put the ship in there. >> i think it degrades the art. i've even seen some people where they actually cut the base of the bottle right here and then stuck the ship going up that way. then mounted it on a piece of wood. >> how does hugh goodwin do it? how does he get a whole ship through such a tight opening? i think i'm ready. >> at the base of the mast there is a hinge. >> wow. lower that down into the bottle. doing fine. >> wow. >> that raises everything up there. >> wow. >> there you go. >> my first ship in a bottle. >> put her there matey. >> about time to get these marbles rolling. >> cowan: ahead. >> that's how champions do it. >> cowan: marbles, anyone? as my diabetes changed it got harder to control my blood sugar. today, i'm asking about levemir®. vo: levemir® is an injectable insulin that can give you blood sugar control for up to 24 hours. and levemir® helps lower your a1c. levemir® lasts 42 days without refrigeration. that's 50% longer than lantus® which lasts 28 days. levemir® comes in flextouch® the latest in insulin pen technology from novo nordisk. levemir® is a long-acting insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults and children with diabetes and is not recommended to treat diabetic ketoacidosis. do not use levemir® if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. the most common side effect is low blood sugar which may cause symptoms such as sweating, shakiness, confusion, and headache. severe low blood sugar can be serious and life-threatening. ask your doctor about alcohol use, operating machinery, or driving. other possible side effects include injection site reactions. tell your doctor about all medicines you take and all of your medical conditions. check your blood sugar. your insulin dose should not be changed without asking your doctor. get medical help right away if you have trouble breathing, sweating, extreme drowsiness swelling of your face, tongue, or throat, dizziness, or confusion. today's the day to ask about levemir® flextouch®. covered by most health insurance and medicare plans. progressive insurance here and i'm a box who thrives on the unexpected. ha-ha! shall we dine? [ chuckle ] you wouldn't expect an insurance company to show you their rates and their competitors' rates but that's precisely what we do. going up! nope, coming down. and if you switch to progressive today you could save an average of over 500 bucks. stop it. so call me today at the number below. or is it above? dismount! oh, and he sticks the landing! >> cowan: i'm just doing this to introduce to you the kids bill geist found who take their marbles very seriously. ♪ >> all right, champions, about time to get the marbles rolling. >> this may not have been the most exciting thing on the boardwalk this summer but in the world of marbles, it's like the freakin' super bowl. >> that's how champions shoot folks. >> it's the 92nd annual national marbles tournament. featuring 49 of the best mibsters, as the players are called aged 7-14 from across the nation. in three days of highly trained thumb flicking, backspin, deadspin sidespin, they can do it all. it's a tradition here in wild wood, new jersey home of ringer stadium in the marbles hall of fame. >> i think back in the '20s, '30s marbles were the game. we have quite a collection. >> beri fox ceo of the marble king manufacturing company founded the hall of fame and sponsors the tournament. >> i would love to see marbles become an olympic event. marbles are played in almost every country in this world. >> yes, there are still kids who play this ancient unplugged game. >> don't knock it until you've tried it. it's actually really fun. >> up against -- bobby nar blocks calls himself big snack is a veteran on the marble circuit. you have four coaches? >> yeah. >> one coach is his sister a former champion. >> only person beating you is yourself. at first i thought it was just for nerds. >> brook donald 14-year-old from maryland is one of the favorites. what's the hardest part of the game? mental? >> yeah. mental. keeping your mind positive. because you have to have the attention span of a goldfish. if you win a game you have to forget. if you lose a game you have to forget. just live in the moment. >> it can be tough mentally and even physically. >> we have had bleeding on the court. >> oh man. >> not fun. >> you are a marble family. >> we're a marble family yeah. all of us have played. my kids all did. they had marbles when they were babies. take pictures when they were really tiny. >> how seriously do you take it? >> well enough that i get my kids practicing two to three hours a day. and we've got a marbles ring in our carport. and our living room floor has tape all over it with marble circles and lines pretty serious. >> all right folks, without further adue let's find out who our finalists are. >> day three of the tournament. the field narrows. tension mounts. especially among the parents. >> very nervous. >> brook donald rolls against emily simxovich in the girls' final for all the marbles. >> that's it. we've got a winner. >> this day emily proofs the better marble flicker. >> picks up one, two. the boys' final luke gaffigan, who learned marbles growing up on the streets of ethiopia. ran into a veritable marbles machine. devon leowendick. it was game marble. >> for the crown. [ applause ] both girls champion and boys champion each received a medal a marbles wristwatch, a $2,000 college scholarship. tradition that came also gives the queen a kiss. not easy for two 13 year old s. devon seemed to be stalling for time but in the end he threw like a champion. >> your new king and queen. >> cowan: coming >> cowan: as refreshing as tall glass of iced tea might be. not all are created equal m. are sweet, some are sweeter, martha teichner joins us for tea. >> did you know that 85% of all the tea consumed in the united states is iced? or that americans drink more than three billion gallons of iced tea a year. >> experience a refreshing -- or in 2014 we spent $5 billion on the canned and bottled stuff. >> we have serious sweet tea. >> then there's the matter of whether somerville, south carolina, a south carolina really is the birth place of sweet tea. often referred to as the wine of the south. >> very good. >> some tea. >> tina of somerville director of tourism. >> in a mason jar. you can use mason jar for anything. we especially use it for our iced tea. >> do they ever. >> i want to show you mason. >> as in mason jar. >> from the tip that have straw to the base is about 12 feet. and it was filled with 1425 gallons of sweet tea. >> somerville is talking about how on june 10, national iced tea day, his city set the guiness for largest sweet tea. how sweet? >> we only used about 1600 pounds of sugar. >> you're a politician, convince me that somerville is the birth place of sweet tea. >> you said i was a politics. you have to trust me would i lie to you? >> what is absolutely true is that the first commercial tea farm in the united states was in somerville. an operation from 1888 until 1950. eventually cuttings were transplanted to island south of charleston where they grown into what is now the charleston tea plantation. owned by bigelow in partner with third generation bill hall. looks like a giant hedge. >> tea, unlike other products is harvested every 15-18 days. when the new growth grows up like this overlooking the harvest is the two leaves and the bud. >> all tea comes from the same plant. once it's harvested it's oxidized. then dried and cleaned. >> the final thing is to taste the tea. >> you slurp it. >> you are rolling it around on your pallet. >> somerville used 120 pounds of the charleston breakfast black tea iced for the world record breaking brew. >> it's an american invention, iced tea. >> supposedly at the 1904 st. louis world's fair on a hot day, people weren't buying hot tea. so somebody put it on ice and bingo, the only problem, this recipe for iced sweet tea from the cookbook "housekeeping in old virginia" dated 1879, st. louis and somerville, take note. how does one make proper iced tea. >> bring it to a good rolling boil. and pour the water on the tea bags. then we're going to pour this into this pitcher. >> and for the secret of southern sweet tea. add your sugar while the tea is hot. >> if you put the sugar in after the tea is made you can never really stir it up so that sugar melts. here's to fresh brewed tea. >> once you've made it just the way you like it how about raising your glass to the ice and saying a big thank you. to the inventor of the ice maker. [african-style music] ♪ take my hand to the land ♪ ♪ take my hand to the land, whoa-oh! ♪ (narrator) only one family goes to incredible lengths to make sure your family time never becomes endangered. kalahari resorts. now open in the pocono mountains. book now at kalahariresorts.com you captain beat the way an old boat rides. he collects wooden boats like this. but never lost touch with his small town roots. as we found out when he invited us to nashville. ♪ he's nashville's nice guy. a man with a warm-hearted heart. can sing the phone book it would probably be a hit. he's country's storyteller. alan jackson. >> you sing a song about heartache, brink drinking dancing, all these things that have bin my mind. ♪ >> it's what makes life. ♪ >> there's no flash to jackson. just a man and his guitar. he had a blinding assent to the pinnacle of country music. 60 million albums sold. his latest "angels and alcohol." ♪ comes 25 years after he first topped the charts back in 1909. 1990. >> my voice gotten deeper in my old age. i don't quite sound up here like this. >> at his home outside nashville. there are shelves, he can count among his fans even those who once lived in the white house. >> oh, man, i'm outta place there. >> never forgotten the night he endnd up next to president geyer at a state dinner. >> they had this bowl with liquid in it. president bush happied over, don't drink that, you're supposed to wash your hands in it. i said, okay, thank you. ♪ >> jackson is country through and through. he grew up in tiny newnan, georgia, about 40 southwest of atlanta. his music speaks to life's simple pleasure farms family, and fishing. so did you catch all these? >> everyone. >> did you really? >> yeah. caught about everything in the ocean that i wanted to catch. ♪ >> his attic is a place just for his toys. especially anything with a motor. >> it's a 1958 pan-head which was the year i was born. >> he proved he was handy with a wrench. love of tinkering he got from his dad eugene a. ford mechanic. pretty much explains why his desk is a '66 half ton pick up. how many cars do you think you've had? >> i'd be ashamed so say. several hundred. i mean, even before i moved to nashville when i didn't have a dime i already had ton of vehicles. i'd buy 'em sell 'em. >> in their simplicity there's a certain wisdom. >> i still know where that comes from. driving down the road then this melody comes into your head. ♪ >> that's what happened with his haunting 911 anthem "where were you." ♪ >> i just woke up, there was this chorus, you know, i'm just a singer of simple songs. and the melody and everything. i would have forgotten it probably by morning. so i got up in my underwear went downstairs and taped that. back then a little tim tall recorder. ♪ writing songs about that day. i didn't want to take advantage. i didn't want to write anything. it's hard to write about. ♪ the record ended up word for word came to me that night. >> as well as it did you were sort of uncomfortable with the attention that the song brought to you. >> so many people tell me, feeling that same way or did i this same thing people started looking at me different, putting me up on this pedestal like i was some kind of saint. i'm just a singer of simple songs. that's the truth. >> truth is, fame fits him like a bad pair of boots. being the center of attention is the last place jackson wants to be. just ended up being a songwriter writing for other people to go on to become rich and famous would be happy? >> i would be. i still self conscious about going on stage. i love the singing, i love sharing my songs with people, especially something that i wrote. but still feel a little uncomfortable in front of people. >> in 25 years of doing it hasn't made it any easier. about an hour before he was due on stage in nashville when the nerves starting hitting on his tour bus. >> i'm pretty laid back as far as that goes i don't do any crazy stretches or anything weird, you know. i might have a shot of jack daniels or something. >> his wife denise helps calm him down. ♪ high school sweethearts they were married at 18. moved from georgia to nashville into a tiny basement apartment. >> we brought our first baby, mattie home to that basement apartment. >> we were still living there when i had my first number one record. we stayed there until we were sure i was going to make a living. >> the miles away from home took a toll. in 1997 he and denise separated after he admitted to having an affair. but they soon reconciled. denise even wrote a book about it to be a best seller. >> i was gone a lot. vulnerable and just made some bad choices. i think it was -- i was worried about people knowing about that. but then again, it was, you know, i'm a person. just real. i'm human being just like anybody. and make mistakes and even better to see that we survived that and have turned it around. >> besides their three children, perhaps nothing symbolizes their romance better than the car where they had their first date, a '55 t-bird. jackson had to sell it for a down payment on their first home. but years later denise tracked it down and gave it to alan as a christmas present. >> as the garage door comes up he sees that it's a '55 thunderbird. oh, you bought me a car like mine. i said, no, alan, that is your car. >> the car. >> still gives me the chills. >> the man broke down and cried. >> his passion for making the old new again is everywhere. whether it's cars, relationships or his music. ♪ at 56, the white-hatted man from georgia can look in his rear view mirror with pride. remembering what matters most in life, while still focusing on the road ahead k. for alan jackson, seems to have no end in sight. ♪ remember when ♪ >> cowan: ahead summertime. >> who doesn't deserve a three-month break after a rigorous year of kindergarten. >> cowan: and jim gaffigan. >> cowan: summertime is the time for taking vacation from cares and woes. unless you're jim gaffigan. >> remember last went snore i think we all still have emotional scars. well summer is finally here to wash away all those horrible memories. can you believe it? summer. the golden boy of seasons. everyone loves summer. what's not to love? sunny days, warm weather and don't forget it's not winter. now it may not come as a huge surprise to you that i don't hop on the summer bandwagon, i am pale and nobody wants to see me in shorts. like most pudge egos i prefer light jacket weather. i like a place to put my keys and hide the fact that i haven't worked out in two decades. i'm sure most of you love summer. it's like a three-month vacation. of course this isn't true but the perception of a summer holiday sure makes doing work during the summer feel like punishment. summer does mean no school for my children. hey, who doesn't deserve a three-month break after a rigorous year of kindergarten? i don't know exactly what's good about my kids getting the summer off. my kids lounge around the apartment like they returned from fighting isis with a constant "what are we going to do now" look on their faces. i can't wait for back to school commercials. inter takenning children is not the only summer pusher. the warm summer weather means pressure to do things. do things outside. this is why i don't live in southern california. nice weather is like an assignment. don't waste the day. go lie on the beach and get skin cancer. i'm sure many of you think i'm doing negative about your sacred summer, i'm just pale pudge 'and lazy but soon you'll come over to my side. i see it every august. that's when we all start regretting the horrible things we said about winter. it's when we go from appreciating our air conditioner to treating it like our most prized employee. you okay there air condition snore i know you've been working hard lately. but tell you what after labor day it's all downhill. you are guaranteed a seven-month vacation please don't quit. enjoy your summer everyone. don't worry. winter's around the corner. olympic next. >> it's really cute. >> cowan: driven to extremes. it's not likely to go away on its own. so let's do something about it. premarin vaginal cream can help. it provides estrogens to help rebuild vaginal tissue and make intercourse more comfortable. premarin vaginal cream treats vaginal changes due to menopause and moderate-to-severe painful intercourse caused by these changes. don't use it if you've had unusual vaginal bleeding breast or uterine cancer, blood clots, liver problems, stroke or heart attack, are allergic to any of its ingredients or think you're pregnant. side effects may include headache, pelvic pain, breast pain, vaginal bleeding and vaginitis. estrogens may increase your chances of getting cancer of the uterus, strokes, blood clots, or dementia so use it for the shortest time based on goals and risks. estrogens should not be used to prevent heart disease, heart attack, stroke or dementia. ask your doctor about premarin vaginal cream. ♪ me and you, ♪ ♪ and you and me. ♪ ♪ no matter how they tossed the dice. ♪ ♪ it had to be. ♪ ♪ the only one for me is you. ♪ ♪ and you for me. ♪ ♪ so happy together! ♪ now there's a rewards program that lets you earn points at one place and use them at another. introducing plenti. ♪ ♪ ♪ when it comes to rewards there's plenti together. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> cowan: grey garden here not with sun flowers like these around. admired by ancient greeks they still have plenty of modern day admirers. including ones sorry that at chew found not far from here. >> in south hampton new york, where palatialal estates hide behind sky-high hedges an oasis of sun flowers. hello. thanks for having us. >> come in. >> i like your t-shirt. this is where 85-year-old henry buhl puts on a dazzling display. >> you like my van goa? look at that. henry is former investment banker turned full time flappist. his summer home is ablaze. >> even the front door. >> incredible. >> he named this house sunflower he r in italian. all began with a single photograph. you took this photograph. assassination of sun flowers was born? >> yeah. >> from greek helios meaning sun and anthis flower. it's the state flower of kansas. now found all over the world as a food source, especially for its oil and seeds. this is fap that is particular. >> from the entryway to larger more valuable pieces this home is a tribute to the flower that makes everyone happy. >> it's supposed to be fun. it's not serious. >> serious or not extent of his collection is no joke. did you ever think -- okay, i've over done it now? >> no. no. >> some of his most striking collectibles are in the living room. >> there are about 1550. >> 15th century prints. >> they originally black and white. somebody came along and colored them in. >> you don't think you'll switch over to tulips? >> i'm too far in. >> do people around south hampton know you have the sunflower guy? >> i think so. because you didn't see my car did you? >> not yet. look at this. this is great. but now it's really, really cute. >> i love it. >> cowan: coming up. is that your favorite? >> cowan: chilling with nancy giles. ...connects to the ends of the earth? from roller coaster hills... ...to musical streets and movie chase scenes. it's all "one road." everywhere you take it tells your story. and wherever you are is where the road begins. the camry. toyota. let's go places. i try hard to get a great shape. this... i can do easily. new benefiber healthy shape helps curb cravings. it's a clear, taste-free daily supplement that's clinically proven to help keep me fuller longer. new benefiber healthy shape. this, i can do. >> cowan: remember when 31 flavors seemed like a lot? now you can spend hours deciding on the perfect ice cream flavor, which is just what our nancy giles did. >> they keep it old school in seaside heights on the jersey shore. from the wooden boardwalk to the kohr's ice cream stand. which is presided over the beach for 75 years. what are the most pop pew polar flavors? >> most pop pew polar is the orange cream. everyone says, reminds me of a creamsicle. >> greg kohr's grandfather started the business and invented the machine they still use. >> vanilla still very popular flavor. >> in fact vanilla remains americans' favorite flavor. the average american eats, or in my case inhales, 22 pounds of ice cream a year. what flavor you got there? >> chocolate. >> is that your favorite? >> and our totally unscientific survey found quite a few traditionalistz vanilla with sprinkles. how does it taste? >> good. >> kohr's is trying to expand our horizons and our waistlines with flavors like salted caramel. and cake batter. >> really focuses on how good the caramel is. that's really good. >> and now for something completely different. >> today we are making american beauty. it's a creme rlaice ice cream. they're part of the new generation for whom vanilla is just a little too vanilla. >> shade is a smoked dark chocolate ice cream with a caramelized white chocolate ganache swirled in. this is butter pop corn ice cream. with toasted raisins and chocolate chips. >> they opened their shop called east and bites this summer selling smooth ice cream. it all started with a cart at local farmers markets. >> we love it when flavors just really punch you in the face. >> this is punching me. punching. >> one of their strongest punches is delivered by not so secret ingredient. get this. meat. >> we love bay son as the rest of america does. >> wait a minute. >> bacon a lot. >> bacon and ice cream. here we go. >> just eat it. >> oh my, god. that's crazy. oh snap. that is crazy. bay son ice cream actually seems to be going over pretty well. even baby gillian pinely pigged out. >> we tried to make a smoked salmon ice cream. >> that is a little wild. that's out there. and? >> the first trial didn't really quite go as intended but we're still working. >> one thing their ice cream isn't, franklys healthy. after all the shop is called ice and vice. 70% prefer premium ice cream which is typically higher in fat. but one man is on a mission to change all that. >> our ice cream is low in fat, low in sugar high in protein high in fiber made with all natural ingredients. >> do you have the nerve to say that your ice cream is nutritional? >> it is. >> michael shoretz grew up eating ice cream. who didn't? but after he saw his father contract diabetes, he studied health policy and got seriously into fitness. >> when you're a personal trainer all your clients really want to talk with you about is food. what they can eat. what they can't eat. what they wish they could be eating why as result of doing all the personal training they're allowed to eat. ice cream of course was the most talked about food item. >> he spent two years at his kitchen counter tinkering with ingredients. then went into mass production. enlightened now sells in more than 6000 stores across the country. so how does it taste? to be honest maybe not quite as sinfully good as some others but still, pretty good. >> so the whole thing we want this to taste decadently so good it can't be good for you. >> exactly. >> if you use that as a tag line, you yes. >> cheers. >> cheers. >> chew on that while you're trying to squeeze into that bikini for a summer at the shore. when i feel bloated and my stomach is rumbling it takes me forever to get dressed. i don't have the time to be gassy and uncomfortable. enjoying activia twice a day for 4 weeks may help reduce the frequency of minor digestive issues. i love activia. that is so good. ♪ activiaaaa. ♪ >> cowan: now to john dickerson in washington for look what's ahead on "face the nation." >> dickerson: today we'll talk with speaker of the house john boehner and senator bernie sanders as well as get latest on the emerging nuclear deal with iran. >> cowan: john dickerson in washington. next week here on "sunday morning." ♪ >> she was my hero brian will sop's second chance. but to get from the old way to the new you'll need the right it infrastructure. from a partner who knows how to make your enterprise more agile, borderless and secure. hp helps business move on all the possibilities of today. and stay ready for everything that is still to come. just about anywhere you use sugar, you can use splenda®... ...no calorie sweetener. splenda® lets you experience... ...the joy of sugar... ...without all the calories. think sugar, say splenda® >> cowan: we leave you this sunday on the grounds of grey gardens. captioning made possible by johnson & johnson where quality products for the american family have been a tradition for generations captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org i'm lee cowan we hope you've enjoyed our sunday at the shore and join us next sunday morning. for now have a good rest of your weekend. copd includes chronic bronchitis and emphysema. spiriva is a once-daily inhaled copd maintenance treatment that helps open my airways for a full 24 hours. spiriva helps me breathe easier. spiriva respimat does not replace rescue inhalers for sudden symptoms. tell your doctor if you have kidney problems, glaucoma, trouble urinating, or an enlarged prostate. these may worsen with spiriva respimat. discuss all medicines you take even eye drops. if your breathing suddenly worsens, your throat or tongue swells you get hives, vision changes or eye pain or problems passing urine stop taking spiriva respimat and call your doctor right away. side effects include sore throat cough, dry mouth and sinus infection. nothing can reverse copd. spiriva helps me breathe better. to learn about spiriva respimat slow-moving mist ask your doctor or visit spirivarespimat.com since 1961, pearle vision has been providing expert eye care. today, we make caring for your eyes even easier. right now, buy one pair of glasses, and get another pair free. this is genuine eye care in your neighborhood. this is pearle vision. >> dickerson: today op "face the nation." a nuclear deal with iran may be within reach. anti-establishment candidates take both parties by storm. thousands turned out to hear donald trump talk immigration and just about everything else in arizona yesterday. >> the majority is back we're going to take the country back. >> dickerson: did trim's controversial remark help or hurt the republican party. we'll talk about the 2016 campaign with house speaker john boehner. then hear from the candidate who is drawing big crowds on the democratic side. bernie sanders a real threat to hillary clinton? and as the u.s. gets closer to a nuclear deal with iran we'll talk to a top critic arkansas republican senator tom cotton. we'll have

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actually just as strong in the mountains of the west. barry peterson will report our cover story. >> it's out there somewhere a treasure chest filled with gold worth a million dollars or maybe more. just follow the clues. >> i'm not going to put it on the map. >> why? >> they have to figure it out for themselves. >> modern day treasure hunt later this "sunday morning." country singer alan jackson has been picking his way through summer for years writing songs gives him peace being on stage not so much. he's ranked as one of the best selling vocalists of all time. but even after 25 years of performing a country almost end alan jackson is as shocked as ever. >> bac k stage simple singer of simple songs and passions beyond a little later. >> summertime brings to mind host of childhood games one which really is played for keeps. bill geist found out firsthand. ♪ >> dream of boardwalk on jersey shores liza stadium. home of the 92nd national marbles tournament. >> who knew. >> don't knock it until you try it. >> rolling to victory later on "sunday morning." >> just when you think ice cream can't get any better it's available now in more flavors than ever with nancy giles will be sampling. >> so many flavors, so little time. vanilla, chocolate. bacon? >> oh, my, god that's crazy. >> we'll pork out on latest in ice cream ahead on "sunday morning." >> tracy smith looks in on some kids looking after endangered sea lyons. christine johnson found a roadside survivor. and a glass of iced tea and mo rocca finally explains how they got that ship in a bottle and more. but first, let's go to the newsroom for the sunday morning headlines. >> good morning, it's july 1 2015. leaders of the european union are meeting in brussels to discuss greece's financial reform. could be the nation's last chance to convince creditors to find new financial assistance. reported greek banks have barely enough cash to last through the end of the week. john kerry continues talks in vienna aimed at agreement with iran over the nuclear program. yesterday the islamic republic supreme leader said whatever the outcomea long struggle against the united states will continue. >> make america great again. we have to. >> republican presidential hopeful donald trump spoke to supporters in las vegas, he believes his comments on illegal mexican immigration have been embraced by a number of americans. the naacp yesterday announced it is ending 15-year-old boycott of south carolina. the action came day after the state took down confederate flag that had been displayed on grounds near the state house. you may recall all the fuss over last year's elaborate u.s.-mexican operation leading to the arrest of notorious mexican druglord el chapo he has escaped from a maximum security prison near the city of taluca. here is one for the record books. evelyn jones celebrated her 108th birthday by tossing out the ceremonial first pitch at the seattle mariners game. that makes her the oldest person ever to do so. the previous record was held by a 105-year-old. now today's weather thunderstorms threaten large section of the midwest scattered storms are likely parts of the southeast and southwest. while blazing heat will make the plains sizzle. and week ahead chance of more scattered storms mostly sunny and hot from compost to coast. >> next -- ♪ the colorful history of grey gardens. and later -- >> there's 265 and hundreds and >> cowan: this wood shingled summer house is considered almost quaint. but it was a proper 14-room mansion when it was built in 1897. >> an imam could you lat garden bloomed out back. sheltering from the grey stormy winds of eastern long islands. the home's reputation came not from that grey garden, but from he can senn particular inhabitants. >> you have to be real individual. >> they were the two edies big edie beale the mother and little edie beale the daughter. >> you know what they said. >> perhaps albert and david never would have shown up to make the 1975 documentary "grey gardens" but they were somebody. the black sheet of the bouvier family. and cousin to none other than jacqueline kennedy owe insurances. bought the home in 1923 for his wife. back then lives were full of high society must haves, country clubs, debutante balls and the like. when beale divorced his wife little edie came home to take care of her mother. and for the next 40-some years their lives and the house unraveled together. >> any little rat hole even on 10th avenue i would like better. ♪ >> film finds them living in sickle room eating liver pate and ice cream. superior round the by trash cats and other wildlife. including raccoons living in the walls who they fed like pets. it was big news when the country board of health tried to evict them. they refused to leave. their famous relative did pay to have the homemade at least san tore but soon it began to decay all over again. it's a tale so odd it's become pop culture. ♪ in 2006 grey gardens was made into a tony award winning musical. and after that hbo turned it into a movie. starring very convincing jessica lange and drew bury mother of. >> you can't have your cake and eat it to in life. yes, i did. i had my cake. loved it. masticated it. chewed it. >> real big edie died in 1977. little edie left alone and penniless finally agreed to sell her crumbling we'd-choked breck. but who would buy it? >> walked in the in transhallway i said, this is the most beautiful house i've ever seen. and little edie said it's yours. >> journalist salie quinn and her late husband ben bradlee, the famed editor of the "washington post," bought the house for $220,000 in 1979. with the agreement that they wouldn't tear it down. >> the back of the house was flapping in the wind. i walked over to the piano i sort of went dink dink dink, the whole piano collapsed. >> that room now looks like this. the rest of the home does too. even that bedroom the two had shared now been restored back to its 1920 glory. >> in order to get rid of the cat smell we had to tear out the floors and the walls. ♪ not far down the road at the bay street theater in sag harbor yet another play is in production. more proof the story of grey garden lives on. as for little edie she died in 2002. after finally leaving the hamptons for florida. but inside the home that will forever bear the grey gardens name, some say the walls still speak two of the who would never leave. ♪ >> cowan: something's fishy. ahead alan jackson explains. i try hard to get a great shape. this... i can do easily. new benefiber healthy shape helps curb cravings. it's a clear, taste-free daily supplement that's clinically proven to help keep me fuller longer. new benefiber healthy shape. this, i can do. [ female announcer ] when you're serious about fighting wrinkles, turn to roc® retinol correxion®. one week fine lines appear to fade. one month deep wrinkles look smoother. after one year, skin looks ageless. high performance skincare™ only from roc®. >> cowan: hid some of his treasure right here on long island. the certain for hidden wealth stretches far and wide. barry peterson now with a story that took some digging. >> ever since i was a little kid i always wanted to go out and find treasure. >> it is so much more than just a stroll in the montana woods for dal neitzel. >> i read all those pirate magazines and comic books. now i look for one for real. >> like thousands of others in the rocky mountains this summer he's here on a hunt for this treasure chest. fit for a pirate. filled with gold, precious medals and ancient artifacts. its exact dollar value is in the known, some say a million, some say millions. how long have with you looking? >> i've been looking now for about five years. >> aren't you getting a little discouraged at this point? >> no. nothing to get discouraged about. >> but this isn't some long lost treasure. that is hidden treasure, placed by an eccentric millionaire five years ago. its there for the taking, if you can figure out the clues. >> i believe that his secret place where there is some kind of running water. >> on this day the clues have taken near yellowstone national park. to this rock. maybe dal just steps away from life-changing wealth or -- >> i don't think this is it. maybe not. dal had long career as professional treasure hunter salvaging sunken ships but this is his toughest quest yet. this trip was his 64th attempt. there's no guarantee it's going to be found even in our lifetime. >> that's right. but that doesn't stop me from looking for it because it's town look for it. and there's always the chance. always the chance. >> which no one knows better than the man who hid it. 84-year-old forest fenn. who made career out of collecting treasures of his own. >> well mr. peterson, let's go. >> that's right. the pipe from the endian chief who bested george custer and his men at little big horn. fenn grew up in texas explored the american west. learned a lot about life's value as a fighter pilot in vietnam where he was shot down twice. eventually moved to santa fe and made his millions as a successful art and antique dealer. the idea of a treasure hunt started after he survived a bout with cancer. >> i said i've had so much fun collecting all of these things. why not let somebody else have the same opportunity that i've had. >> he drove out across the rockies and left the chest. >> when i walked back to my car i talked to myself out loud nobody was around i said, did you really do that? i started laughing. with my treasures bold -- >> fenn then wrote a poem with nine clues. placing the fresh sure where in the rockies in one of four states. montana, wyoming, colorado or new mexico. >> there is no place the end as they were drawing nigh, no paddle up the creek just heavy loads and water high. >> do you want to add anything to the hips? >> the fresh suffer not hidden in a mine. lot of these old mines are dangerous. they have snakes black widow. >> that's a good hint and good piece of advice. >> did i give you a hint? really? you're not being fair to me barry. >> i don't think that narrows it down a lot i got to tell you. >> it turns out launched a lot of lookers. what has been the response from people who are trying to find this fresh newer. >> i stopped keeping e-mails at 65,000. >> 65,000? add to that -- the countless more on youtube. with their own plans to find the treasure. >> if you look at first line as i have gone alone in there. if you count the number of syllables. count those for us. >> but is it really out there? >> assure me somehow that this fresh surreal. how do i know that? >> only way that i can prove to you that the treasure is hidden is to take you there. >> what are my chances that you are going to do that? >> there's old saying two people can keep a secret if one of them is dead. >> okay. >> if i take you out there i wouldn't want to be your insurance agent. >> to avoid that deadly fate we opted to just ask someone who knows a lot about secrets. his friend, valerie plame. you may remember her a former cia agent, plame's cover was compromised in 23003 by white house official. scandal ensued. and plame and her husband eventually moved to santa fe where she met fenn. you were an ex-cia operative do you give forrest credit for keeping his secret for so long? >> apparently not even his wife. >> not iep his wife. >> that is something. >> do you believe snip do you think that fresh suffer out there? >> oh, absolutely. i think that this is something that forrest has done to completely amuse himself. >> another friend meyer michael mcgarrity agrees, he's one of many people who say they saw the treasure before fenn hid it. >> forrest loves attention. but he denies it. >> he has this awe-shucks personality. >> we don't way that -- no. >> his ego is involved. who he is, what he comes from. his whole life has been one big adventure after another. >> adventures that he loves. and hiding the treasure was a way to pass that love on. in your mind who would be the best person or family to find this treasure? >> a family that is joined together and looking for the treasure for five or ten or 50 times. take a tent and sleeping bags and fishing pole, go out looking. that was my primary motive. >> and that is exactly the motive driving the dunstan family of city slickers who are slip sliding through the southern colorado back woods. >> look. >> this is terrifying. >> last month they left their home in orange county california. on their own search for fenn's treasure. what is the moral of this treasure hunt for you? >> the adventure of it. the fun of it. the riddles. solving muzzles. >> parents marlene and mark, along with amanda and amber audrey and aislyn are far from their comfort zones. >> there might be bears. there might be wildlife. we might get lost. it's super fun. i feel like i really bonded with my older daughters doing it. >> if only you could see the expressions on their faces. >> i know they're teenagers. like indiana jones. careful, mark. >> oh, my, god. >> the family trip ended with photos and memories but alas no treasure. as for forrest fenn who launched a thousand dreams on a hunt yet to end he has no regrets for what is out there, somewhere for any of us to find. >> you would do it again? >> i would do it again in an instant. listen good, your effort will be worth the cold. if you have been brave and in the wood i give you title to the gold. >> cowan: ahead. kids to the rescue. and later here come the sun clouds. brandon thinks hellmann's is heaven in a jar. that's because our ingredients come from... farmers committed to responsibly sourced oils... blended with ingredients like cage-free eggs. mmm. heaven. real ingredients. that's how we're working to bring out the best. thanks for calling angie's list. how may i help you? i heard i could call angie's list if i needed work done around my house at a fair price. you heard right, just tell us what you need done and we'll find a top rated provider to take care of it. so i could get a faulty light switch fixed? yup! or have a guy refinish my floors? absolutely! or send someone out to groom my pookie? pookie's what you call your? my dog. yes, we can do that. real help from real people. come see what the new angie's list can do for you. the taste of light and fit greek non fat yogurt gives you the power to help make temptation shrink away! with irresistible flavors never have 80 calories tasted so satisfying! light and fit greek. taste the power of satisfaction. >> cowan: summer at the shore is lot more than sea and sand. cease smith explains for some kids in california it involves taking care of sick sea lyons. >> for a few seconds after they were set free last week the four young sea lyons paused. almost as if they were reluctant to say goodbye. not long ago they all looked a lot more like this sick emaciated and near death. but now they were back, fat happy and healthy enough to scamper down to the water's edge and beyond. it was just another happy ending, thanks to a place that makes these kinds of things happen all the time. this is the pacific marine mammal center in laguna beach, california. keith runs a rescue station that is often the last best hope for animals in distress. what happens when they come here? >> when they come here they are basically on their last legs. they have had a rough life. so what we have to do is bring them in, start them over again and give them a second chance on life. >> that means round the clock care. heated floors for fragile animals like this little pup. and plenty of fish. even for youngsters still struggling to eat solid food. the center is also a wildly popular summer day camp for young humans. for one glorious week campers ages 8-12 learn the finer points marine mammal compare like cleaning animals after an oil slick or making a fish frappe. >> how to make fish smoothies. >> it's a tasty mix of herring and karo corn syrup. pureed in a blender before its tube fed to the youngest, weakest patients. for 12-year-old kiley shaffer this was the fun part. what was it like when you first came here, that smell? >> it was really gross and disgusting. but i've gotten used to it. >> notice that they're only working on stuffed toys. the first rule of seal camp is you don't touch the animals at seal camp. education director kristin. >> we need to keep the animals wild so they can go back out in the ocean without dependency on human beings. is. >> also the animals might nip ya. >> yeah. >> baby sea lyons are like baby rattle snakes. >> they are kind of vicious. they can bite. >> i like all five of my fingers. >> you like all five of your continuingers. >> i like all ten. >> so the kids simulate feeding and cleaning and capturing stranded animals. just in case they ever have to do it for real. they may get their chance. in the first five months of 2005 there were fewer than 300 sea lion strandings on the shores of california. in the first five months of this year there were more than 3,000. and experts say we ain't seen nothing yet. scientists believe unusually warm water in the pacific brought on by a wetter pattern called earl knee know is driving away the fish sea lyons usually eat. so the young pups, who can't hunt for themselves, are often left to starve. and the forecast is pretty grim. next year is looking worse? >> yes. we'll havoline know that will be stronger next year. this is going to happen again. >> are you guys overtaxed at this point? >> we're not overtaxed. our resources are being stretched. we can release some animals make some more room but we have been at capacity for at least last two to two and a half months. >> it hasn't always been quite this busy. the center was founded in 1971 by two laguna beach lifeguards and veterinarian as place to take sick animals that would occasionally wash up on the beach. it was popular with the local kids then and now. >> this is one of my favorite camp, is that i've ever done. i just think it's town get messy. >> the chance to get messy runs about $325 per kid a week. not exactly cheap. but keith says that is one summer dream you can't put a price tag on. >> i mean, who doesn't want to be here looking at the animals? there's no feeling better than watching rehabbed sea lyons run down the beach into the ocean and disappear again. >> so for a kid to experience that -- >> it's pretty amazing. >> for campers the work with sea lyons is mostly pretend. but the thrill of watching them go home is about as real as it gets. [ cheering and applause ] >> bye, guys! >> cowan: look. isn't that ho howard johnson's. next. >> here again is lee cowan. >> cowan: it's a guest cottage with a thatched roof. aren't many around. turns out thatched roofs aren't the only kind of roofs disappearing. with christine johnson we take a tour back in time. >> there's a place in lake george, new york, where the past is a thing of the present. that is the original roof? >> that is the original orange roof. >> you have the weather vane up there. >> howard johnson's founded near boston by howard d. johnson was once the biggest restaurant chain in the country. ♪ with roughly a thousand locations during the 1970s. >> could i bring some dessert? >> no, just orange sherbet and two spoons. >> the sherbet and ice cream were staples for so many americans growing up in the "mad men" era. >> welcome to howard johnson's. >> and even younger ones, too. >> i remember howard johnson's. we used to pile in the car as kids. >> oh, yeah. that's what they did. pile in the station wagons. we're all going to howard johnson's. >> and businessman john larock is betting they will do it again. howard johnson's restaurants all but disappeared by 1909 eaten up by the competition. but larock recently spent more than $200,000 to reopen the last free standing hojo's location that dates back some 60 years. was there any hesitation on your part? >> no. not really. if you believe in it you can make it work. >> he believes in it. because he's lived it. starting right here as a dishwasher three decades ago. >> still feels like the original restaurant. >> very important to keep that? >> veryn't. >> he's preserved authentic details. >> these are the old tables. they don't make them like this any more. >> of course the menu. with classics like root beer float and the clam fry d. we mention liver and onions? is. >> holy moly look at my plate. 2004 plates. >> many customers relished most are the memories. >> i grew in in howard johnson's track particularly. >> it feels innocent to me. feels like an innocent time of my life. >> does it feel like you're getting old? >> feels like that every day. >> new owner here. >> they come from all over, simply for serving of nostalgia. >> even ask for my autograph because i think maybe one time, howard johnson's itself may be gone. >> but save that thought for another summer. right now the hot cakes are still selling like hot cakes. >> cowan: coming up. sailing in style. >> cowan: their own boat can set sail any time they want. those who get a little seasick maybe try something a bit more contained. mo rocca sets sail in a bottle. ♪ >> what kind of a person puts a ship in a bottle? >> wow. you could say someone that's insane. >> or, someone with a steady handa keen eye and a peculiar passion. >> the type of person that pursues this art they're into puzzles, because it is a puzzle on how to get something big through a small opening diameter. >> jim goodwin is a ship in the bottle builder in charlotte, in this case. for how long have you been putting ships in bottles? >> pushing 15 years. i've been hitting the bottle for that long. >> and in that time he's launched hundreds of ships into glass. >> it's difficult for me to walk into the liquor store because i will go on the shelf and turn the bottle sideways. and of course, the people at the lig or store are going, can i help you? >> have you ever put a steamboat in a bottle? >> i have. >> kayak in a bottle, that would be easy. >> it would. >> that's for beginnersz right. >> but goodwin is no beginner he's gone well beyond the sea. doesn't seem very hard to get a lighthouse in the bottle. >> hardest part is carving the light making sure that it fits through the mouth of the bottle. if it doesn't fit through the mouth you know what you got? a cork. >> goodwin's shipyard, aka his garage a stocked with liquor bottles. begins all of his projects with a block of wood. taking each and everyone by hand a process that can take more than 30 hours. >> the art is known as patience bottle. i joke say well, yes, you either have it or you lose it. the building of patience bottles began in 1700sa solitary craft practiced by monks and miners. who would create whole keeps inside of bottles. it became the pastime of sailors out at sea for months at a time. >> they were built mainly for sweethearts, loved often lot of times sailors would sell them to clear up their debts for when they were in port. >> robert hughes works at savannah, georgiaa he is ships of the sea museum, home to a small permanent collection of ships in bottles. >> it's the mystery. how do they do it? do they cut the class? once you handle it you'll notice on the glass no cuts. there are all bottles and you cannot figure out how to get them in there. it's an amazing thing. >> but even in the world of ships and bottles, there are sharks. what do you think of the cheaters in this trade? the people who actually saw the end off of a bottle and put the ship in there. >> i think it degrades the art. i've even seen some people where they actually cut the base of the bottle right here and then stuck the ship going up that way. then mounted it on a piece of wood. >> how does hugh goodwin do it? how does he get a whole ship through such a tight opening? i think i'm ready. >> at the base of the mast there is a hinge. >> wow. lower that down into the bottle. doing fine. >> wow. >> that raises everything up there. >> wow. >> there you go. >> my first ship in a bottle. >> put her there matey. >> about time to get these marbles rolling. >> cowan: ahead. >> that's how champions do it. >> cowan: marbles, anyone? as my diabetes changed it got harder to control my blood sugar. today, i'm asking about levemir®. vo: levemir® is an injectable insulin that can give you blood sugar control for up to 24 hours. and levemir® helps lower your a1c. levemir® lasts 42 days without refrigeration. that's 50% longer than lantus® which lasts 28 days. levemir® comes in flextouch® the latest in insulin pen technology from novo nordisk. levemir® is a long-acting insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults and children with diabetes and is not recommended to treat diabetic ketoacidosis. do not use levemir® if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. the most common side effect is low blood sugar which may cause symptoms such as sweating, shakiness, confusion, and headache. severe low blood sugar can be serious and life-threatening. ask your doctor about alcohol use, operating machinery, or driving. other possible side effects include injection site reactions. tell your doctor about all medicines you take and all of your medical conditions. check your blood sugar. your insulin dose should not be changed without asking your doctor. get medical help right away if you have trouble breathing, sweating, extreme drowsiness swelling of your face, tongue, or throat, dizziness, or confusion. today's the day to ask about levemir® flextouch®. covered by most health insurance and medicare plans. progressive insurance here and i'm a box who thrives on the unexpected. ha-ha! shall we dine? [ chuckle ] you wouldn't expect an insurance company to show you their rates and their competitors' rates but that's precisely what we do. going up! nope, coming down. and if you switch to progressive today you could save an average of over 500 bucks. stop it. so call me today at the number below. or is it above? dismount! oh, and he sticks the landing! >> cowan: i'm just doing this to introduce to you the kids bill geist found who take their marbles very seriously. ♪ >> all right, champions, about time to get the marbles rolling. >> this may not have been the most exciting thing on the boardwalk this summer but in the world of marbles, it's like the freakin' super bowl. >> that's how champions shoot folks. >> it's the 92nd annual national marbles tournament. featuring 49 of the best mibsters, as the players are called aged 7-14 from across the nation. in three days of highly trained thumb flicking, backspin, deadspin sidespin, they can do it all. it's a tradition here in wild wood, new jersey home of ringer stadium in the marbles hall of fame. >> i think back in the '20s, '30s marbles were the game. we have quite a collection. >> beri fox ceo of the marble king manufacturing company founded the hall of fame and sponsors the tournament. >> i would love to see marbles become an olympic event. marbles are played in almost every country in this world. >> yes, there are still kids who play this ancient unplugged game. >> don't knock it until you've tried it. it's actually really fun. >> up against -- bobby nar blocks calls himself big snack is a veteran on the marble circuit. you have four coaches? >> yeah. >> one coach is his sister a former champion. >> only person beating you is yourself. at first i thought it was just for nerds. >> brook donald 14-year-old from maryland is one of the favorites. what's the hardest part of the game? mental? >> yeah. mental. keeping your mind positive. because you have to have the attention span of a goldfish. if you win a game you have to forget. if you lose a game you have to forget. just live in the moment. >> it can be tough mentally and even physically. >> we have had bleeding on the court. >> oh man. >> not fun. >> you are a marble family. >> we're a marble family yeah. all of us have played. my kids all did. they had marbles when they were babies. take pictures when they were really tiny. >> how seriously do you take it? >> well enough that i get my kids practicing two to three hours a day. and we've got a marbles ring in our carport. and our living room floor has tape all over it with marble circles and lines pretty serious. >> all right folks, without further adue let's find out who our finalists are. >> day three of the tournament. the field narrows. tension mounts. especially among the parents. >> very nervous. >> brook donald rolls against emily simxovich in the girls' final for all the marbles. >> that's it. we've got a winner. >> this day emily proofs the better marble flicker. >> picks up one, two. the boys' final luke gaffigan, who learned marbles growing up on the streets of ethiopia. ran into a veritable marbles machine. devon leowendick. it was game marble. >> for the crown. [ applause ] both girls champion and boys champion each received a medal a marbles wristwatch, a $2,000 college scholarship. tradition that came also gives the queen a kiss. not easy for two 13 year old s. devon seemed to be stalling for time but in the end he threw like a champion. >> your new king and queen. >> cowan: coming >> cowan: as refreshing as tall glass of iced tea might be. not all are created equal m. are sweet, some are sweeter, martha teichner joins us for tea. >> did you know that 85% of all the tea consumed in the united states is iced? or that americans drink more than three billion gallons of iced tea a year. >> experience a refreshing -- or in 2014 we spent $5 billion on the canned and bottled stuff. >> we have serious sweet tea. >> then there's the matter of whether somerville, south carolina, a south carolina really is the birth place of sweet tea. often referred to as the wine of the south. >> very good. >> some tea. >> tina of somerville director of tourism. >> in a mason jar. you can use mason jar for anything. we especially use it for our iced tea. >> do they ever. >> i want to show you mason. >> as in mason jar. >> from the tip that have straw to the base is about 12 feet. and it was filled with 1425 gallons of sweet tea. >> somerville is talking about how on june 10, national iced tea day, his city set the guiness for largest sweet tea. how sweet? >> we only used about 1600 pounds of sugar. >> you're a politician, convince me that somerville is the birth place of sweet tea. >> you said i was a politics. you have to trust me would i lie to you? >> what is absolutely true is that the first commercial tea farm in the united states was in somerville. an operation from 1888 until 1950. eventually cuttings were transplanted to island south of charleston where they grown into what is now the charleston tea plantation. owned by bigelow in partner with third generation bill hall. looks like a giant hedge. >> tea, unlike other products is harvested every 15-18 days. when the new growth grows up like this overlooking the harvest is the two leaves and the bud. >> all tea comes from the same plant. once it's harvested it's oxidized. then dried and cleaned. >> the final thing is to taste the tea. >> you slurp it. >> you are rolling it around on your pallet. >> somerville used 120 pounds of the charleston breakfast black tea iced for the world record breaking brew. >> it's an american invention, iced tea. >> supposedly at the 1904 st. louis world's fair on a hot day, people weren't buying hot tea. so somebody put it on ice and bingo, the only problem, this recipe for iced sweet tea from the cookbook "housekeeping in old virginia" dated 1879, st. louis and somerville, take note. how does one make proper iced tea. >> bring it to a good rolling boil. and pour the water on the tea bags. then we're going to pour this into this pitcher. >> and for the secret of southern sweet tea. add your sugar while the tea is hot. >> if you put the sugar in after the tea is made you can never really stir it up so that sugar melts. here's to fresh brewed tea. >> once you've made it just the way you like it how about raising your glass to the ice and saying a big thank you. to the inventor of the ice maker. [african-style music] ♪ take my hand to the land ♪ ♪ take my hand to the land, whoa-oh! ♪ (narrator) only one family goes to incredible lengths to make sure your family time never becomes endangered. kalahari resorts. now open in the pocono mountains. book now at kalahariresorts.com you captain beat the way an old boat rides. he collects wooden boats like this. but never lost touch with his small town roots. as we found out when he invited us to nashville. ♪ he's nashville's nice guy. a man with a warm-hearted heart. can sing the phone book it would probably be a hit. he's country's storyteller. alan jackson. >> you sing a song about heartache, brink drinking dancing, all these things that have bin my mind. ♪ >> it's what makes life. ♪ >> there's no flash to jackson. just a man and his guitar. he had a blinding assent to the pinnacle of country music. 60 million albums sold. his latest "angels and alcohol." ♪ comes 25 years after he first topped the charts back in 1909. 1990. >> my voice gotten deeper in my old age. i don't quite sound up here like this. >> at his home outside nashville. there are shelves, he can count among his fans even those who once lived in the white house. >> oh, man, i'm outta place there. >> never forgotten the night he endnd up next to president geyer at a state dinner. >> they had this bowl with liquid in it. president bush happied over, don't drink that, you're supposed to wash your hands in it. i said, okay, thank you. ♪ >> jackson is country through and through. he grew up in tiny newnan, georgia, about 40 southwest of atlanta. his music speaks to life's simple pleasure farms family, and fishing. so did you catch all these? >> everyone. >> did you really? >> yeah. caught about everything in the ocean that i wanted to catch. ♪ >> his attic is a place just for his toys. especially anything with a motor. >> it's a 1958 pan-head which was the year i was born. >> he proved he was handy with a wrench. love of tinkering he got from his dad eugene a. ford mechanic. pretty much explains why his desk is a '66 half ton pick up. how many cars do you think you've had? >> i'd be ashamed so say. several hundred. i mean, even before i moved to nashville when i didn't have a dime i already had ton of vehicles. i'd buy 'em sell 'em. >> in their simplicity there's a certain wisdom. >> i still know where that comes from. driving down the road then this melody comes into your head. ♪ >> that's what happened with his haunting 911 anthem "where were you." ♪ >> i just woke up, there was this chorus, you know, i'm just a singer of simple songs. and the melody and everything. i would have forgotten it probably by morning. so i got up in my underwear went downstairs and taped that. back then a little tim tall recorder. ♪ writing songs about that day. i didn't want to take advantage. i didn't want to write anything. it's hard to write about. ♪ the record ended up word for word came to me that night. >> as well as it did you were sort of uncomfortable with the attention that the song brought to you. >> so many people tell me, feeling that same way or did i this same thing people started looking at me different, putting me up on this pedestal like i was some kind of saint. i'm just a singer of simple songs. that's the truth. >> truth is, fame fits him like a bad pair of boots. being the center of attention is the last place jackson wants to be. just ended up being a songwriter writing for other people to go on to become rich and famous would be happy? >> i would be. i still self conscious about going on stage. i love the singing, i love sharing my songs with people, especially something that i wrote. but still feel a little uncomfortable in front of people. >> in 25 years of doing it hasn't made it any easier. about an hour before he was due on stage in nashville when the nerves starting hitting on his tour bus. >> i'm pretty laid back as far as that goes i don't do any crazy stretches or anything weird, you know. i might have a shot of jack daniels or something. >> his wife denise helps calm him down. ♪ high school sweethearts they were married at 18. moved from georgia to nashville into a tiny basement apartment. >> we brought our first baby, mattie home to that basement apartment. >> we were still living there when i had my first number one record. we stayed there until we were sure i was going to make a living. >> the miles away from home took a toll. in 1997 he and denise separated after he admitted to having an affair. but they soon reconciled. denise even wrote a book about it to be a best seller. >> i was gone a lot. vulnerable and just made some bad choices. i think it was -- i was worried about people knowing about that. but then again, it was, you know, i'm a person. just real. i'm human being just like anybody. and make mistakes and even better to see that we survived that and have turned it around. >> besides their three children, perhaps nothing symbolizes their romance better than the car where they had their first date, a '55 t-bird. jackson had to sell it for a down payment on their first home. but years later denise tracked it down and gave it to alan as a christmas present. >> as the garage door comes up he sees that it's a '55 thunderbird. oh, you bought me a car like mine. i said, no, alan, that is your car. >> the car. >> still gives me the chills. >> the man broke down and cried. >> his passion for making the old new again is everywhere. whether it's cars, relationships or his music. ♪ at 56, the white-hatted man from georgia can look in his rear view mirror with pride. remembering what matters most in life, while still focusing on the road ahead k. for alan jackson, seems to have no end in sight. ♪ remember when ♪ >> cowan: ahead summertime. >> who doesn't deserve a three-month break after a rigorous year of kindergarten. >> cowan: and jim gaffigan. >> cowan: summertime is the time for taking vacation from cares and woes. unless you're jim gaffigan. >> remember last went snore i think we all still have emotional scars. well summer is finally here to wash away all those horrible memories. can you believe it? summer. the golden boy of seasons. everyone loves summer. what's not to love? sunny days, warm weather and don't forget it's not winter. now it may not come as a huge surprise to you that i don't hop on the summer bandwagon, i am pale and nobody wants to see me in shorts. like most pudge egos i prefer light jacket weather. i like a place to put my keys and hide the fact that i haven't worked out in two decades. i'm sure most of you love summer. it's like a three-month vacation. of course this isn't true but the perception of a summer holiday sure makes doing work during the summer feel like punishment. summer does mean no school for my children. hey, who doesn't deserve a three-month break after a rigorous year of kindergarten? i don't know exactly what's good about my kids getting the summer off. my kids lounge around the apartment like they returned from fighting isis with a constant "what are we going to do now" look on their faces. i can't wait for back to school commercials. inter takenning children is not the only summer pusher. the warm summer weather means pressure to do things. do things outside. this is why i don't live in southern california. nice weather is like an assignment. don't waste the day. go lie on the beach and get skin cancer. i'm sure many of you think i'm doing negative about your sacred summer, i'm just pale pudge 'and lazy but soon you'll come over to my side. i see it every august. that's when we all start regretting the horrible things we said about winter. it's when we go from appreciating our air conditioner to treating it like our most prized employee. you okay there air condition snore i know you've been working hard lately. but tell you what after labor day it's all downhill. you are guaranteed a seven-month vacation please don't quit. enjoy your summer everyone. don't worry. winter's around the corner. olympic next. >> it's really cute. >> cowan: driven to extremes. it's not likely to go away on its own. so let's do something about it. premarin vaginal cream can help. it provides estrogens to help rebuild vaginal tissue and make intercourse more comfortable. premarin vaginal cream treats vaginal changes due to menopause and moderate-to-severe painful intercourse caused by these changes. don't use it if you've had unusual vaginal bleeding breast or uterine cancer, blood clots, liver problems, stroke or heart attack, are allergic to any of its ingredients or think you're pregnant. side effects may include headache, pelvic pain, breast pain, vaginal bleeding and vaginitis. estrogens may increase your chances of getting cancer of the uterus, strokes, blood clots, or dementia so use it for the shortest time based on goals and risks. estrogens should not be used to prevent heart disease, heart attack, stroke or dementia. ask your doctor about premarin vaginal cream. ♪ me and you, ♪ ♪ and you and me. ♪ ♪ no matter how they tossed the dice. ♪ ♪ it had to be. ♪ ♪ the only one for me is you. ♪ ♪ and you for me. ♪ ♪ so happy together! ♪ now there's a rewards program that lets you earn points at one place and use them at another. introducing plenti. ♪ ♪ ♪ when it comes to rewards there's plenti together. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> cowan: grey garden here not with sun flowers like these around. admired by ancient greeks they still have plenty of modern day admirers. including ones sorry that at chew found not far from here. >> in south hampton new york, where palatialal estates hide behind sky-high hedges an oasis of sun flowers. hello. thanks for having us. >> come in. >> i like your t-shirt. this is where 85-year-old henry buhl puts on a dazzling display. >> you like my van goa? look at that. henry is former investment banker turned full time flappist. his summer home is ablaze. >> even the front door. >> incredible. >> he named this house sunflower he r in italian. all began with a single photograph. you took this photograph. assassination of sun flowers was born? >> yeah. >> from greek helios meaning sun and anthis flower. it's the state flower of kansas. now found all over the world as a food source, especially for its oil and seeds. this is fap that is particular. >> from the entryway to larger more valuable pieces this home is a tribute to the flower that makes everyone happy. >> it's supposed to be fun. it's not serious. >> serious or not extent of his collection is no joke. did you ever think -- okay, i've over done it now? >> no. no. >> some of his most striking collectibles are in the living room. >> there are about 1550. >> 15th century prints. >> they originally black and white. somebody came along and colored them in. >> you don't think you'll switch over to tulips? >> i'm too far in. >> do people around south hampton know you have the sunflower guy? >> i think so. because you didn't see my car did you? >> not yet. look at this. this is great. but now it's really, really cute. >> i love it. >> cowan: coming up. is that your favorite? >> cowan: chilling with nancy giles. ...connects to the ends of the earth? from roller coaster hills... ...to musical streets and movie chase scenes. it's all "one road." everywhere you take it tells your story. and wherever you are is where the road begins. the camry. toyota. let's go places. i try hard to get a great shape. this... i can do easily. new benefiber healthy shape helps curb cravings. it's a clear, taste-free daily supplement that's clinically proven to help keep me fuller longer. new benefiber healthy shape. this, i can do. >> cowan: remember when 31 flavors seemed like a lot? now you can spend hours deciding on the perfect ice cream flavor, which is just what our nancy giles did. >> they keep it old school in seaside heights on the jersey shore. from the wooden boardwalk to the kohr's ice cream stand. which is presided over the beach for 75 years. what are the most pop pew polar flavors? >> most pop pew polar is the orange cream. everyone says, reminds me of a creamsicle. >> greg kohr's grandfather started the business and invented the machine they still use. >> vanilla still very popular flavor. >> in fact vanilla remains americans' favorite flavor. the average american eats, or in my case inhales, 22 pounds of ice cream a year. what flavor you got there? >> chocolate. >> is that your favorite? >> and our totally unscientific survey found quite a few traditionalistz vanilla with sprinkles. how does it taste? >> good. >> kohr's is trying to expand our horizons and our waistlines with flavors like salted caramel. and cake batter. >> really focuses on how good the caramel is. that's really good. >> and now for something completely different. >> today we are making american beauty. it's a creme rlaice ice cream. they're part of the new generation for whom vanilla is just a little too vanilla. >> shade is a smoked dark chocolate ice cream with a caramelized white chocolate ganache swirled in. this is butter pop corn ice cream. with toasted raisins and chocolate chips. >> they opened their shop called east and bites this summer selling smooth ice cream. it all started with a cart at local farmers markets. >> we love it when flavors just really punch you in the face. >> this is punching me. punching. >> one of their strongest punches is delivered by not so secret ingredient. get this. meat. >> we love bay son as the rest of america does. >> wait a minute. >> bacon a lot. >> bacon and ice cream. here we go. >> just eat it. >> oh my, god. that's crazy. oh snap. that is crazy. bay son ice cream actually seems to be going over pretty well. even baby gillian pinely pigged out. >> we tried to make a smoked salmon ice cream. >> that is a little wild. that's out there. and? >> the first trial didn't really quite go as intended but we're still working. >> one thing their ice cream isn't, franklys healthy. after all the shop is called ice and vice. 70% prefer premium ice cream which is typically higher in fat. but one man is on a mission to change all that. >> our ice cream is low in fat, low in sugar high in protein high in fiber made with all natural ingredients. >> do you have the nerve to say that your ice cream is nutritional? >> it is. >> michael shoretz grew up eating ice cream. who didn't? but after he saw his father contract diabetes, he studied health policy and got seriously into fitness. >> when you're a personal trainer all your clients really want to talk with you about is food. what they can eat. what they can't eat. what they wish they could be eating why as result of doing all the personal training they're allowed to eat. ice cream of course was the most talked about food item. >> he spent two years at his kitchen counter tinkering with ingredients. then went into mass production. enlightened now sells in more than 6000 stores across the country. so how does it taste? to be honest maybe not quite as sinfully good as some others but still, pretty good. >> so the whole thing we want this to taste decadently so good it can't be good for you. >> exactly. >> if you use that as a tag line, you yes. >> cheers. >> cheers. >> chew on that while you're trying to squeeze into that bikini for a summer at the shore. when i feel bloated and my stomach is rumbling it takes me forever to get dressed. i don't have the time to be gassy and uncomfortable. enjoying activia twice a day for 4 weeks may help reduce the frequency of minor digestive issues. i love activia. that is so good. ♪ activiaaaa. ♪ >> cowan: now to john dickerson in washington for look what's ahead on "face the nation." >> dickerson: today we'll talk with speaker of the house john boehner and senator bernie sanders as well as get latest on the emerging nuclear deal with iran. >> cowan: john dickerson in washington. next week here on "sunday morning." ♪ >> she was my hero brian will sop's second chance. but to get from the old way to the new you'll need the right it infrastructure. from a partner who knows how to make your enterprise more agile, borderless and secure. hp helps business move on all the possibilities of today. and stay ready for everything that is still to come. just about anywhere you use sugar, you can use splenda®... ...no calorie sweetener. splenda® lets you experience... ...the joy of sugar... ...without all the calories. think sugar, say splenda® >> cowan: we leave you this sunday on the grounds of grey gardens. captioning made possible by johnson & johnson where quality products for the american family have been a tradition for generations captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org i'm lee cowan we hope you've enjoyed our sunday at the shore and join us next sunday morning. for now have a good rest of your weekend. copd includes chronic bronchitis and emphysema. spiriva is a once-daily inhaled copd maintenance treatment that helps open my airways for a full 24 hours. spiriva helps me breathe easier. spiriva respimat does not replace rescue inhalers for sudden symptoms. tell your doctor if you have kidney problems, glaucoma, trouble urinating, or an enlarged prostate. these may worsen with spiriva respimat. discuss all medicines you take even eye drops. if your breathing suddenly worsens, your throat or tongue swells you get hives, vision changes or eye pain or problems passing urine stop taking spiriva respimat and call your doctor right away. side effects include sore throat cough, dry mouth and sinus infection. nothing can reverse copd. spiriva helps me breathe better. to learn about spiriva respimat slow-moving mist ask your doctor or visit spirivarespimat.com since 1961, pearle vision has been providing expert eye care. today, we make caring for your eyes even easier. right now, buy one pair of glasses, and get another pair free. this is genuine eye care in your neighborhood. this is pearle vision. >> dickerson: today op "face the nation." a nuclear deal with iran may be within reach. anti-establishment candidates take both parties by storm. thousands turned out to hear donald trump talk immigration and just about everything else in arizona yesterday. >> the majority is back we're going to take the country back. >> dickerson: did trim's controversial remark help or hurt the republican party. we'll talk about the 2016 campaign with house speaker john boehner. then hear from the candidate who is drawing big crowds on the democratic side. bernie sanders a real threat to hillary clinton? and as the u.s. gets closer to a nuclear deal with iran we'll talk to a top critic arkansas republican senator tom cotton. we'll have

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