Transcripts For KYW CBS This Morning Saturday 20140712

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morning with a look at today's "eye opener." >> your world in 90 seconds. >> shut the front door. lebron is back. >> cleveland celebrates as lebron james comes home. >> three great words from lebron james. "i'm coming home." >> cleveland cavalier fans are celebrating big time. >> so what if it's baseball game. put your basketball game on. there's a lot of excitement. >> there's been a lot of people killed today in the israeli air strikes on gaza. the militants' missiles are striking further better than before and jolting israeli's sense of security. >> the prime minister said they'll continue its offensive which has claimed the lives of more than 100 palestinians. >> a storm rolls in to rocky mountain national park. a lightning bolt killed one woman and sent seven to the hospital. >> a suspected mass murderer collapsed in the courtroom not once but twice accused of killing six family members on wednesday. >> the last member of the ramon has died. tommy ramon at the age of 65. >> something strange is happening at yellowstone park. >> all that -- >> the road has melted. >> -- and all that matters. >> steven spielberg. >> don't say it. >> -- on "cbs this morning." >> i know people are talking about it. of course, it's lebron james. apparently lebron is going back to cleveland or as the cleveland fans put it, is there a way to unburn jerseys? captioning funded by cbs and welcome to the weekend. i'm anthony mason with vinita nair. good morning. >> good morning to you. >> we have some wonderful guests and one of the most honored and innovative chefs gregory ogden. >> and the r & b scottish hit maker on our saturday session. israeli forces hit gaza with more air strikes today and the death toll continues to rise. >> hamas says more than 900 people have been wounded including dozens of civilians. as of today egypt has opened the crossing in southern gaza to allow medical aid into the zba za strip and for palestinian wounded to be evacuated to egypt. holly williams is in gaza. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the israeli military pounded the gaza strip with air strike this morning five days. palestinian officials say more than 120 people have been killed including dozens of civilians. the israeli military sometimes telephones in advance of its air strikes so that people have time to get out alive. in gaza city they evacuated this area and then watched as a house was demolished. israel says it's targeting terrorist command centers though in reality they're often the homes of militants where children and other civilians have become collateral damage. an israeli air strike demolished 77-year-old ibrahim doad's house yesterday and like many palestinians, he feel as powerless rage. i wish i were a young man, he said. i could ware a suicide belt and go and blow myself up in tel aviv. palestinian militants have fired hundreds of rockets at israel during this escalation that caused some injuries and damage to buildings but so far no israelis have been killed thanks in part to the country's iron dome anti-missile defense system which shoots the rockets down. in gaza they have no protection and more are dying every day. at this funeral yesterday they buried five members of one family. two of the dead were brothers and both members of islamic jihad, a palestinian group. their -year-old sister was also killed in the strike. her surviving brother said a final farewell before kefa was buried with her father, mother, and two brothers. israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu vowed to push on with the strikes yesterday. he also refused to rule out a ground invasion and said no international pressure will stop israel from acting. anthony? >> holly williams in gaza city. thank you, holly. for more on the israeli/palestinian confrontation watch "face the nation" tomorrow morning. bob schieffer's guests will include israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu. two labs at the centers for disease control are closed the morning. potential for dangerous germs were halted after repeated incidents of mishandled samples. they lost some samples which were sent from a secure cdc lab to atlanta. one run by the u.s. department of agriculture in athens georgia. the head of the cdc is astonish astonished over the agency's failures. >> i'm upset, angry,'ve lost sleep over it and i'm working around the clock to do everything possible to resolve it. >> the cdc is reviewing its safety procedures. now to tim grags debate. beginning next week the obama administration plans to begin sending home some of the thousands of children and families who crossed into the u.s. illegally from central america, but some of the republicans in congress are reluctant to flip the bill. good morning. the secretary of homeland security says the surge will make a difference soon but the administration may have longer to wait to get the help it wants from congress, although a deal could be in the works. homeland security secretary jeh johnson toured a temporary immigration detention facility in ar jen in new mexico. they're housing thousands of children who crossed the border illegally. >> i think they expected to be apprehended and let go into the interior and they're surprised they're being detain and sent back so quinnly. >> reporter: johnson warrened them thursday that immigration customs enforcement could run out of mon in mid-august under the strain of housing and processing up to 90,000 yum migrants. in new mexico johnson used his strongest lang yet to parents who spent thousands of dollars to send their children north. >> we're sending people back. >> reporter: the white house has asked congress for nearly $4 billion in emergency funding but some republican lawmakers think it's too much. they want the money tied to repealing a 2008 law that makes it much harder to deport some unaccompanied imgrant children without a lengthy court process. >> the president should put his money where his mouth is. >> reporter: senator mccain agreed on friday congress should act, but republicans, he said will not guarantee. >> we want to assure the american people that it's going to stop. unfortunately that's not in the president's request. >> reporter: in a possible olive branch he said the white house is open to both parties to quote, get this done. next week the senate holds another hear on the crisis but time is running out on the congressional calendar. the senate only has 15 working days left until its august vacation. the house only 12. vinita? >> mark aim betterlbert in our washington bureau. thank you. there's been substandard care at some of the 150 centers. a veteran who died while waiting in cafeteria, they want to know if compassion got in the way of common sense. >> reporter: the first call to 911 comes from inside the cafeteria from a woman who's upset the v.a. emergency room rejected her first plea for help. >> we called our rapid response here of the hospital butern fortunately they won't respond. >> a veteran of vietnam had collapsed in the cafeteria, but under the vmt a.'s rules in albuquerque, the cafeteria, which is about four blocks way, is outside the zone that emergency room staff are allowed to go. >> there's no cold blue in the canteen. >> reporter: the v.a. in a statement said it's reviewing all details of the tragic incident but it's still not clear if faster response could have helped jim garcia. they say he got expert care in the cafeteria immediately. >> we got people doing cpr. >> nurses? doctors? >> nurses. >> nurses? okay. >> reporter: nurses and paramedics responded but according to one caller none of the doctors did. >> there's a table of doctors sitting here -- >> i'm sorry sorry about that. >> the veteran who collapses wud surrounded by physicians assistants, emergency, all training in emergency care. the family is hearing conflicting v.a. accounts of jim garcia's death and is considering a lawsuit. a big story in the world of sports is the world cup and we'll get to that in a few moments but the buggest sports story here in america is of course lebron james' decision to return to cleveland after four years and two nba championships in miami. dean reynolds reports from cleveland. >> reporter: the announcement set off celebrations. my relationship with northeast ohio is bigger than basketball, james said in a statement published by "sports illustrated." i didn't realize that four years ago. i do now. james, a native of akron, ohio was a phenomenal playmaker from a very young age who went straight from high school to the cavaliers. but four years ago james announced his departure from miami in what amounted to a nationally televised jilting of cleveland. humiliated fans burned his jersey and his image was torn from the arena. dan gilbert castrated him for his betrayal. it was a four-year deal worth $88 million. >> i'm so freaking happy to get this guy back in this town. >> reporter: anthony lima is a local sportscater for cbs radio. >> what it means financially for the people of this city what it means mentally psychologically, all of that is intertwined. >> reporter: while attendance dropped 15% during his absence, now callers are jamming their switchboard. and as for miami, a team mural said it all with the face of james blacked out. "forbes" magazine now estimates with lebron james on the cavaliers, the value of franchise could increase by as much as $100 million and oddsmakers in las vegas now see the cavs as legitimate contenders and a 4-1 bet to win the championship next year. for "cbs this morning: saturday," dean reynolds cleveland. >> for more on lebron james' return to cleveland we turn to bill rhoden a sports columnist. bill, bill bill you told us you didn't think he would go back to cleveland. >> i told the truth. i woke up and thought it was a dream. maybe forgiveness is one of my strongest suits. there's no way if the owner trashed me the way fwil better trashed lebron and seeing the fans burning my uniform and taking my image and dumping it in the garbage can, no way am i going back. clearly three or four teams could have paid him the same amount, but i think lebron is a businessperson. he's thinking in five or six years, how is this going to play auto. to a certain point i think he is concerned. the fans do care and miami, they come a half hour late they leave early, you know, aknow and i think there's a part of him that wanted to go home. >> he left because he wanted to win championships. you've got to in miami. cleveland is one of the worst franchises. so why go back? >> in a way it's like the project dal son prodigal son. he left. he won two championships. now he's coming back because miami wouldn't do it for me anymore, new york, l.a. i do want to come back. i think at a certain level, there is something real about that. this is home and i never thought that he was -- i still didn't think he was going to leave miami to come back to cleveland, but i think i never thought that he was a miami guy, like an l.a. guy. >> right. >> a lot of the people you see in the streets, those same people burned his jersey. what happens in five years if they haven't won the championship. >> he didn't even make that promise. i remember during that espn conference back when he joined miami, i'm going to win all these championships. this is an e-mail and no promise of a championship. >> but see? it doesn't matter. if you're a fan, that sounds fine. but after three years without a championship, i'll be very curious to find out, you know, how they feel about it. will they burn the jerseys again. >> and it's going to be interesting to see -- you know it's nice to see that cleveland forgives quickly. that's nice. always encouraging. >> i'm with you though. i don't forgive very easily, so i understand. >> i'm trying to get better. >> bill rhoden thanks so much. a lightning strieng in rocky mountain national park killed a woman and injured several. they saw the storm brewing. the lightning strike happened yesterday. fire officials say a wildfire in washington is threatening hundreds of homes. it's already burned through about 32 acres or 22,000 square miles. they're concerned about storms in the forecast which could cause fire to spread. here it is the middle of summer and forecasters are predicting a cold snap in the midwest. we're joining with more on the extreme weather. >> well, it may be summer but sort of a chain reaction of events that started last week with a typhoon in japan is going to dislodge a piece of arctic cold and send it down to the midwest, a sort of winter pattern coming down later this week. record cold temperatures will happen in international falls and the twin cities on monday. then into milwaukee, chaurks and possibly for wayne and sault ste. marie on tuesday with highs only in the 50s and 60s in many spots and there will be a chance for severe weather as that cold air moves in across the east as well. it's not the polar vortex but the son of the college roommate. anthony, vinita? >> that was our affiliate of wcco. after four weeks, 66 matches it's down to two teams and one important team. they face off tomorrow to decide the 2014 world cup soccer championship. here with us is brendan greeley. good morning. >> good morning. >> let's talk about the last meaning between germany and argentina. >> there's go ways to look at this. either you care about history or don't care. soccer fans get very precious about soccer history. the last two teams have been in the quarterfinals in 2010. many of the same players on both teams played against each other. germany won 4-0. you can say that's the answer we're looking for. however, if you care about history, germany played argentina in the files in 1986. they won. it's hard to scribe how important he is to ar jen tee nachlt he's everything to that country, right? then in 1990 again they played in the finals. germany won this time 1-0. so diego mary dano was the coach. there are many conspiracies he held back lionel messi in 2010 which was argentina's breakout star, possibly the best player in the world, because he didn't want messi to take over. perhaps now messi can do what he's supposed to do. that's if you care about history. >> many look at this as the best team in the world in germany versus argentina with what many believe is the best player in the world in argentina. how does this fall? >> there's nobody on the german team better than messi, and i'm going to get calls. but there are so many on the team almost as good as messi. germany for the last 15 years has had a comprehensive program in place to find absolutely every 8-year-old in the country who has talent in soccer to make arrangements. so other countries rely on luck to put together their teams. germany has relied on a 15-year plan to find all of this amazing talent. they've got midfielders who can score. they've got such a deep bench that it's almost hard to compare them to argentina which is a solid team with an amazing star. >> before we duo, quickly pick who's going to win. >> germany. >> okay. >> the oddsmakers have it at 1-1. i'm going to go out on a limb and say germany is not going to be as successful as brazil who's just watching a team and an entire country collapse. germany is going to put three on the board and think lionel messi is going do something magical we're all going to remember and he's going to score and it's going to be enough. >> 3-1. >> 3-1. >> thank as lot, brendan. >> it's on tape now. the "washington post" says communications problems complicated the police response last fall to the deadly shootings at the washington naval yard. police report says federal and local officials did not share information during the hunt for gunman aaron alexis. the report says it would not have saved any of the victims. the "sun sentinel" says the theater shooter is now under arrest. he was ordered to surrender his firearm. the shooting stemmed over testing. he said he was acting in self-defense. the "new york post" says tracy morgan is taking walmart to court to allow a sleep-deprived driver behind the wheel of a truck. he injured four others and killed a passenger. the driver was awake for more than 24 hours. walmart has yet to comment. "usa today" says chrysler is recalling more than 650 mill yunion suvs because the lights around the mere can catch fire. chrysler says it has only seen the problem in lighted sun visor mears but wanted to take a look at all of the vehicles as a precaution. and the "san francisco chronicle" says amelia earhart has completed her fleet around the world. yes, you heard right. 77 years after the first earhart's ill attempt. 31-year-old traffic reporter amelia rose earhart, no relation wrapped up a 17-hour stop trip landing on friday. she called it amazing and felt like they had amelia with them. coming up many health experts want to curb americans' consumption of sugary soft drinks by taxing them. now, two of the most aggressive cities in the nation will put it to a vote. and later, three economists get in a car. sounds like the start of a bad joke, but it's really the start of a good book about american business. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." summer usually means the sweet smell of fresh cut grass or something good cooking on the outdoor grill, but this year in many places it means the noxious odor of skunks especially in the suburbs. later, a look at why the numbers have exploded. >> we have a friendly skunk at my house. we'll be right back. this is "cbs this morning: saturday." we have some breaking news this morning, philadelphia police are searching for, two missing children right now. six year-old sincere mcgovern an milk die a tucker were last seen on the 3200 block of byberry avenue. they were heading to the decatur school playground around 4:00 o'clock. pair never return home. sincere is a i 4-foot and ways -- is 4 feet and weighs 60-pound. he was wearing a yellow shirt and blue and white checkered shorts. nikkei lah is 5 feet eight and wearing a beige tank top and green pajama pants. if you see them call police immediately. let's check on that forecast with carol good morning. >> good morning, nicole. we have a couple clouds but they are off to the west. we will look outside and see bright conditions beautiful looking start to the day, storm scan three showing a few clouds to the west might see a couple in the area today but that is it we are looking for sunshine. temperatures 71 right now in philadelphia we are starting to warm up, our temperatures this afternoon getting to 88 degrees, mostly sunny warm day and then tomorrow another warm day with a chance of a shower or thunderstorm in the afternoon on sunday and better chances monday and tuesday nicole. >> our next update 7:57. i'm nicole brewer, we will see you then. if he were a lobbyist... if they were political contributors... maybe tom corbett would listen to them, instead of cutting funding for their schools. oil and gas companies gave corbett 1.7 million dollars in political contributions. and he gave them a sweetheart deal on taxes that's costing pennsylvania billions. corbett's mismanagement has caused a huge budget deficit. and his painful education cuts are forcing teacher layoffs and increasing class sizes. now corbett wants to give the oil and gas industry even more handouts. and what's he getting from them? corbett's keeping that secret. so pennsylvanians are challenging tom corbett to come clean. release the records of your meetings with donors... that you've been hiding. disclose all the contributions letters and emails from oil and gas lobbyists who influence you. we've got a right to know who tom corbett's listening to. because it sure isn't us. in the sixth day of the running of the bulls. they had applied an anti-slip coating on the slippery streets to try to reduce injury. >> i wonder what's going through their minds, why am i here. the good news is no one was gored today. only three were hurt with one taken to the hospital for a broken bull. it was made famous with hemingway's "the sun rises." a big push of sugary drinks by taxing them. the soft drink industry is fighting too. >> this fall voters in two california cities famous for their progressive ways will decide the fate of proposals to tax sugary drinks by the ounce. adriana do as has more. >> reporter: should a can of soda be treated like a pack of cigarettes. that's what voters in san francisco and elsewhere will decide this year. >> sugary drinks are making people sick. >> reporter: scott weiner proposed it. his proposal will add two cents per ounce of soda sports drinks, and juices. >> if this can pass in san francisco, i believe we'll see a lot of energy around the country in cities, in states to try to get this passed elsewhere. >> reporter: but it's been tried before. in the past four years lawmakers around the country have introduced 30 special taxes on sugary drinks. none have passed. in part because the food & beverage industries poured millions into anti-tax ad campaigns. >> feeding a family is difficult enough in today's society. now politicians shouldn't do it. >> it could hurt families and businesses like this. he runs more than 50 movie theaters across the country. >> another tax on business and we have to figure out how to promote business, not at how to hurt business. it's not about solving obesity or diabetes. it's about taxation. >> reporter: if it's defeated critics hope the idea will fizzle out for good. for "cbs this morning: saturday," adriana up next medical news in our ""morning news."" researchers hope they have found a way to beat the aids rye vus and a new app that helps a college develop a better baseball team through brain science. >> holly phillips and dr. jon lapook. a simple test may predict who might get the disease. a specialist shows us how an early diagnosis could make a real difference. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." oh hey there! 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(angry cat purr) ah! part of a good breakfast... for almost everyone! with psoriatic arthritis, i had intense joint pain that got worse and worse. then my rheumatologist prescribed enbrel. i'm phil mickelson, pro golfer. enbrel helps relieve pain and stop joint damage. i've been on the course and on the road. enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders, and allergic reactions have occurred. before starting enbrel, your doctor should test you for tuberculosis and discuss whether you've been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. you should not start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. tell your doctor if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores have had hepatitis b have been treated for heart failure, or if you have symptoms such as persistent fever, bruising, bleeding, or paleness. enbrel helped relieve my joint pain. but the best part of every journey... dad!!! ...is coming home. ask if enbrel, the number one biologic medicine prescribed by rheumatologists, can help you stop joint damage. kerri: kerri the sparkle® fairy here. are you about to spend that on paper towels? mom: well, i use bounty... kerri: ooo! use sparkle®... it's just right for cleaning up everyday little messes without cleaning out your piggy bank. sparkle®. the bright way to clean. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] keep your lawn looking great with a troy-bilt trimmer for just $119 at lowe's. ♪ ♪ discover brookside and discover an exciting combination of tastes. rich, dark chocolate covering soft centers flavored with exotic fruit juices. it's chocolate and fruit flavors like you've never experienced before. discover brookside. it's time now for "morning rounds." medical correspondent dr. jon lapook and cbs contributor dr. holly phillips. first an update on a story we reported on last year. researchers had good reason to believe they had found a way to beat the aids virus in newborns. jon? >> this was promising news in the battle of aids. doctors in mississippi say they may have rid a girl of hiv, but there was a major development in the case. physicians at the mississippi medical center had been monitoring the 4-year-old girl since her unusually aggressive treatment during infancy. there had been no trace of active virus for more than two years but a routine checkup this month showed the virus had returned. this doctor oversees aids research at the national institutes of health. >> it was obviously disappointing because they were hoping this would be the first example of a real cure of baby related to the fact that the baby was treated aggressively very, very early especially at the time of birth. >> the case was very promising because doctors thought the regimen might have stopped the virus from finding hiding places in the body. at at birth the girl was tested positive and was treated with a three-day cocktail. after months the mother stopped treatment and disappear for five months. when the child returned to the hospital doctors were surprised to find no signs of the virus. normally it must be suppressed by the indefinite use of medication. >> jon, this is heartbreaking. how is she doing now? >> she's doing well. she's back on medication. the viral load is down. the white count is back up. it looks like she's doing better. >> jon, going forward, what do we learn from these test results? >> the reason it's so exciting you heard about these hiding places, the thought was maybe we could interrupt the hiv virus in the reservoirs hiding out, where they couldn't be affected. what happens is it goes through the blood but then it goes out to lymph tissue throughout the body and is able to incorporate itself back into the dna of the cell. that's why it's called a retro virus. it makes a copy of itself. even if you get rid of the virus in the bloodstream it can come out later. so the thought of early aggressive treatment during the tomb of birth is investor exciting. thing it does show even if it's not a cure it was able to delay the hiv virus from coming back out. so maybe it's something we can do in the future. >> hopefully. also scientists may be a step closer to develop a simple blood test for alzheimer's. in a news report they get an 80ch accuracy who will get it within a year. more than 5 million americans have alzheimer's. it's the sixth leading cause of death. 80% accuracy. how significant are these tests? >> that's very very significant. of the thousands of proteins in the blood they wish able to narrow it down to ten. if you have those proteins along with mild memory or thinking problems with that 80% accuracy that you mentioned they can predict whether or not you will develop alzheimer's within the year, so it's a very very promising study especially when you consider we don't have a great blood tests for alzheimer's right now. we really rely on imaging studies. there are tests that we can do with lumbar punctures and spinal fluid but mostly the diagnosis is made clinically just based on symptoms. so having a strong blood test would be an important tool. >> i had to say what do i want to know now that i know there's no treatment. do people want to know? >> you know vinita, there's no cure but there are triemtds and what we know about the treatments that makes the blood tests so important is that they work best at the very very start of the illness or arguably even before the illness starts at all. so if we know who's going to get alzheimer's disease, we can treat them recall and maybe even more effectively. the other thing is alzheimer's doesn't just affect the patient. it's really an illness that ainvolves the entire family. families can plan and know what to expect and can may dealing with the condition much easier. >> and finding out who's at risk earlier maybe you can get them into clinical trials. 's a big hope and maybe find out what works and what doesn't work. >> that's true. we're also finding out wait take to kick the smoking habit. smokers had a 49% higher quit rate than those who used only one method. the times of the pills and the patchwork in the quitter's favor. you might think it's the eyes that determine what we see but it's actually the brain. the mind uses 25% of is power on visual perception. carter evans shows us how a new app is helping one california team through brain science. >> reporter: batting practice seems like a no-brainer for david andrese every time he swings. it's the same for teammate joe chavez. but both players struggled last season. >> i had a tough time between pitch ball and change-up. >> change-up. >> it came from workouts in the school's science lab. david and joe were among 19 members of the baseball team in riverside taking part in the experiment. the goal training the brain to see better. the players spent 25 minutes a day, four days a week using a new app designed to expand brain power. >> these just look like blurry blobs. >> yeah. and so these blurry blobs are called patterns. as we go through the screens, the wavy lines become closer and closer together so that's actually a measure of visual acuity. >> neuroscientist aaron seitz. >> it's not making eyes work any better. it's making brain work better. >> exactly. >> the brain measures only a fraction of what we see. every-inch enters the retina upside down and is recorded by 125 million photo recep tore cells. that inform something's compressed down to fit within 1 million fibers as it travels through the optic nerve. >> the eyes have this big image, but normally our brain doesn't process everything we see, is that what you're saying? >> so that's actually true. most of the visual field is very fuzzy in that we only have a sense of clarity because we're moving our eyes about all the time. >> you're checking on -- i don't see what you're clicking on at this point anymore. >> after two months they increased their position. the team scored 42 more runs and five more wins in one season. >> just picking up a different spin on the ball you can lay off pitches you normally swing at. >> if you can just recognize what's coming it makes the game so much easier. what a difference. >> maybe this can make the mets a little bit better. holly, are there other ways this app can be used do you think? >> you know anthony, it's already being skpafrmtsed with in other sports and also law enforcement, officers who need to see license plates quickly. but i can see where it applies to any field where you can apply really really good perception, whether you're a scientist or a surgeon. jon, it would help you in the colonoscopy? >> i was going to say one o ever the hardest things to find is flat polyps. it could help detect cancer. finally new research shows us the faekts of sitting on heart health. two hours of sedentary behavior like sitting, watching tv or driving driving. this is it, two hours. >> we could turn this into a treadmill test. >> this makes sense, right, because in evolution people were not just sitting around. if you sad around too long you got eaten. now we're sitting around too much. >> dr. jon lapook and dr. holly phillips thanks so much. up next main street lessons for wall street. two business school professors reveal what they learned on a 4,000-mile road trip. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." ♪ ♪ ♪ abe! get in! punch it! let quicken loans help you save your money. with a mortgage that's engineered to amaze! thanks, g. i do a lot oresearch on angie's list before i do any projects on my home. i love my contractor and i am so thankful to angie's list for bringing us together. find out why more than two million members count on angie's list. angie's list -- reviews you can trust. ♪ yoplait. with a smooth and creamy taste your whole family loves. it is so good all of the time. [ mrs. hutchison ] friday night has always been all fun and games here at the hutchison household. but one dark stormy evening... there were two things i could tell: she needed a good meal and a good family. so we gave her what our other cats love purina cat chow complete. it's the best because it has something for all of our cats! and after a couple of weeks she was healthy, happy and definitely part of the family. we're so lucky that lucy picked us. [ female announcer ] purina cat chow complete. always there for you. chili's new southwest pairings for just 8 bucks. pick any two southwest favorites, like enchiladas, tacos tostadas, and more. the combinations are endless. chili's new southwest pairings for just 8 bucks. the same old problem with them is the catalytic converters and precious metals. >> yeah. >> you throw it in the yard and telling the guys hey, i'll give you 50 bucks. that's how it started. >> that's from a promo video for a very interesting new video. three men, all business professors, took a road trip from alabama to idaho to find out what wall street could learn from main street. the result is roadside nba. backroads lessons for entrepreneurs, executives and small business owners. two of the three authors are here with us this morning. mike mazzio and scott shea professor of finance at university of utah. welcome to both of you. scott, i'm told you did almost all of the driving? >> i did almost all of the driving, yes. i get very antsy in the car if i'm not drivinging. >> mike, you were in the back seat. >> it's safer there. >> how did you come up with the idea for this trip? >> well we see each other at conferences a lot and after seeing the panels and seminars all day, we had enough of the economists. we need to get out. >> i know the feeling. >> so we wanted to get, you know, out on the road. one time we were in boston for a conference. we went up to maine. while we were there, we went to the shoe store. we started talking to the staff at the shoe store and talked about inventory and pricing. we thought wow, on main street there's a lot of insight into businesses on how things work and there's a lot we could teach. let's do road trips and bring their stories into a book that other small businesses could use. >> i cannot imagine the quizzical looks you got when three economists come in and start asking about inventory and how you do business. but what did you learn about how small businesses are competing against the big box shops. what are they doing to stay in business that big retailers don't realize is successful? >> there's a lot of things big business does well. they're set up to realize the economic scale and pricing. but small business needs to figure out how to do things that big businesses can't do well. for example, we talked to a business in california, rosa brothers dairy, and what they're doing is differentiating milk, right? they're figuring out a way to figure different proposition to milk. they're selling milk in glass bottles, flavored milks, we tasted root beer-flavored milk and orange cream-flavored milk. >> ew. >> what they're doing is doing things in a way that's difficult for the big huge large milk processors to replicate and as a result, they've carved out a niche. >> you created mazzio's law. how's that? >> it ooh is gra it to have a law name add f you. i won. >> apparently so. >> here are the five things to do to be successful but when we were talking to these businesses, what we found is they had different approaches. sometimes disparate strategies. one worked in one circumstance. another in another area. mazzio's law, the right answer to any strategic question is "it depends. "our book is going to tell you what's right and how you adapt your circumstances to the right approach. >> has this changed what you're teaching in the classroom now? >> the examples from machb street really enrich the classroom and give a variety of new exposure to the students and they're getting excited about it. >> i have to say, scott and mike, it's very impressive that you're still friends. >> 4,600 miles they went. >> thank you both again. >> thanks. coming up millions of manners do much of their shopping on amazon.com but they're being sued. we'll tell you why. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." jake and i have been best friends for years. one of our favorite things to do is going to the dog park together. sometimes my copd makes it hard to breathe. so my doctor prescribed symbicort. it helps significantly improve my lung function starting within five minutes. symbicort doesn't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden symptoms. with symbicort today i'm breathing better. come on, boy! 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[ male announcer ] if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. ♪ ♪ ♪ i think the sun might be shining ♪ ♪ just a little more bright ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ i think the stars might be hanging ♪ ♪ just a little more high ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ come on, love ♪ ♪ a new day is calling, and it feels so right ♪ [ female announcer ] with ingredients like roasted hazelnuts skim milk and cocoa, there's a whole lot of happy in every jar of nutella. spread the happy. some people don't like added sugar in their juice. so say hello to ocean spray 100% juice. and goodbye to added sugar. i thought we weren't adding any sugar. oh. okay, nobody use these cranberries over here. punk rock lost a founding father on friday tommy ramone the last surviving member of the band the ramones died of cancer. tommy was born in budapest hungary. he moved to new york where he would meet the bandmates who all took the last name ramone. ♪ as drummer and manager of the band tommy ramone helped define punk and changed the course of pop music. in recent years, ramone changed gear forming the folk duo uncle monk with his partner claudia. the ramones were inducted into the rock and roll hall good morning everyone i'm nicole brewer. fire fighter rescued two residents in the early morning house fire. two other residents managed to escape the flames from the third floor. "eyewitness news" on the 3900 block of aspen street in mantua just after 2:30. the fire chief on the scene tells us one fire fighter did suffer a minor hand injury, the the cause of that fire is still being investigated. now lets check that forecast carol good morning. >> good morning nicole hello, everybody. we are brightening up around here so we had nice conditions and heading to the shore, you will love weather today and the ocean is also warming up. you'll find it close to 70 degrees in most locations. sunshine is out, storm scan three showing clouds off to the west and see maybe a cloud or two going by, we should be enjoying a dry weekend but a lot of people would see rain around here every so often and that may be coming as we especially go into monday and tuesday. we have 73 degrees in philadelphia warming up on our way to 88 degrees. we have a chance of the shower or thunderstorm sunday afternoon better chances on monday and tuesday nicole. our next update 8:27. i'm nicole brewer see you then. if he were a lobbyist... if they were political contributors... maybe tom corbett would listen to them, instead of cutting funding for their schools. oil and gas companies gave corbett 1.7 million dollars in political contributions. and he gave them a sweetheart deal on taxes that's costing pennsylvania billions. corbett's mismanagement has caused a huge budget deficit. and his painful education cuts are forcing teacher layoffs and increasing class sizes. now corbett wants to give the oil and gas industry even more handouts. and what's he getting from them? corbett's keeping that secret. so pennsylvanians are challenging tom corbett to come clean. release the records of your meetings with donors... that you've been hiding. disclose all the contributions letters and emails from oil and gas lobbyists who influence you. we've got a right to know who tom corbett's listening to. because it sure isn't us. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm anthony mason that and i'm vinita nair. coming up this half hour this is the summer of the skurng. that is correct. america's skunk population is exploding. they may already be in your neighborhood. we'll tell you why. and then a century ago he single-handedly transformed the game of baseball. we look back on the amazing ka rye of the bambino, babe ruth. >> and we travel to the most remote places on earth as well as the most amazing places in the world. we explore google's street view. the death toll is climbing in gaza as israeli forces continue their air attack on palestinian militant targets. >> dozens of civilians are some of the dozen wounded. they allowed medical aid into the gaza strip and for the palestinian wounded to be evacuated into egypt. holly williams is there with the latest r latest. >> reporter: good morning. they pounded them again with air strikes in this five-day offensive. palestinian officials say more than 120 people have been killed including dozens of civilians. israel says it's targeting terrorists and hitting what it calls command centers. in reality, though they are often the homes of militants. officials here say nearly 300 homes have been destroy over the last five days. this offensive is fueling palestinian rage and the anger boils over during funerals of those killed especially when they're buried children. they have fired hundreds of rockets during the escalation that caused injuries and damaged buildings. no sign that israelis have been killed thanks in large part to the country's iron dome anti-missile defense system which shoots the rockets down. israel has already called up 30,000 reservists and many of them are amassed at the border. prime minister benjamin netanyahu vowed to continue with the strikes and he said no international pressure will stop israel from acting. for "cbs this morning: saturday," holly williams gaza. secretary of state john kerry met with outgoing afghan president hamid karzai in kabul this morning. the visit was aimed at diffusion tensions over the recent presidential runoff selection to choose karzai's successor. the u.s. government is making certain there's a government in place. at the same time the violence in afghanistan has not let up. at least ten people were killed this morning in roadside bombings. this morning two research labs at the centers for disease control are cloeled. the problem, miss handling of the potentially dangerous germ. in one instance cdc workers lost track of an h1n1 virus. procedures are now being reviewed. the white house says it's open to working with congress to real a deal houston to deal with the surge of unaccompanied children crossing the u.s. border. the president wants nearly $4 billion in emergency funding but some republicans are demanding in exchange that part of an immigration law be repealed. mark albert is in our washington bureau with more. good morning, mark. >> good morning. president obama's press secretary josh earnest did say, quote, the white house wants to get this done but the differences remain including total price tag. meanwhile the homeland security director jeh johnson visited a detention security facility on friday. he told the government they would start deporting families and children being held there as soup as next week. the government estimates 90 million children may cross illegally into the u.s. this fiscal year alone. >> our border is not open to illegal migration, and our message to those who are coming here illegally, contemplating coming here illegally is we will send you back. >> republican senators john maclean mccain. mccain said yesterday that repeal must be part of any machinery funding package in order to get senate republicans on board. next week the senate holds another hearing on the crisis. congress goes home for summer break in just three weeks. the administration has told congress immigration customs enforcement may run out of money shortly after that. anthony and vinita? >> mark albert. thank you. in nba basketball sometimes dreams come true. ask the fans of the cleveland cavaliers. lebron james is coming back. he's decided to end his time at miami and return to the home he wasn't left behind. fans are ecstatic over his return. the online retailer amazon is asking the faa for permission to use drones to deliver packages. the aim is to get purchases to customers within half an hour but another government agency the federal trade commission, is suing the company over its sales practices. >> reporter: 9-year-old ryan marshal loves playing games on his parents'phone. the game apps are free but to progress in the game you often have to play which ryan did without his mother knowing until she logged onto her bank account. >> and find out that there's $00 missing. then to look and say, i don't remember spending this type of money. >> reporter: kids, lesean marshal, says kids are too easily tempted. >> unbeknownstetst to parents kids can rack up hundreds of dollars of charges simply by clicking on apps. >> reporter: in the lawsuit they claim amazon illegally billed parents in unlawful charges like this. >> amazon continued to allow children to rack up these charges failing to provide parents basic information this was a problem, people raiset it as a problem and amazon didn't fix the issue. >> reporter: in an internal e-mail obtained by the ftc, they admitted with e're clearly causing problems for a large problem for our customers calling the kplanltss a near house on fire. they began requiring passwords in 2012 but left open a 15-minute window in which kids could still make purchases without permission. the ftc wants amazon to return its money to parents. aim amazon says its practice has been lawful from the onset. one of the problems across the nation this morning is skunks, lots of them from southern california to the islands off massachusetts. the skunk population has exploded, especially in suburban areas. "outside" magazine took a look at the summer of the skunk and executive editor sam moulton is here to tell us all about that. just when i got comfortable complaining about hot weather, now i have to complain about skunks. 're everywhere. >> they population is booming. they're adaptable. there's a couple reasons for it. the past winter has been cold but others have been warm. the population is going up. they have larger litters and there's been a drought out west that's forced the skunks further in. some cities have had to cut trash collection budgets so there's more trash around and skunk skunks are scavengers. >> so skunks are an economic indicator here. >> yes. >> do we expect to continue to see this exploding? we receive skunks show up at dodger stadium, new york city. >> the population ebbs and flows naturally so it will probably see it dip down again. sometimes what happens when the population goes up we get an outbreak of rabies. that happens when the population spikes and the disease is translated from animal to animal and that knocks the population back down. >> what is the predator of skunks? >> they don't have me predators. wolves and others don't want to attack them because they don't want to get attacked. it's owls and hawks. they're less susceptible to smell than animals. >> if you have a skunk in your backyard, what do you want to do? >> stay away. they're very skittish. they don't want to spray you. most don't have rabies. leave them alone. they're knock term so you most likely will see them in the evening. >> through the years we've heard of oatmeal and tomato juice. what do you need? >> those are urban myths. you need something to break down the chemical spray. clother bleach and waeter. your dog -- most dogs get sprayed than people. they recommend one quart of 3% hydrogen prox sid, a quarter cup of baking soda and a tea spoon of liquid soap. lather that into your dog. >> the best solution is just up next young or old you've got know about the yum bambino. >> that was by babe ruth. you actually played with it? >> yeah, but i was going to bring it back. >> yeah, but it was signed by babe ruth. >> yeah you keep telling me this. who is she? >> what? >> bients 100 years since babe ruth has made his major league debut and baseball has never been the same. the babe's legacy is next on "cbs this morning." if you're living with chronic migraine your life is a game of chance. but what if the odds could be in your favor? botox® is an fda-approved treatment that significantly reduces headache days for adults with chronic migraine 15 or more headache days a month each lasting 4 hours or more. it's proven to actually prevent headache days. and it's injected by a doctor once every 3 months. the effects of botox® (onabotulinumtoxina) may spread hours to weeks after injection causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away as difficulty swallowing speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness can be a sign of a life-threatening condition. side effects may include allergic reactions neck and injection site pain fatigue, and headache. don't take botox® if you have a skin infection. tell your doctor about your medical history muscle or nerve conditions and medications, including botulinum toxins as these may increase the risk of serious side effects. the dose of botox® is not the same as other botulinum toxins. put the odds on your side. and talk to a headache specialist. don't wait for awesome... totino's pizza rolls... ...gets you there in just 60 seconds. . revlon age defying firming + lifting makeup our multi-benefit innovation. skin feels tighter. expression lines look more relaxed. 3x hydration... ... beautiful coverage. 93% of women saw noticeably improved skin. radiant. rejuvenated. revlon. [announcer] play close-good and close. help keep teeth clean and breath fresh with beneful healthy smile snacks. with soft meaty centers and teeth cleaning texture,it's dental that tastes so good. beneful healthy smile food and snacks. he has been called energizing, electrifying and unaware of personal boundaries. and now he's here to explain one product that does two things. beroccaaaaaaaaaaaaa! fla-pow... mental sharpness support... fla-pow... physical energy support... ...together and only brock spedwell can explain it. beroccaaaaaaaaaaaaa! beroccaaaaaaaaaaaaa! with the all-star game coming up on tuesday where they honor the best we take you back to the superstar of the game the one and only babe ruth. he took the field in boston for his first game 100 years ago yesterday. >> the bambino went on to change the way baseball was played. collecting 56 records along the way. joining us now is the author of pinstripe empire marty em held. good morning. >> good morning. >> thank you so much for being here. he made it into major league baseball at 19. hiss backstory was interesting. he was dropped off at an orphanage by his own dad. >> one wonders how incorrigible he could have been to be dropped off. that was where he learned to play basketball and that waseball and that's when he was. he ended up being signed to the red sox. >> there's huge mythologies surrounding it. you yourself say his life was shrouded in rumors. >> well, let's say record-keeping about, you know his ancestry and everything like that was sloppy. it wasn't as efficient as it is today, so there's a lot of questions about his early life and his background and everything. but now he's come to be like the most well known sports figure of the first half of the 20th century. >> which is an extraordinary achievement because media was very limited in the day. >> it was news reels that made him because ultimately only the president and charlie chaplain were benner known than baby ruth was in america and that was largely because people would go to the movie and see news reels and see babe ruth every week. >> we saw him throw in that imagery and he actually was a pitcher. >> he was a pitcher, and they found that he was great hitter also. so he still stands unique in baseball history for having been both great pitcher and then great hitter. there's really nobody else quite like that. >> but we talked about how he changed the sport of baseball. when you look back, what did he do that was so different? >> well, he made the home run his signature and everybody i've ever met who saw babe ruth play said, oh, i was there when he hit the longest home run i ever saw. the mythology just grew with him, but the record was just there too. in 1920 his first year with the yankees, he hit more home runs than any other team in the league. >> i mean the decision by the red sox to sell him to the yankees was probably the most famous deal in baseball. >> yes. >> and, of course one of the worst, as it turns out. why would the red sox have wanted to get rid of him? >> there was still a feeling of, well, that's not the way you play the game and there were baseball purists who would say, you know he's destroying this beautiful game based on singles and sacrifices and stolen bases. so his kind of baseball didn't appeal universally. the owner of the red sox who happened to live in new york and produce broadway shows, harry phrasy, also wanted to raise money for his broadway productions. he saw an opportunity to sell ruth to the very wealthy jacob ruppert who owned the yankees and accomplished the deal. >> lots of rumors. tell us about johnny sylvester. >> ruth was great with kids. he loved kids and in the 1926 world series johnny sylvester was a child who was hospitalized. he was ill and his father who was a vice president of the bank and i guess connected wrote a letter and asked for autographed baseballs from both the yankees and the cardinals. the letters were signed in st. louis -- the baseballs were signed in st. louis airmailed back to the boy so he had them during the world series. and on the yankee ball babe ruth wrote, i'll knock a homer for you, and he wound up hitting three and little johnny sylvester survived. in fact, he lived till 1994. soo that added to the ruth mystique. the tabloids of new york loves that story. >> it's fascinating his legend has survived for so many years. marty, thank you so much. >> my pleasure thank you. up next, technological magic for the arm chair traveler. google street view can take you to the taj mahal without ever leaving home. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." type 2 diabetes affects millions of us. and for many, it's a struggle to keep your a1c down. so imagine, what if there was a new class of medicine that works differently to lower blood sugar? imagine, loving your numbers. introducing once-daily invokana®. it's the first of a new kind of prescription medicine that's used along with diet and exercise to lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. invokana® is a once-daily pill that works around the clock to help lower a1c. here's how: the kidneys allow sugar to be absorbed back into the body. invokana® reduces the amount of sugar allowed back in, and sends some sugar out through the process of urination. and while it's not for weight loss, it may help you lose some weight. invokana® can cause important side effects including dehydration, which may cause some people to have loss of body water and salt. this may also cause you to feel dizzy, faint, lightheaded, or weak especially when you stand up. other side effects may include kidney problems, genital yeast infections urinary tract infections changes in urination high potassium in the blood, or increases in cholesterol. do not take invokana® if you have severe kidney problems or are on dialysis or if allergic to invokana® or its ingredients. symptoms of allergic reaction may include rash, swelling, difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you experience any of these symptoms, stop taking invokana® and call your doctor right away or go to the nearest hospital. tell your doctor about any medical conditions medications you are taking and if you have kidney or liver problems. using invokana® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase risk of low blood sugar. it's time. lower your blood sugar with invokana®. imagine loving your numbers. ask your doctor about invokana®. the answer to treating your dog's fleas and ticks is staring you right in the face. nexgard, from the makers of frontline® plus. it's the only soft beef-flavored chew that kills both fleas and ticks. vets recommend it. and dogs, well they're begging for it. nexgard is for dogs only. and hasn't been evaluated for use in pregnant, breeding or lactating dogs. reported side effects include vomiting, dry flaky skin diarrhea, lethargy and lack of appetite. use with caution in dogs with a history of seizures. recommended by vets. loved by dogs. from the makers of frontline plus. my favorite city venice. thanks to google this is the way to see it without ever leaving home. >> fewer companies have had so great an impact on our lives than google. google street view mans is an example. they've captured life on cities rural areas on all seven continents and more than 50 countries. daniel is sieberg is with us. good morning. >> good morning. i wish i could say i was on that trip. i didn't get the straw on that i think we can remember in 2007 when street view was launched two-dimensional. really fancy. but these images are incredible. >> we're always trying to think of ways to make maps more comprehensible reliable for anybody whether you're a virtual tourist sitting at home or you're going go to these places. today it's the car, the trucker, the snowmobile, the trolly the bike. there's lots of ways to capture this image. >> you use a trike to get. >> we attached a trike to the back of a boat. you see the polar bears coming straight up to us. >> you've got to some remote locations. how were you able to map the go lap goes islands? >> u there's a research team looking at the changes happening in the oceans. we were able to get some underwater imagery through a special camera. then, of course, we're always thinking how can we be cautious of the environment, do it in the right way and bring the images back to people who wouldn't have the opportunity to go. i wish i could say i had been along for venice but this is the kinded of place that not a lot of people get to see, so you get to see it from the comfort of your home. >> you've given us a street view of the colorado river as well and that also must have been challenging. >> you can imagine that place i have been separate of going with google but you can see, of course, the waves. they had to secure the cameras, the trekkers. there were two going at any one time. they take pictures every 2 1/2 seconds and we had to try to align the imagery. it with us so bumpy, but we were able do it with technology after we got the imagery back. >> i wanted to ask you about the backpack with a 360-degree camera attached. is it a regular person who can go? >> folks can apply to be part of the loper program if you're part of the university. it's often a googler who goes out wearing it. it's about 40 pounds 15 cameras. >> yook sikes. >> you definitely need to be in good shape. it captured imagery 1 1/2, 2 seconds. it's about four feet over the person's head as you're hiking around and it gets to places we couldn't take with other devices, cars and other things. >> daniel, is there anyplace too remote for this gear? >> we haven't seen one just yet. we're always looking for the places we want to get to. we've been to the top of fuji under water, the arctic antarctic. there's always a new challenge out there, but i don't know there's a limitation just yet. >> it seems like you have strict standards if the image you want to put forth because it's all beautiful. >> it's something we have to review. we want to make sure it looks and represents the area or place that we've been. we often are, of course talking to the local communities when we go there. we want to make sure we respect any environmental concerns or access rights, that sort of thing. we don't just barge into some sensitive place and start taking pictures. all of that imagery is shared. it can take a few weeks or months to process it all. >> 6 million miles you've been on this stoo we're getting there. >> thanks so much for being with us this morning. >> cominging up a celebrity interviewer with a knack for getting a laugh. >> my mother once said to me i don't think i could love you if you were fat. >> that's a terrible thing to say to a child. >> yeah. and she said it two weeks ago. >> martin went from standup comedy to the sitdown variety with some of hollywood's biggest names. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." we have some breaking news this morning, philadelphia police are searching for, two missing children. six year-old synciere mcgovern and 12 year-old makyla talker were last seen yesterday on the 3200 block of byberry road. they were heading to the decatur school playground around 4:00 o'clock. pair never return home. synciere is 4-foot and weighs 60 pounds . he was wearing a yellow shirt and blue and white checkered shorts. makyla there is 5 feet eight and wearing a beige tank top and green plaid pajama pants. if you see them please call police immediately. now lets check that forecast with car will ol. >> well, nicole we are looking at a day that is very bright let's start outside this morning, should we, we've got sunshine and temperature of 77 degrees in reading. it looks very nice on the neighborhood weathernet work. we have temperatures that are warming up and we've got conditions that are just fine. notice couple clouds on storm scan three but they are not menacing clouds. they have no power behind them. so maybe just a passing cloud. 73 degrees is our temperature in philadelphia. seventy-one in trenton and wilmington on our way to 88 degrees this afternoon, mostly sunny warm day. shower or thunderstorm chance as we move into unday afternoon and monday and tuesday as well, nicole. >> our next update 8:57. i'm nicole brewer, see you then. what way to spend your 86th birthday. a grandmother took a ride on a zip lied hundreds of feet in the air. >> she wasn't frightened as she zipped along. her next adventure may be skydiving. look at her. >> sh's extraordinary. she said he had a stroke openen heart surgery. she said this was on her bucket list. >> i love it. we begin this half hour with mark maron who worked decades to become an overnight sensation. a comedian who finally gets his last laugh. >> his guests have been will ferrell, robin williams and others. >> what's more thrilling being a game show host or -- >> row looking to bring into show business? >> that was funny. you get a chance to pitch your life. how about a guy who interviews celebrityies in his garage and can't keep his life together. i'm doing it. are you okay buddy many. >> i've got to go to the john. >> reporter: he's resurrected his career with a low budget podcast after years of directing on and off stage. >> mr. mark maron. >> mark maron spent years on standup comedy but he never broke through. he alienated friends and family. >> sometimes you have to sit down with your dad over coffee and look him in the eye and say all right, is there any way i can avoid becoming you? >> reporter: after decades of show bis maron had been jealous. >> always remember bitterness amply fies self-pity. >> reporter: he was strug frlg years of drinking and drug abuse. by 2009 maron was back to square one. i'm thinking you probably had this grand master plan but it just wasn't happening the way you wanted to. what did that do to you as a person? >> when you do something for half your life there's no more plan bs. you get in your mid-40s and say, i can always -- huh, there's nothing in that folder. >> how do you like living in los angeles? it lead maron to a third act. >> i was kind of broke. i didn't know where the money was to come from. there was no money to be made from the podcast and i was very focused work. i was okay with it. i was exciting. something was starting to happen. yeah, so this is it. this is where it happens. >> this was your garage before it was a studio. >> it was a garage. i've always wanted do man's work in garage and i think i'm doing that in my version. >> yeah. it's not the socket wrenches and screwdrivers. >> no. i have no understanding of that whatsoever. >> reporter: over the past five year this tiny makeshift studio has been visited by many of hollywood's biggest stars. what do they say when they see it? >> it depends. now people are more familiar with it but usually what people do, they walk in and go what part of town am i in? where am i? i didn't even know this existed. or like bryan advances ton walked in and goes this is it huh? i go yeah jon hamm was in here. he was like, oh, yeah hamm was in there? that gave him credibility. >> it allowed him to get a-list entertainers to open up all as specks about their lives and careers. >> you can hear me right? >> loud and clear. >> i'll start running and talking and at some point we'll go -- is it on? yeah, we even been going for like five minutes. >> i look at this room. it can't be more than 100 square feet and in the last five years it's completely changed your life from top to bottom. >> crazy crazy. >> reporter: wtf passed two milestones, 500th even soap and over 2 million downloads. now the man who was in his car miserable trying to make people laugh final has a reason to smile. >> is id the podcast who changed your life or you who changed your life? yeah. you noe . >> yeah, you know when i looks back, i have no regrets but maybe i was. ready for what was going on. there was some stroke of cosmic timing on that. out of desperation i turned to podcasting, things align and now i can be the cometic wanltd to be and sell some tickets and now i've got a tv show on the air. the one thing i can say whether i changed myself or whether it was a series of events is that because i was humbled and because i let go a lot of expectations, i was truly ready to show up for everything that's happening. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning: saturday" carter evans. >> what i love about this story, sometimes success comes from a place you really never expected. you try and try and try in this direction and then you do something else and it hits. >> it sounds like a up next, "the dish." bradley ogden knows a thing about updating traditional fair. he's here with his unique version of cornish game hen. yes, that's what those are. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> announcer: this portion sponsored by toyota. let's go places. ily likes camping... ...i like dancing. so when we packed up our rav4, i brought this. ♪ turns out my family likes dancing too. the rav4 toyota. let's go places. let nothing come between you, and your moment to enjoy the new bacon clubhouse sandwich from mcdonald's. with crispy chicken in an artisan roll and the one and only big mac special sauce. try it in chicken or beef. because a special moment deserves a breakthrough sandwich. knows her way around a miniskirt. can run in high heels. must be a supermodel, right? 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>> i start off with watermelon margaritas. >> i don't mind that. >> one of my favorite summer drinks. goat cheese and lavender almonds, oak roasted organic cornish game hen and over to your far right here is stone crab bury she ta which now is in season and now a ham hock bean rah goo. >> everything smells fantastic. >> and we're using an organic tequila as well. >> excellent. >> talk a little bit about that. we see so many chefs who say farm to table but in so many ways that was your way, your idea. now it sounding like you want to take farm to table and bring it to more fast casual. >> first i grew up in michigan grew up on my grandma's farm to get out of my mom's hair because there were seven of us. my brother and i used to spend summers picking corn. beef steak tomatoes and salt. scratchers running around her farm. so it's like bringing that to a mass amount of people to what we're doing fast casual. funky chicken hewn and bfd, bradley's fine diner. we're slated to open two other concepts as well. the ogden force society as well as a home base in menlo park in the bay area. it's taking these gradients and enhancing them in a way which is american wholesome more california fresh approach to it. >> you mentioned growing up on a farm six siblings. is that really where your love of food got started? >> no. i actually hunted and fished as a kid. my dad opened a big rock and roll joint in traverse city. bog bob bob seger used to hang out there. we saw this report in the news. off to chef school i went. off to school i went. it was like playing piano with no lessons. >> both of your sons are chefs. >> i tried to talk them out of it. i have a doctor son who's up in portland who could have been a chef too. >> what i love is your real big break around maybe transforming point is when you ended um in kansas city when you were working with of all people james beard. >> james beard. joe bomb. he was really my mentor. james beard and barbara cough fa. i developed a palate. i remember her coming in the kitchen, what does this taste like? a little more salt, a little more acid. it was like developing a pal at with these entrepreneurs of our industry. >> that's such a unique and rare opportunity. at the time, did you know how big this was going to be and how influential they would be in your career. >> >>no. i was working 18 20 hours a day. i had no idea. i had no idea joe bomb -- i mean he was a stickler for details as everyone knows, and that i brought along with me when i opened up place in san francisco in 1983. but i had no idea. >> bradley, i have to ask you. you're still going strong and obviously opening more restaurants but you had a real health scare six years ago. how did you get through that? >> actually it was sort of an awakening time and, yes, i did. so when i was pretty much gone for like 24 hours. but then i saw this light, you know indirectly and directly. so it was like okay, there's a lot more i have to offer to the world and to myself and to the family. so now i'm sort of reinspired and, you know start of starting over again, if you will. >> it's a wonderful way of looking at i'm sure a frightening experience. >> it was. >> we want to ask you as you sign it if you could share this meal with anyone past or presence, who would it be? >> i would say thomas jeff eson. frankly my two sons and my doctor's son. >> that's a great choice. >> thank you so much. for more on bradley ogden and "the dish" heb to our website cbsthismorning.com. up next. scott pal teeny and all the music to go with it. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." what happens when women use dove bar for 7 days? with one small catch. no mirrors. everyday they wash with dove beauty bar but can only feel what's happening. on the seventh day beautiful skin is revealed. dove is different. with one quarter moisturizing cream it helps skin feel more firm and elastic. really want to feel the difference? 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[announcer] play close-good and close. help keep teeth clean and breath fresh with beneful healthy smile snacks. with soft meaty centers and teeth cleaning texture,it's dental that tastes so good. beneful healthy smile food and snacks. his name is italian. >> from his first album in 2006 paolo nutini has been wowing critics. his third album flew straight to the top of the charts in britain. it will be out in september followed by a u.s. tour. meanwhile he has a new album "iron sky," and here is paolo nutini with his hit single "scream." ♪ i just want to make love to you ♪ ♪ how was i to know you'd just come along ♪ ♪ lips like they've been singing sex up strawberry songs ♪ ♪ never heard it coming thought it's just another woman with a shotgun in her hand ♪ ♪ she's the bass she's the beat, she's the rhythm she's the band ♪ ♪ and the girl so fine makes you wanna scream hallelujah ♪ ♪ sly hands spinning webs like silk beats are dripping on me like spider milk ♪ ♪ and i never heard the warning when i woke up this morning with my sun shine on a drip ♪ ♪ she's my rock she's my body she's tequila, she's a trip ♪ ♪ and that girl so fine makes you wanna scream hallelujah ♪ ♪ yeah yeah ♪ ♪ how could i refuse i'm not fit to choose ♪ ♪ i said the only way i win is the way i lose ♪ ♪ and i never got the script, i unzipped got a little bit wet up in my brain ♪ ♪ she's your church, she's your sin, she's atomic she's the rain ♪ ♪ and the girl, so fine makes you wanna scream yeah, yeah ♪ ♪ yeah yeah ♪ ♪ she gets me silly, she's like a trick on me ♪ ♪ hell i don't even know her name but yet she sticks to me ♪ ♪ and in the climax she would scream with me yeah, she sticks to me ♪ ♪ she gets me funny she doesn't want none of my money ♪ ♪ so i pour it over her like gasoline ♪ ♪ light a match and then i'm back in my teens ♪ ♪ me and super grill smoking my green ♪ ♪ me and super girl smoking my green ♪ ♪ unload reload eyes back swinging ♪ ♪ sweet thing, knows things jeffjet pack sings ♪ ♪ round house, knock down going down and the girl so fine makes you wanna scream hallelujah ♪ ♪ hallelujah ♪ ♪ yeah, the girl so fine makes you wanna scream ♪ ♪ yeah yeah ♪ ♪ yeah yeah ♪ ♪ yeah, yeah ♪ ♪ yeah, yeah ♪ don't go away. we'll be right back with more music from paolo nutini. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." chili's new southwest pairings for just 8 bucks. pick any two southwest favorites, like enchiladas, tacos tostadas, and more. the combinations are endless. chili's new southwest pairings for just 8 bucks. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] bring your style to life. get 20% off all hunter ceiling fans at lowe's. ahhh! what is it? there are no marshmallows in this box of lucky charms! huh... weird... seriously? what? they're magically delicious (buzzer! door knock!) isabella... vincent... sharon? did you say bounty is obviously the best brand?... exclamation point... happy smiley face? yes, i did! did you know that more people prefer viva® vantage over bounty? no... i'm gonna show you why. it stretches...stretch... stretch. it has a... (excited) it stretches! oh, i wish my jeans had that kind of stretch. (laughs) you use that stretch to get the scrubbing power. i think that's the cleanest spot on my table now. can you do the rest of it? wow, that's awesome. right? yeah! viva® vantage. the towel more people prefer. i just love cherry preserves. is that your favorite? i don't know... i also like strawberry, boysenberry, red raspberry, blackberry sweet orange marmalade apple, pineapple concord grape, apricot, peach, blueberry... [ male announcer ] tim and richard smucker grew up knowing that with so many delicious varieties, it's tough to choose just one favorite. apricot pineapple... [ male announcer ] for five generations with a name like smucker's it has to be good. if vitamins have you at the corner of "smart choice" and "multiple choice," come to walgreens for help finding the one that's right for you... ...like centrum. select products are now just $9.99 with card. at the corner of happy and healthy. your eyes. even 10 miles away... they can see the light of a single candle. look after them... with centrum silver. multivitamins for your eyes, heart and brain. now with a new easy-to-swallow coating. tomorrow on "cbs this morning sunday" morning it's the summer fun keira knightley and her new romantic comedy "begin again." and also jason moran. >> have a great weekend, everybody. we leave you with more music from paolo nutini. this is "better man." ♪ she makes me smile she makes me think the way i think ♪ ♪ that girl that girl makes me wannat to be better snoetsz snoetsz took her down bleaker street so she drank the way i drink ♪ ♪ i kiss the sky to send her blue a letter ♪ ♪ makes me want to be a better man ♪ ♪ yeah sure she sees fit gonna treat her like a real man can ♪ ♪ she's fearless she's free oh, she is a real live wire ♪ ♪ and that g good morning, everyone i'm nicole brewer. tracie morgan has filed a lawsuit over last month's crash on the new jersey turnpike. morgan is suing wal-mart for negligence, saying that they should have known driver of their tractor trailer kevin roper, was awake for more than 24 hours. roper has pleaded not guilty to death the by auto and other charges. so far neither wal-mart nor morgan are commenting. lets check that forecast. it will be a nice day right. >> it is starting already, nicole. we will find some sunshine and find it through philadelphia you go to the shore finding some sunshine there too. temperature downtown 77 degrees. look at the the people on the boardwalk and you might be one. we have got temperature of 76 degrees in philadelphia. seventy-four trenton. seventy-one wilmington. we are on our way this afternoon to 88 degrees, mostly sunny not as humid as it will be tomorrow but not as dry as it felt yesterday either. our humidity is climbing a little bit. temperatures tomorrow, right about where they are today with a chance of the scattered shower or thunderstorm in the afternoon on sunday better chances for stronger storms on monday and tuesday before it cools down nicole. >> that is it for "eyewitness news" this morning, you can always follow us on our web site at cbs philly.com. i'm nicole brewer. make it a great hey, uncle craig what's the deal? oh...you can't record that many shows at once. why? i guess they didn't feel like it. you can't save every single cartoon. why? you can't just watch tv wherever you want. why? you know you can't pause the tv here and play it in another room. why? it's time for fios quantum tv. store up to 200 hours in hd. record up to 12 shows at once. pause and play live tv room to room. plus watch live tv on the go with the fios mobile app. redefining what tv can be. upgrade to a fios triple play and get $300 back with a two year agreement. hurry, it's your last chance to get this incredible deal. offer ends july 19th. call 1.877.437.fios, today. that's 1.877.437.fios. call the verizon center for customers with disabilities at 800.974.6006 tty/v announcer: when you see this symbol you know you're watching a show that's educational and informational. the cbs dream team& it's epic. narrator: today on lucky dog, jasmine, a sweet, german shorthaired pointer, needs a home and a purpose in life. brandon: jasmine, watch me. narrator: jake needs a friend who will always be by his side. brandon: he's a great guy with very special needs. narrator: but before they can be together jasmine must overcome some tremendous obstacles. dr. nardi: in these instances, the pets require surgery. brandon: i'm brandon mcmillan, and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are living without hope. my mission is to make sure these amazing

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