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new terror arrests made in belgium but did authorities catch the called "man in the hat"? >> plus how the terror attacks in europe will soon affect you. details on the new security searches in the airports in the united states. >> why more and more colleges are accepting students which have short video. a night of rock 'n' roll ends on a sour note. controversy appear one of the hall of fame inductees goes off on the organizers. we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. he has been wanted since the attack since the attack in paris in november. >> breakthrough. europe's most wanted man is captured in belgium. >> they are trying to figure out if abreny is the man in the hat. escaping from a psychiatric hospital, the patient is captured. >> he was hiding in some bushes in spokane. >> food and water was his enemy. he was thoroughly dehydrated. >> space x sends supplies to the space station. >> all on board. >> terrifying site in miami. that is a dump truck plowing through traffic. passenger in that taxi cab died. >> bruce springsteen cancelling a concert in north carolina where a new state law. >> straight outta compton. >> hip-hop is here forever get used to it. >> all that. >> he is wearing special glasses >> and all that matters. >> for the win. he knocks down a three with 0.02 to go. >> amazing! >> on "cbs this morning: saturday." >> you want to talk about a debut? another bomb! gone! he's done it again! home run number six for trevor story. this is not fantasy baseball here. this is the real thing for this rookie. just unbelievable. >> welcome to the weekend, everyone. we got a great lineup for you this morning including a business to the arc. a photo arc is the project aimed at documenting the animals that may soon disappear. we will check in with the photographer and find out just how far along he is in this massive undertaking. only female barbecue champion. we will talk to her about competing in the male-dominated field and how her daughter might be her secret weapon. >> charles bradley's first album came out when he was 62 years old and now he is packing in festivals and selling out venues across the world. hear his incredible story and his incredible sound later in our "saturday sessions." terror arrest in belgium. five men suspected to link to last month's bombings in brussels are now in custody. >> they include the last remaining identified fugitive in the november attacks in paris. police are looking into the suspect is the so-called "man in the hat" which escaped the suicide bombing at the brussels airport. >> officials say mohammed abrini on the run for five months and hiding out in brussels. police are investigating what in the brussels bombings. cell phone video captured the moment belgian police moved in and took into cust a terror suspect in brussels. up to six people were arrested in a series of raids. among them, mohammed abrini, the only remaining fugitive from the paris terror attacks. officials believe he was hiding out with a brussels airport attackers in this apartment. [ speaking in foreign language ] safe houses and released for it. but also in the vehicle removed that was used during the paris attacks. >> he was last seen in november in that vehicle at a gas station two days before the paris terror attacks. with him, salah abdeslam, the only paris attackers. investigators are now trying to figure out if abrini is the called man in the hat seen walking along the brussels before the attack. the raids come just one day after police released this surveillance video asking for the public's help. the series of clips detail the suspect's escape route. he vanished nearly two hours later in the same neighborhood where the airport attackers assembled their bombs before calling a taxi to bring them to their final destination. belgian media released this telephone recording what they claim is one of the attackers ordering that cab. abrini was also arrested alongside this man identified by local media from sweden. police believe he may have involved in the attack on the metro that followed the airport bombing. abrini was the second most wanted man in europe behind ab abdeslam. anthony? >> johnathan vigliotti in the terror attack at the brussels airport is prompting new security for airports in the u.s. transportation correspondent kris van cleave has details on what is being planned. >> reporter: passengers traveling through u.s. airports are likely to see more police in public areas, increased random checks of vehicles and people with large bags. also additional bomb sniffing dogs. 28 canine teams have been reassigned from small airports to major transportation hubs. tsa administrator. >> i like to think of it as a security environment you think and gets more shrur as you get closer to the think you're trying to protect. >> reporter: that means after security checkpoints passengers may be suspect to more random checks. airline cargo and airport employees are also receiving extra scrutiny following the bombing on a jet. >> there is always a possibility cell that we don't know about to do some harm, which is why it goes back to then the visible presence and the layers of security so that you can deter, detect answer hopefully disrupt. >> reporter: while airlines passengers are vetted the moment they purchase a tickets but it's unclear if the brussels bombingers planned to go past secure. how do you put it in that koir? >> it's in a sense that same category. we move people into the sterile areas of the airport. >> reporter: one factor is contributing to long lines at some major u.s. airports. >> i do have concerns about long wait times because it does -- it does gather people. in addition to being an inconvenience for the traveler which is no small problem, it does propose a potential challenge with respect to large crowd of people. >> next week, roughly 300 airports. of best practices it hopes to implement across the entire system. for "cbs this morning: saturday," kris van cleave, reagan national airport in virginia. north korea says it has tested a rocket engine that could hit the u.s. nuclear missile. this would be the latest in a series of such tests. despite its claim the north has not conducted a long-range test of the rocket engine. the u.s. and south korea say the north does not have a reliable missile, let alone the ability to arm it with a nuclear warhead. in the presidential race, the two democratic candidates are campaigning in new york today. the race between hillary clinton and bernie sanders, both of whom claim connections to new york has seen added tension lately over qualifications. this as they try to pick up voters before the state's primary on april 19th. julianna goldman is in our washington bureau with more. >> we have come to expect all sorts of fireworks on the but with sanders and closing spent friday trying to shift their harshest attacks to republicans but couldn't quite let it go. >> does chef the experience? obviously, she does. >> reporter: bernie sanders, on friday, tried to move past his questioning whether hillary clinton is qualified to be president. >> i think this has all been pretty silly. >> reporter: and while clinton told reporters in buffalo she was ready to move on as well. >> he seemed to take them back today. i don't know why he made them in the first place, but i'm going to go on talking about the issues that are at stake in this campaign. >> reporter: earlier in the day, she made sure to tout her credentials. >> seriously -- seriously, i've been called a lot of things over the years, but unqualified has not been one of them. >> reporter: the escalating rancor comes as sanders and clinton face off ahead of the april 19th primary in new york, where sanders was born and where >> i spent the first 18 years of my life in apartment 2c right here. >> reporter: while the dealt math still works against sanders he is only running ten points behind the democratic front-runner and probably closer than her campaign would like. >> i did something yesterday in philadelphia p.m. i almost want to apologize for. >> reporter: increased frustration appear to be spilling over to former president clinton as well who tried to explain why he challenged two black lives matter activists. they were protesting clopt's ingclinton's use of preed-- >> i vigorously defended my wife as i i want to do. >> clinton is trying to downplay the animosity between her and sanders. you might remember a far more bitter fight that some democrats still haven't totally gotten over. >> julianna goldman in washington this morning, thank you. on the republican side, donald trump takes a break from the trail today. he will be back campaigning on sunday in rochester, new york. he is in a battle to prevent his republican delegates from switching to texas senator ted cruz. trump's new campaign manager paul manafort says the billionaire will win the gop nomination outright. >> the reality is this convention process will be over with sometime in june. probably june 7th and it will be apparent to the world that trump is over the 1,237 number. >> that is the magic number needed to secure the nomination without a floor fight at the july convention. let's take a closer look at the presidential campaign and for that we turn to philip block of "the washington post." what do you make of this nastiness on the democratic side after all this time and what nominee? >> i think it was due. i think bernie sanders figures he is running in a tighter race than first expected. i don't think over the long-term it will do much to affect the outcome of november. we saw in 2008 a much more rancorous campaign and both sides got over it and barack obama was elected easily. >> he's been on a string of wins. he has won the last couple of race. does that change anything in your mind? >> it really doesn't. a lot of bernie sanders advocates would argue with me about that but he has won states he should have won. demographically the sorts of states he will be winning and probably continue to win today in wyoming but i think that streak is coming to an end now. >> bernie sander and hillary clinton and donald trump have strong new york ties. >> right. >> do you think that will affect this primary here? >> i think it will making interest interest interesting. in 2012 the republican primary in the city of new york had remarkably low. it's exciting from that standpoint. i don't know anyone's new yorkness will outweigh anyone else but i think donald trump has an advantage over senator ted cruz. >> we had lindsey graham on the show yesterday. i think he is surprised he is getting behind ted cruz at this particular time. >> i think that the republican establishment is torn because they really like ted cruz to your point that lindsey graham is shocked he's in this spot. they don't like donald trump but they do want to try to win in november, right? i think they are hoping that the convention will resolve who the nominee is and trump fans are very strong fans of donald trump and not going to like someone else being the nominee. >> paul ryan released a video on his website yesterday that to a lot of people played like a campaign ad. he doesn't want the nomination, et cetera, but is he an x-factor out there at this point? big giant x-factor which is someone else. paul ryan could fit into that mix but, again, the republican party -- the last time we saw a contested convention was before social media. >> kasich is still in this race. why is he someone that republicans are not talking more about at this point? >> i think it's sole because they want to keep donald trump from winning. kasich is a distant third, they want to keep that 1,237 number that was just said. the only race is donald trump getting to that number. ted cruz winning races keeps him from getting there and john kasich winning races keeps him from getting there. >> we talked about how contested new york is which is very different for the state. how important is new york at this point? >> it's very important on the republican side. donald trump, one of the reasons he is not xaping in california he wants to lock down the delegates in new york. he needs to get to the 1,237. on the democratic side it's not important at all. if bernie sanders wins it doesn't matter. side is the delegate count and bernie sanders is more than twice behind what hillary clinton was behind in 2008 at her worse. almost no way he can catch up barring some sort of amazing, amazing occurrence so much more important on the republican side. >> so interesting to watch the politics who they are supporting at this point. thank you. >> my pleasure. tomorrow morning on "face the nation" john dickerson's guests will include bernie sanders and john kasich. prosecutors have asking for a prison sentence for dennis hastert in a hush money case. court documents agreed to pay 3.5 million dollars for a high school wrestler that a team hastert coached in the 1970s. hastert pleaded guilty in october to breaking banking laws. he will be sentenced later this month. winter continues to spoil and snow, rain, and plunging temperatures threaten crops. from the northeast to the south to the carolinas today. arctic cold front moves in. in toledo, ohio, driving was treacherous with spinouts and whiteout conditions. >> in chicago, the white sox does not let snowflakes prevent them from playing friday's home opener against cleveland. perhaps they should have. the indians beat them 7-1. another breaking story overnight. the second of two men who escaped from a washington state psychiatric hospital has been captured. anthony garver was found in a wooded area of spokane last night. he was confined to the hospital after being found too mentally ill to face charges in connection with a murder three years ago. the inmate who escaped with garver on wednesday was caught thursday. both escaped from a lower security part of the hospital. there is sadness and anger but also a collective sigh of relief on the university of police have made an arrest in connection with a murder of a first-year student. david begnaud has the story. >> reporter: police say the figure seen on this surveillance tape is meechaiel criner a homeless 17-year-old walking through the campus on the same night the victim went missing. on sunday night the suspect followed the victim police say who was seen looking down at her cell phone. criner has been charged with the murder of 18-year-old haruka weiser. >> we saw things in the surveillance video decketedconnected to this crime. >> do you have any confessions? >> not talk about that. >> reporter: weiser was last seen on campus sunday night and monday released missing and her body was found in this creek. did you get the call from the fire department saying we might know who the guy is? >> reporter: the chief says weiser set fire to some of her property. as soon as firefighters saw the surveillance tape they called in the crucial tip. weiser's murder has shocked this campus of 50,000 students. she was a dancer from portland. charles o. anderson was one of her instructors. >> i can't help but be angry and saddened at the loss of a brilliant talent. >> reporter: we have more on the suspect. he apparently ran away from home in tax ar qana, texas, last year. his grandmother told our affiliate ksla he had been under psychiatric care since he was a boy. the grandmother went on to say he was a well-mannered kid but if you made him mad, he would snap. for "cbs this morning: saturday," i'm david begnaud, in austin, texas. investigators are working to determine how an airman managed to bring a weapon to a texas -- carrying out an parent murder/sued. authorities found a pair of handguns near the body of two men at joint base san antonio lackland on friday. the possession of firearms on the base is heavily restricted. it's not clear if the gunman who has yet to be identified was authorized to carry the weapon. mexican prosecutors say they have captured a woman who was on the 9 fbi's ten most fugitives list. brenda delgado is being held in mexico city. she was accused of hiring a hit man to kill dr. kendra hatcher. she arranged the hit because hatcher was dating delgado's former boyfriend. "usa today" reports bruce springsteen has cancelled a concert in north carolina citing the state's new law blocking anti-discrimination rules governing the lgbt community. springsteen said some things are more upon than a rock show and this fight against prejudice and bigotry which is happening as i write is one of them. 15,000 tickets for tomorrow's show were sold. they will be refunded. the san jose mercury news reports women and girls in california can now pick up birth control at a pharmacy without a prescription. it's part of a 2013 law which took effect on friday. they increase access and removes the need for an annual doctor's visit could induce unintended pregnancies. critics fear it puts the diagnosis and treatment in the hands of a pharmacist. it is reported a picture perfect launch and landing for the spacex falcon 9 rocket. it sent a capsule packed with 7,000 pounds of supplies to the international space station for the sixth man team working there. for the first time, the separated rocket booster landed successfully on a barge in the atlantic ocean which official and possibly reused later this spring. >> wonderful news for them after a couple of failures. axl rose has more than a doctor's note. he has a doctor's video explaining his recent foot injury. >> he'll be limiting the weight on the front part of the foot for about four weeks. >> fracturing your left foot can happen. when you haven't done something in 23 years and referring to his recent reunion tour with guns 'n roses. they are set to play again in las vegas. the doctor implies kind of in the video they are redesigning the set to make it easier for him to walk. >> the show must go on. i have to get a doctor's video. a doctor's note. >> the kind of proof you need these days. bright start, but the clouds are moving in and the wet weather will follow. snow, mainly south and west of the city. as we go through the day, anticipate mainly rain for the get a wintery mix moving on in as well. so kind of soggy this afternoon. frigid overnight, possibly record lows. coming up, new cybersecurity measures. we will look at what happens when the data is taken hostage by criminals. late, meet the new members of the rock 'n' roll hall of fame, including the rap good nwa. morning: saturday." (laughing) there's nothing like making their day. except making sure their tomorrow is taken care of too. financial guidance while you're mastering life. still ahead in this age of phone video. the best way to apply for college. the universities think so so much so they are scrapping the essay and s.a.t. the masters of golf go into the weekend with high drama. we will break down the story lines and the predictions for one of the biggest sporting events of the year. saturday." good morning. it is 7:27 on this saturday mornings, i'm tony iello. police have released a new video of a slasher attacking an israeli tourist on a subway platform in greenwich village. you can see the man in the orange sweatshirt pushing the door at the bleaker street station. that's the 6 train platform. police say the 55-year-old victim got lost and fell asleep on a bench around 3:00 friday morning. the attacker woke him up, took his money, slashed him on his neck, arm and hands before running off. the victim is being treated at bellview. the search for a 13-year- old boy missing for nearly a week has intensified on long island. nassau county police say amari young last was seen leaving his home in new castle at 6:00 monday morning. investigators say witnesses placed him at a park and a middle school in westbury. police say they've also searched social media sites for possible clues in hopes of locating the teen. now to vanessa murdock with a check of the forecast. hi, vanessa. >> good morning, tony. good morning, everybody. going to be kind of a raw and damp day out there. here's the deal. the clouds are thickening, the wet weather not far away now. by mi morning we start to see some -- mid morning we start to see some action and the rest of the weather impacts your afternoon forecast. it will be snow mainly through the mid section of new jersey. rain elsewhere with a little so here's how we see the totals stacking up, trace to an inch for most of us. but through that mid section we're talking through middlesex, somerset, hunterdon counties, that's where we would see the highest totals, one to two inches, maybe three at most. so for today we are looking at temperatures in the 40s with snow, freeze warning tonight. it's going to get frigid. tony >> thanks, vanessa. continues in just a bit. our top story this half hour the latest on the hire against >> this week, we learned federal investigators found cybersecurity weaknesses in the health care exchanges of the. potentially exposing the personal information of hundreds demarco morgan looks at the problem. >> plainfield, new jersey. a town of roughly 50,000 people was taken hostage. >> the hijacker has requested or demanded a ransom. >> reporter: the mayor mapp says hackers infiltrated their employee clicked on an infected link. city officials scrambled to pull servers offline and three were compromised, leaving e-mails and other city files accessible. >> we have about ten years of to access. >> reporter: the hijackers held the files ransom, demanding roughly 650 euros paid in bit coins. the mayor remains helpless in regaining access. that cries for you a solution and we don't have it at the local level. >> reporter: plainfield was a victim of ransom ware, a type of malware that cyber security and law enforcement officials say is spreading nationwide. who should be concerned? >> everyone should be concerned. it's the number one issue facing company secretive in this industry and it's a very difficult thing to solve. >> reporter: ryan norain of a cybersecurity lab says the malware gets into computers often with a simple click. >> they prey on end-users' willingness to click on the latest viral videos and prey on people willingness to click on facebook links and sending spam to e-mail in addition to using twitter. >> reporter: once a computer is infected, it encrypts all files or locks the user out until they pay for the key. >> you have a document folder here. >> reporter: he demonstrated just how it works. >> i have a music folder here. i also have, like everyone's computers. it's full of pictures and in many cases, people's family >> reporter: then the malware takes hold. >> the ransom wear is communicating with the server. the server is sending instructions to start encrypting all of these files. >> reporter: in minutes, the computer is compromised. >> this is what the end-user sees. >> reporter: wow! >> in this attack. >> reporter: those photos? >> if i try to look at all of my photos from my last vacation, try to open this, it's nothing. it's garbage. imagine an average business, this happening in the background, not only on this computer, but encrypting every computer within the network at the same time. >> reporter: in addition to a string of hospitals hacked, the village of ilion, new york, paid hundreds of ransom in 2014, and another paid 500,000 to get back online. >> we are seeing an uptick in this type of activity. >> reporter: aurie harris heads the fbi's new york cyberdivision. >> one of the reasons our ransom. >> reporter: in 2014, the fbi received more than 1,800 complaints of ransom ware and estimated loss of more than 23 million dollars. in 2015 the bureau received over 2,400 complaints and victims lost over $24 million. the ransom demands are often small. hundreds to a few thousand dollars, but the loss to an individual or business can be huge. >> it's a very, very helpless feeling to open your computer and you don't have your computer any more. >> reporter: how can you protect yourself? >> good user habits, common sense, backups and patching. with those basic things in place, i think you can -- you can minimize your exposure to risk. >> speaking of cyber security. the battle over encryption is about to get more complicated. the online service whatsapp will a billion of its users. that means are. up next, medical news in our "morning rounds," include why and how the obama administration plans to spend $500,000 fighting the zika virus. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by seresto. seresto makes it easy to help protect your dog or cat from fleas and ticks. with the performance you expect from a monthly topical in a non-greasy collar... seresto kills and repels fleas and ticks for 8 continuous months. the pursuit of healthier. it begins from the second we're born. because, healthier doesn't happen all by itself. it needs to be earned every day. using wellness to keep away illness. and believing a single life can be made better by millions of others. as a health services and innovation company optum powers modern healthcare by connecting every part of it. so while the world keeps searching for healthier we're here to make healthier happen. feel secure in your dentures... feel free to be yourself all day. just switch from denture paste to sea-bond denture adhesive seals. holds stronger than the leading paste all day... without the ooze. feel secure. be yourself. with stronger, clean sea-bond. oh, look... ...another anti-wrinkle cream in no hurry to make anything happen. neutrogena rapid wrinkle repair works... ...in one week. with the... fastest retinol formula. neutrogena . i am a migraine sufferer. my mom wants to understand, but she just can't see it. so excedrin worked with me to show my mom what i experience during a migraine. excedrin relieves my pain and symptoms. but their dedication to migraine sufferers doesn't stop there. oh my god... i'm so sorry, honey, that you go through this. now i finally feel understood. can't afford to let heartburn get in the way? try nexium 24hr, the #1 selling brand for frequent heartburn. get complete protection with the leader in frequent heartburn. that's nexium level protection. it is time for "morning rounds." cbs news medical chief dr. jon the white house budget director announced more than $500,000 is being rushed into the zika virus research. jon has more on how that money could be spent. >> that's perfect for breeding mosquito larvae. >> reporter: tropical disease expert has been warning for months that neighborhoods like this are similar to neighborhoods in brazil, the epi center for the zika pandemic. this makes for perfect breeding grounds for the mosquitoes that carry zika. >> if you look to see where zika is devastating families and mothers and unborn or newborn babies throughout the americas, it's in the areas of extreme poverty. >> reporter: he is worried the u.s. is not prepared to fight the zika virus, despite the commitment of over $500 million. congress still hasn't approved warm weather fast approaching, dr. anthony fauci says he is not waiting any longer. >> i'm taking money from other areas that we fund in order to fund the very important zika research, particularly the zika vaccine research. >> reporter: the mosquito is found in the foujsouth but it could reach as far north as new york and ohio. the biggest concern is for pregnant women. in brazil, zika virus has been linked with microcephaly, babies born with abnormally small head and brain. the administration says the new funding will go towards vaccine development, as well as mosquito surveillance and control. >> no such thing as a small outbreak of zika. if you start seeing babies with microcephaly on the gulf coast states, it would be a public health crisis and the public >> what is the next step in the u.s.? >> well, to be sure, the administration still wants the 1.9 billion dollars that is requested in aid and it requested it in congress in february and still hasn't been approved. put this in perspective. there is broad consensus from every expert i've spoken to that the zika virus is coming to a mosquito inside the united states. now do we really want to look back and say, what were we thinking? we had the warning. we had the time. why didn't we prepare? and that means funding, vaccine development, all sorts of ability to go on the local and state level and do surveillance. is the zika virus in mosquitoes or in people? you need to develop testing. very importantly you need to go into these especially poor areas, these neighborhoods that are not that dissimilar from dr. hotez is pointing out from brazil that have standing water and all sort of lack of air-conditioning and screens and clean things up. when i was in the epi center in brazil, i was with the soldiers. house-to-house and we should be doing a similar effort here in the united states to get ahead of this whole outbreak. >> the world health organization has released some startling new statistics on the number of diabetes cases in this country and abroad. it found the number of adults living with diabetes has quadrupled since 1980. in the u.s. alone the number of cases among men has jumped by 80% over that time and in cases among women, have increased by 50%. what is fueling this, holly? >> you know, it's directly related to the increase in obesity. almost number by number. we focus a lot and talk a lot about the obesity epidemic in the united states where two-thirds of adults are either overweight or obese. sometimes we can lose sight of the fact this is a worldwide issue. worldwide, 1 in 3 adults is overweight. approximately 1 in 10 is obese. and the diabetes rates are going up directly related to that. why is the world health organization say let's day paengs to -- pay attention to it now? >> sure. unless we see a decrease or reversal of these numbers, diabetes will be a global concern in the next few years. when we look at medical complications, right? you see vision loss, kidney failure, neuropathy which is nerve problems in the legs. you see amputations. the cost is overwhelming. the number is $827 billion spent already every year. a lot of that is disproportionately falls on low and middle income countries that really can't absorb those health costs. so the world health organization is focusing on it now. even they admit arguably maybe it's a little bit late in the game. >> what do we do to curb this, jon? >> we know, without a doubt, nutrition, weight loss, doing exercise does wonders here. the question is how do you do that? i was hoping -- holly, in your practice, people come in and the same problem. i'm not exercising and i'm overweight. what do you tell them? >> i say take it one day at a time. losing weight is one of the most challenging things any person can do whether you're trying to lose two pounds or 20 pounds or 200. i say if you're completely sedentary, today, walk around the block. if you have three sodas a day, today, have two and see what happens tomorrow. try and make tiny changes that are actually realistic and then you're more able to stick with those. one of the things about diabetes is that it's largely preventable but it's also wonderfully reversible, right? whether or not you can get rid of it altogether, you can manage it very well both through weight loss and medication so take little steps. getting rid of mindless eating. this great book was book. book is called "mindless eating." it talks how we eat when we are not paying attention to. the worst thing to do is in front of a television set and eating like that. get smaller plates. i tell my patient, the kitchen it's closed! when you go in there, because you're bored. there are all of these things that you can do to try to encourage people and also then being realistic because i think -- i just spoke to somebody today who said i only lost five pounds in a month. that is amazing! it's 3,500 calories in a pound of fat. if you normally have 2,000 calories as a diet and you go down to 1,500 that is amazing to lose 50000 calories in a day. >> just when you thought the tech world and fbi couldn't get even more heated. the message service whatsapp has thrown gas on the fire with their latest decision to encrypt everything, including phone calls. we will tell you what this means for national security. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." ever since jim signed up for lowe's personalized lawn care plan, he's been getting step-by-step instructions based on where he lives that ensures his lawn looks amazing. hey jim, you know what else would look amazing in the yard? 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"what's worse", he thinks... or my eyes can never look away?" since when did experience become something to hide? i say we own it. lose all that negativity. just let it go. it's just bad energy. oh, and lose those terrible black balloons they give you on your 50th. what's up with that? hey we hear you. that's why our members love aarp the magazine. it celebrates you. with fun and provocative content, from lifestyle and entertainment to in-depth reporting. and it's just one of the great benefits of membership. if you don't think "this is right for me" when you think aarp, then you don't know "aarp". get to know us at aarp.org/possibilities introducing the fusion of exceptional taste with the benefits of our probiotic yogurt. new activia fruit fusion, with the exclusive probiotic bifidus regularis. delicious and good for you. the ballots between the fbi and apple over unlocking the san bernardino killer's iphone may be over, but the fight over encryption has just been dramatically ramped up. >> the online messaging service whatsapp has over a billion encryption on messages and phone calls and videos. "wire" magazine got an exclusive interview with the editors and jason is here to tell us more. these guys don't talk very often so this is a big deal to have them talking about what they view as the future. first off, what is end-to-end encryption? >> if i'm sending you a message with end-to-end encryption the only way you can decipher that message if you have your specific phone. nobody can tap into it while it's being sent. most importantly, the company that is hosting this app has no record of it either. >> now apple has that as well. how if at all does this differ? >> the difference is whatsapp is huge. we don't use it in the united states and has a billion users. apple's imessage can only send nowhere close cloes to a billionto a billion. >> icloud. >> if you use icloud, that immediate ameliorates any encryption you get. >> i think after brussels attack people are nervous and how the government is not able to tap into them. how do they defend what they do right now and it all should be encrypted? >> law enforcement has been able to fight crime without having access to everybody's conversation in real-time. so basically this is just an excuse or that they should be focusing more on their intelligence work and less on inserting back doors into everybody's communications. >> what does that guarantee, the encryption and your security? >> well, there is no way to absolutely guarantee anything. >> right. >> but what they can do is guarantee that if the government comes to them with a warrant and says we need records of these people's conversations, they can say we don't have it. it's as encrypted to us as anybody else. >> yeah, we can't get it. it's not there. >> you describe this is an app united states. why is it it's only taken off overseas? >> oo somesome of this is messaging apps in particular this one took off because it offered a free alternative to expensive messaging services and honestly texting is not so expensive in the u.s. but it was a huge demand and why it really grew internationally more than in the united states. >> one of the founders grew up in communism in soviet union. >> he says he knows what it's like to have your conversation not private. it's motivational for him. the cofounder brian acton was pushing this even more koon. they are both on board but not a huge mission only from koon. >> be interests to see if js isthis find out why the forever stamp is going down and the last time it happened. this is "cbs this morning: saturday." what's going on here? i'm val, the orange money retirement squirrel from voya. we're putting away acorns. you know, to show the importance of saving for the future. so you're sort of like a spokes person? more of a spokes metaphor. get organized at voya.com. dogs - sure can be messy. but with nexgard, their flea and tick killer doesn't have to be. nexgard, the vet's #1 choice for dogs, is a delicious, beef-flavored chew that kills both fleas and ticks. so it's easy to give, easy to take. reported side effects include vomiting, itching, diarrhea, lethargy and lack of appetite. use with caution in dogs with a history of seizures. for powerful flea and tick protection, ask your vet about nexgard. the #1 choice of vets for their dogs and yours. if your family outing is magical for all the wrong reasons. you may be muddling through allergies. try zyrtec for powerful allergy relief. and zyrtec is different than claritin . because it starts working faster on the first day you take it. try zyrtec . muddle no more . if you need advice for your business, legalzoom has your back. our trusted network of attorneys has provided guidance to visit legalzoom today. the legal help you can count on. if you're heading to the post office, prepare for longer lines and higher rates. >> the stamp only went one direction. and that is up. >> but all that about to change. tomorrow, the price of a first class stamp will drop from 49 cents to 47 cents! it's the first decrease since 1919 when the price of a stamp fell by a penny from 3 cents to 2 whole cents! while it seems people will always have problems with the post office. >> it takes a week to go from the bronx to manhattan. >> i had a bill due in two device and i just got the >> a long time and everyone is going aarrgghh! >> at least now the price of stamps will be a little lower on that list of complaints. >> i guess i shouldn't have bought stamp futures? huh? i'm getting creamed! >> for all of those forever stamps! >> down in value. >> i'm excited about that. i do send a lot of letters and i do complain about that. up next, one man's quest to create an art. a photo art, that is. we will check into the project to photograph thousands of the earth's at-risk creatures. for some of you, your local news is next. for the well, good morning. it is 7:57 on this saturday morning. i'm tony iello. six firefighters have been injured battling a raging fire at a monmouth county shore town. the flames erupt yesterday afternoon in the business district of keyport at a warehouse on west front street. plumes of smoke could be seen for miles. several amounts and five businesses, including a tax office were destroyed. the cause of the fire remains under investigation. in new york police are cracking down on distracted driving. operation hangup started yesterday. state and local police will be out in force, making sure people are looking at the road and not their phones. governor cuomo says since 2011 the number of tickets issued for people texting while driving has increased 840%, but police say fewer people are being pulled over for talking on their cell phones. vanessa murdock is here forecast. hi, vanessa. >> good morning. a little bit uncomfortable today. it'll be cold and soggy. some of us will see snow, many of us will see rain mixing with snow. it will start not too long from now. we're thinking mid morning with the brunt of the activity through the afternoon. inches. we're talking those totals for, bit into that action as well. many of us, though, just a trace up to an inch possible. tonight it gets down right frigid. a freese warning is in effect. overnight we're talking possibly record cold overnight. for today 43 degrees, rain and wet snow, the steadiest snow south and west of the city. the winds pick up this evening, and it will be windy overnight with a low of 29. tony. >> vanessa, thank you. we will have another news update in half an hour. i'm tony iello. "cbs this morning saturday" this is everything i have, my family. i got to see my dad die on national tv. they don't know what they took from us. people are dying. we need a president that's going to talk about it. i believe bernie sanders is a protestor. he's not scared to go up against the criminal justice system. he's not scared. that's why i'm for bernie. i'm bernie sanders and i approve this message. welcome to "cbs this morning: saturday." i'm anthony mason. >> i'm vinita nair. this half hour, coming up, no more grades and no more s.a.t.s and no more essays! see how some schools want video shot on cell phone. >> perhaps the biggest golf weekend of the year. we will preview the final round of the masters as jordan spieth tries to repeat as champ. the newest entries to the rock & roll hall of fame were honored last night. suspects in belgium. five men are in custody in brussels. they include the last remaining identified fugitive in the november attacks in paris. >> police are trying to determine if the suspect mohamed abrini is the so-called man in the hat who escaped the sued bombing at the brussels airport last month. the raids came one day after police released a surveillance video asking for help from the public. >> keith allen harward is joining his first full day of freedom this morning. the north carolina man was released from a virginia prison years for a crime he did not commit. dna evidence cleared harward from the bite marks prosecutors are relied on. >> whatever i want to do, because i can do it. >> harward says family reunions and fried oysters in north carolina await and he says he wants to get acquainted with the internet. a jet pack company executive is recovering after crashing during a flight test of one of his product. nick maycumber is in serious condition and was flying a jet pack in denver when he fell about 10 to 20 feet. he is vice president of jet pack international. last year, he told "cbs this morning" the jet pack can only fly for about 28 seconds. when friday's crash happened, maykumber was testing out the jet pack. the faa is investigateing. inducted last night in the rock & roll hall of fame. the class of 2016, one continues to smash barriers. >> nwa, what's up? >> reporter: rap pioneer nwa now share the same address as the beatles and the rolling stones. the ground breaking group known for their subversive lyrics and songs such as straight outta compton once again the third group to make it into the hall of fame by a rap group. >> rock 'n' roll is reforming to the people who came before you by creating your own path in music and in life. >> reporter: but fans were disappointed when nwa opted not to perform. legends deep purple earned their way into the hall of fame by recording and touring for nearly 50 years. but none of the group songs is as famous as "smoke on the water." >> perhaps the most classic guitarist of all time, the first thing anybody learns on a guitar, the rift that actually been banned from being played in music stores to preserve the sanity of the staff. i was walking down the street one day >> reporter: jazz fusion collective chicago. i want you to to want me >> reporter: and hard rockers cheap trick also entered the hall after career spanning five decade. some people call me the space cowboy >> reporter: inductee steve miller thanked history fans with you afterwards had critic comments. >> they came this close. no, i'm not going to wrap this i'm going to wrap you. this is how close the show came to not happening because the now. >> reporter: after miller's remarks the rock & roll hall of fame released a statement saying rock 'n' roll can ignite many opinions and it's what makes it so great. congratulations steve miller. >> he got two tickets for the whole night and his band didn't get tickets. i've heard this complaint before, i have to say. >> if you're inducted, you think your wives and significant others would get a chance to come! round three of the masters golf tournament gets under way today. after the first two rounds, defending champion jordan spieth is atop the lergedaderboard on amy, nice to see you. >> nice to see you. >> let's talk about jordan spieth. strong performance and a little bit trouble putting. >> funy you say trouble putting. he is the best short game in the world. at only 22 years old is keeping him on top of the leaderboard. any time you use the word wicked and crusty to talk about the golf course, it's not good and that is what they are battling. it's not about the field and battling the guys who are playing alongside you right now. it's about battling the conditions. 30-mile-per-hour winds. really whipping everything into havoc. even on the green. if you don't get up there and guard your ball it could roll away. it's making a normally pristine golf course a monster but he has the short game to battle it and six straight rounds he has been on top of the leaderboard so he has figured this place out. >> rory mcilroy is still in the hunt. what do you think? >> rory has the best ball striking game. he hits it solid and he hits it clean. rory is very stoic and cold-hearted and jordan is my favorite golfer and he talks nonstop. talks to the ball and to himself and his caddie and talks to the course! so these two being paired together, they are second and third in the world, they both are major winners. so they are the two superstars and help to fill the void since tiger woods stopped playing and phil mickelson is not making the weekend. >> once place so fast and one goes to is slow. >> they do. their styles are completely opposite and two of the superstars in the sport along with jason day. >> what about dechambeau? >> they are all named after former golfers which is good! he's an amateur. the high amateur. 22. same age as jordan spieth but he is also won u.s. amateur. it's his first masters but he has ncaa individual title. and his personality is so wonderful. never gets too high or low. golf shot which is what you need in conditions like this. >> on the other hand, some of the past masters champs have struggled. phil mickelson you mentioned and tom watson. >> tom watson is 66. >> it's great he is just there! i say struggle but he's there! i'm like, he is 66 years old and still playing! >> it's amazing. a few years ago he was close. he has made the cut. he almost won an open championship in 2012 i think it was. he says the course is too long for him now. what a standing ovation. i was in tears watching it. all of the former master champs. weekend but he barely made the up next, the viral videos now taking aim at the s.a.t. and the stressful college application process. if you know a high school student who is sweating it out you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." james drove his rav4 hybrid, unaware death was lurking. what? 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(laughing) there's nothing like making their day. except making sure their tomorrow is taken care of too. financial guidance while you're mastering life. from chase. so you can. for many high school seniors, this is the most serve racking time of their lives. three short weeks left before the may 1st college admissions deadline. it's about him such a high some colleges and universities are trying innovative new ideas, like scrapping s.a.t.s and essays and even transcripts. mark albert looked into took. >> morgan home? >> hi. yeah. >> reporter: on doorsteps outside of boston, the ivory tower has come knocking. >> i'd like to talk to you about your admission. >> thank you very much. >> reporter: this year in a first, wheaton college in massachusetts hand delivered some acceptance letters like ed mcmahon dropping off the prize of a lifetime. >> wow! >> reporter: the unconventional households are part of a rewrite of college admissions and campuses across the country including this college in baltimore. how many colleges did you apply to? >> three. >> how many let you submit a video? >> just one. >> i'm from memphis, tennessee. >> reporter: in her hand shot,selfshot, her love of writing and drawing and how she thought she would fit in. >> i believe i could grow as a writer and a student. it was very different and really called out to me as a way to show who i am. >> reporter: it's amazing the things they come up with to do in their two-minute videos. >> reporter: chris wild and nina are on the admissions committee at goucher which this year enrolled the first students who were allowed to apply by video. does a student have to submit high school transcripts? >> no. >> reporter: do students have to submit an s.a.t. or a.c.t. score. >> no. >> essay structured question? >> no. >> reporter: if i'm at home and listening to this i think i hit the jop. >> jackpot. >> in the tradition-bound world of college admissions, it's a radical idea. what was your initial reaction? >> i was a little skeptical. i think initially when we met i probably raised the most outs. >> completely. >> reporter: what would you say to your more traditional admissions colleagues who may feel that you're dumbing down the process? >> that is definitely one of the criticisms, right? and my response is always that while we have taken away some of those more traditional means, we haven't gotten rid of the element that those are trying to uncover. >> reporter: let's take a look at the next video. so we watched some admission videos to them to find out what stands out. >> hi. >> reporter: it was only 120 seconds. yet you feel as though you sort of know her. >> what i see on that screen, i would love to have it in the classroom. >> reporter: while they say the production values don't matter, if they did, 19-year-old mitchell roaran kaplan would likely have not made the cut. >> in goucher, i'm not even in half of the frames. >> reporter: your mouth and chin? >> yeah. >> it was really genuine, i think. you know it's a video app and i should take a chance took. >> reporter: jose antonio bowen is goucher's president. >> we are not finding all of the talent. we are not reaching the talent and letting them know they have opportunities to go to college. >> reporter: bowen is also a jazz pianist. so he did what jazz musicians do. he improvised and gave students another option. >> first, people said that is cool and using their phone to apply to college. >> reporter: but that's all they have. >> that's not cool, that is poor. that is because that is all you have. so we were looking for, if all you have is a phone, how do i level the playing field? >> it's easy to update with the new things. >> reporter: others are marching to a different beat too. tcu, morehouse and tulane are now using a social media app and students can create a profile for administration officers. at usc, it's requires a one-minute idea. students with the best ones come to campus for group interviews to pitch themselves. but for "the new york times" columnist fran bruni those types of intervention are like a 1600 s.a.t. score. exceedingly rare. so he wrote a book he thought would be an antidote to the college admissions mania. >> it was rigged. >> reporter: igedrigged? >> absolutely. >> reporter: he says some athletes in similar type of subjective administrations. >> it means they are not doing some subjective assessment of every applicant's merit. they are looking who is the greatest use to the school including terms of present and future donations. >> reporter: some could say if they are looking at this in terms of a business that that is a smart business model? >> it is absolutely smart for society and for children. >> reporter: goucher and its president jose bowen believe their innovation, so far, is getting a passing grade. it says students who apply by video had a slightly higher gpa and more likely to have a gpa above 3.0 after their first semester in college and were more diverse than traditional applicants. but the man who once played with liberace isn't taking a bow -- just yet. >> the only real test will be if, in four years, these students are graduating at the same rate with everybody else. that is the real test. >> reporter: for "cbs this morning: saturday," mark albert, baltimore. >> i think this sort of changes long overdue, personally. you don't like it, do you? >> i think it's good but the reality you can evolve the application process but will the rest of the world match that? are you going to get out of school and i think i don't have to write this because i can do a video and i'm a fuddy-duddy. i'm a traditionalist. >> i think people are different in different ways is what i like about it because that is how i would have applied! >> i have a sense there is self-motivation here. with animal species vanish vanishing at a growing rate, national geographic are trying to preserve as many as possible the next 25 years. meet the photographer who is playing noah for this 21st sent century ark. kris "cbs this morning: saturday." hi dad. uh huh. yeah...sorry about that. think about it there must be higher love down in the heart what do you think? hi ted, glad you could join us, we think you're going to like these numbers. bring me a higher love i could rise above go paperless, don't stress, girl i got the discounts that you need safe driver accident-free everybody put your flaps in the air for me go paperless, don't stress, girl i got the discounts that you need safe driver accident-free everybody put your flaps in the air for me i can't lip-synch in these conditions. savings oh, yeah i never really gave much thought to the acidity in any foods. never thought about the coffee i was drinking having acids. it never dawned on me that it could hurt your teeth. he told me to use pronamel. it's going to help protect the enamel in your teeth. it allows me to continue to drink my coffee, and it was a real easy allergies distracting you? when your symptoms start... doctors recommend taking ...non-drowsy claritin every day of your allergy season. claritin provides powerful, non-drowsy 24 hour relief... for fewer interruptions from the amazing things you do every day. "national geographic" photographer is a man on a and portraits of the wildlife before -- they disappear. he just reached the halfway mark of 6,000 photos. >> this month, "national geographic" features ten different photo op images on multiple covers and the first for the magazine and joel is with us. good morning. >> thanks for having me. >> this is such an amazing project. you're ten years in and you're just halfway there! >> i nope.know. a little obsess sieve. >> tell us about the first picture you took. >> a naked mole rat at the lincoln's children zoo. on the day she felt better i went to a zoo a mile from my house and said if they had any animals they could put on a black and white background. they showed me this and a photo >> a female white rhinoceros. >> that is a heart-breaker. she is one of five left in the world. she was at a zoo in the czech republic. the pr said you better hurry and get here. she has big cysts and too old to have surgery so hurry. we got there and she was super sweet and laid down to take a nap after the shoot and everything was fine. a week later one of the cysts burst and she died. now the world has three left. she and another have died so three left and that subspecies of the rhino is almost certain to be extinct. >> how about this fox? >> they are stable right now and so cute that those big ears are used to dissipate heat and for great hearing as well but they live in the sahara desert. they are good at getting the public in and getting them to care about the extinction it's not about photography, but "national geography" is trying to prevent species from going extinct. we try to get the public to care through cute animals, whatever it takes and get them to want to come online and learn and see what they can all do to save species like this. >> one of the cutest pictures are the pair of aorangutans. >> that was at the houston zoo. a mamma with her adopted child. another female orangutan giving birth and asking for a little bit of time and gave it to this other mom who had her arms out and she raised that animal successfully. >> how long does it take to get an image like that? >> they usually paint backgrounds for me black and white in the zoo for animals that can't move around. it takes usually an hour. something that is tolerating the process well. >> the smaller animals are not the easiest ones to shoot? therapy all tricky. shooting tents for a lot of them and sometimes work them out in the open. some of the shoots only last 30 seconds or so and some may take up to an hour. >> how do you prep? a way to prep the animal or comb them out? >> no. we are not working with trained animals. they are all wild animals usually. so we work with zoos and aquariums and breeders. they are the real keepers of the kingdom now. they are the ark. a lot of these species can only seen in captainivity. we work with the zoos ahead of time to know what animals we can do this with and which animals can withstand the limelight and so far everything has gone real well. >> it was dangerous at times. you were nearly blinded by a crane and punched in the face by another animal? >> i'm sticking my face in there most of the time with the camera lens. kind of goes with the job. we try to take every precaution and so far, no animal has been project. we are going to try to get all 12,000, 13,000 species that are in captainivity around the worlde ityitye ityity -- captivity. >> how much longer will it take? >> another 15 years. >> how is your wife doing now? >> she is great and got ten-year all-clear from cancer a couple of weeks ago so life is good. >> thank you for joining us. >> up next, "the dish." she is the queen of cue. the world's only female barbecue good morning. 8:27 on this saturday morning. the npped np releasing new video of a slasher attacking an israeli tourist on a subway platform in greenwich village. you can see the man in the orange sweatshirt pushing the victim against the turnstile door. station, the 6 train platform. police say the 55-year-old victim got lost and fell asleep on a bench around 3:00 friday morning. the attacker woke him up, took his money and slashed on his neck, arm and hand before taking off. the victim is being treat at bellview hospital. the search for a 13-year- old boy missing for nearly a week has intensified on long island. nassau county police say amari young last was seen leaving his home in new castle at 6:00 monday morning. investigators say witnesses placed amari at a park and a middle school in westbury. police say they've also searched social media sites for possible clues in hopes of locating the teen. now to vanessa murdock with a check of the saturday forecast. hi, vanessa. >> good morning, tony. everybody note those clouds have already made a quick move in, the wet weather is not far behind. the suggestion of a little snow already falling northwest of the city in new jersey. that will be the trend, moisture continuing to move in, snow, mainly to the west of the city, and then rain for many of us today. stacking up, a trace to one for most. one to two inches really through the mid section of new jersey. it could sweep up into warren, maybe a little bit into sussex. but otherwise not a total washout this morning, but by this afternoon it will be soggy. overnight it gets really cold. a freeze warning goes into effect, the wind will pick up. we are actually anticipating the possibility of roar cold overnight. tony >> all right, vanessa, thank you. we'll be back with the news at 9:00. i'm tony iello, "cbs news bit. in this morning's "the dish" melissa cookson has developed a growing up around pit fire grills and southern cooking in southern mississippi. in a barbecue contest, she is breaking the competition ever since. >> she became the only female world champion of barbecue. after years on the contest circuit, she returned home to open her memphis barbecue company restaurant, now with three locations in the southeast. her latest cookbook "smokin' hot in the south." it's due out in may. melissa cookson, good morning. welcome to "the dish." >> thank you for having me. >> i guess you brought barbecue, huh? >> well, not today. >> what did you bring for us? >> i brought southwest flanked steak and bacon wrapped asparagus and minibiscuits with sage butter and grilled slaw and grilled fruit salad and >> telsl us about the drink. >> special sweet tea. >> we call that an ice pick where you just add a little vodka and that way you don't know what we are drinking on the front porch! >> i love special st. pete tea. we talked about how you got into this world. like anthony, i wanted a whole hog on this table. it sounds like a turning point for you. you saw a whole hog competition when you were with your husband and said i want to do this. >> i knew when i was at home, the guys are like cook ribs. they are easy. you're a girl. i go what are you cooking? we are cooking whole hog. it's the most difficult thing on any barbecue circuit. i wanted to be the best at whatever is the most difficult so i jumped right in to whole hog. >> i was surprised is there a barbecue circuit. what exactly what happens? >> depending on which sanctioning body has the circuit. memphis style, you're judged blind and on-site and you prepare whole hog, whole >> i gather some of the teams are really big, like 15 people to a team? >> wow. >> it's just the three of you, you, your husband, and your daughter? >> yeah. i figure there is three opinions. there is one that matters and three is a lot less than 20. >> we, obviously, show people images and touched upon this but it is still a very male-dominated world. how have you succeeded in all of this? >> i everrealized i was different. they treated me like one of the guys so i went with it and, you know, there is no ladies tease in barbecue like there is in golf. so i just went in and did my thing and won some big ones. >> now you didn't really have a former culinary background of any kind but your grandfather owned a coffee shop. how did that start things? >> when i was young, my grandfather was my special person. >> oh! >> he would take me to the coffee shop where they would talk about fishinging or farming it just happened to double as a barbecue restaurant. you would smell those pits and the meat is cooking on those pits all morning long. if we stayed there long enough for lunch, then we might get to have a barbecue sandwich and that is the best barbecue in the world. i'm not sure if it was the company or the barbecue but really doesn't matter. >> you say best barbecue in the world. depending where are you in the united states there are such different perspectives what barbecue should be like. do you feel you have to adapt where the barbecues are? >> somewhat. texas has a mesquite family and in kansas they like more hickory and in memphis we like a sweet saucy barbecue and alabama you get vinegar and then mustard and white sauce so i try to adapt and try to fit the judging profile. whoever is judging try to win over. >> smart way to do it. >> if you could have this meal with any person past or present who would that person be? >> i had a feeling you were going to pick him. thank you very much, melissa slam for much more up next, our "saturday sessions." meet the screaming singer of soul. charles bradley released his debut album in '60s and selling out ever since. his life story is just as powerful as his music. hear them both ahead. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." moderate to severe crohn's disease is tough, but i've managed. except that managing my symptoms was all i was doing. and when i finally told my doctor, is for adults like me who have tried other medications but still experience the symptoms of moderate to severe crohn's disease. and that in clinical studies, the majority of patients on humira saw significant symptom relief. and many achieved remission. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. ask your gastroenterologist about humira. strength is an addiction. you can never get enough of.. now it's time.. to bring that strength to your tooth enamel. new colgate enamel health mineral repair toothpaste. it strengthens weakened enamel 4x better by replenishing it with vital minerals. so smile.. with strength. with new colgate enamel health mineral repair toothpaste. smile with strength. twenty more years of this job? yikes. my kids say go for it, mom. be that woman who does what she loves. knows what she wants. "yeah, mom's gonna go for it!" hey we hear you. that's why aarp created life reimagined. it's designed to help you find your true passion - with personal advice from experts, coaches and people like you who are going for it. if you don't think "this is right for me" when you think aarp, then you don't know "aarp". get to know us at aarp.org/possibilities this morning in our "saturday sessions" charles bradley success was a long time coming from a singer born in 1948 but released his debut album just five years ago. >> his experiences during those 60 plus years make for quite a story. fitting for a soul man strongly influenced by the late great james brown. i spoke with him about his life and his music at brooklyn's essex bar where he was the world is going up in flames >> reporter: early in his late blooming career, charles name gave him a name -- the great screaming eagle of soul. what do you think of that name? >> i love it. i love it now. >> reporter: the screaming eagle got his inspiration from the godfather. >> reporter: bradley was a teenager in 1962 when he saw james brown perform in harlem. your sister took you to the apollo? >> yes yes yes. >> reporter: that is what started it? >> that's what started it, because i always liked the blues. they put the rhythm with the blues and that is what made it funky. i said now that is what i want to be! >> reporter: but through his first five decades, bradley drifted between jobs. he worked as a short order cook in maine, at a hospital for the how many jobs did you have over the years? >> geez. i can't really count because anybody give me a job, i hitchhiked all the way to alaska. >> reporter: bradley was in his sifts when he finally landed back in brooklyn. he was doing a james brown tribute show here in the essence bar when he was spotted by dap tone records who paired him with the producer. >> we want to see you do you. >> reporter: when he asked you that, did you know who charles bradley was? >> kept drilling me. >> reporter: yeah? >> he was pressing me. and he said, no, you can hit that note. i was like this. no. why? i said you try to burn my throat out, you know? go back >> i was feeling the power in my voice that i could hold a note longer. >> reporter: you found a power you didn't even know you had? >> yes, yes, yes, that's true. i'm still searching for more inside of me. >> reporter: once you find one thing, you realize there might be more. >> yeah, yeah. yeah. >> reporter: at age 62, bradley finally got his break. when dap tone released his debut album in 2011. the small brooklyn label had had success with sharon jones and the draft kings. who had also played on the grammy winning amy winehouse album "back to black." were you confident you could market a 60 plus something singer? >> i wasn't really thinking in those terms and i don't think we do think on those terms. >> reporter: nearly sugarman, cofounder of the label, sound they surpassed all expectations. >> you saw something happening? >> yeah. people were responding to it. >> reporter: bradley pours himself into every performance. last year, he even went on stage the night he lost his beloved mother. >> that was the hardest thing that i ever did in my life. >> reporter: why did you perform that day? >> if i didn't, i think i would really truly hurt myself. i couldn't take it no more. i was looking anywhere i can do to get this pain out of me. i'm going through changes >> reporter: he thinks of her, he says, whenever he sings the title track of his new album, a cover of the black sabbath song "changes." how many days a year are you on the road now? >> i know this time, i got 147 shows. >> reporter: your next tour? >> yeah. that's coming up now. >> reporter: wow. >> yeah. but i love it. but i learned how to pace >> reporter: you're 67 now? >> yes. how old are you? >> i'm about to be 60. >> really? >> reporter: yes. >> isn't that amazing? >> reporter: yeah. thank you, charles! i think you're working extra hard because this came so late? >> yeah, because i want it and i ain't going to let it go. you make me die >> reporter: now performing a track from his new album "changes" here is charles bradley are "ain't it a sin?" >> hey hey! i try to be a right man and i try to give love all over the world. but wait a minute! it's my turn it's my turn to love and be loved it's my turn come on boys i try to be a righteous man come from lord some time i get tired of getting used i can scream just like a child i start spilling over i see a man stay a mess ain't going to do me right i might just do you in and i try to keep to keep my soul from running wild my emotions got the best of me i scream just like a child i start powering over my feelings catch a flame i see a man stay a man if he wants to stay a man ain't going to do me right i might just do it you and ." boys hit it! come on! double up on it! ain't it a sin ain't it a sin my feelings a flame apt ain't going to do me right i might just do you in and come on come on come on ain't it a sin >> don't go away! we will be right back with more from the screamin' eagle of soul, mr. charles bradley. you're watching "cbs this morning: saturday." >> announcer: saturday session are sponsored by blue buffalo. you love your pets like family so feed them like family with with the pain and swelling of my moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis... ordinary objects often seemed... intimidating. doing something simple... meant enduring a lot of pain. if ra is changing your view of everyday things orencia may help. orencia works differently by targeting a source of ra early in the inflammation process. for many, orencia provides long-term relief of ra symptoms. it's helped new ra patients and those not helped enough by other treatments. do not take orencia with another biologic medicine for ra due to an increased risk of serious infection. serious side effects can occur including fatal infections. cases of lymphoma and lung cancer have been reported. tell your doctor if you're prone to or have any infection like an open sore, the flu, or a history of copd, a chronic lung disease. orencia may worsen your copd. you need... ask your doctor about orencia. orencia. see your ra in a different way. hey, jesse. who are you? 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a new clue in the slashing it might be just as hard to remove, the big mess cars discovered on their cars on a public parking garage. cbs news saturday morning starts right now. . morning, just shy of 9 a.m. on this saturday, april 9th. >> nice to have you with us. >> thank you. >> today's top stores are ahead. we have a look at the forecast. probably what everybody wants to know about the snow, right? >> is it going to snow, and the answer is yes. not a ton for most of us. west of the city, better chance for some sticking snow. otherwise this is going to be a soggy afternoon, cold, kind of dreary day. but, you know, some people say, hey, we need the rain, and maybe wouldn't mind some snow even though it is in mid-april almost. so let's go ahead, shall we, look at what's going down? for this evening until 8:00 a winter weather advisory in effect for only hunterton county here. but many of us will see a little bit of snow. the winter weather advisory is in effect just there because that's where we anticipate the highest totals. the vortex satellite and radar picture makes it look like it's snowing west of statistic but that is not reaching the ground just yet. it will take -- of the city but that is not reaching the ground just yet. it will take some time. most of us are dry but cloudy. in the afternoon most of the moisture will push in. as the colder air filters in behind the system, some snow mixes in with the rain is certainly expected as well. your full forecast is coming up. we'll talk totals and brighter skies on the horizon.

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