Transcripts For WUSA CBS News Sunday Morning 20150118

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photographer captured the first ever images of a rare snub-nosed monkey. >> no one knew there was a kind of monkey who has red lips and a pitching face like us humans. the discovery caused a sensation and also serve as a warning, ahead how a monkey is changing the way china thinks. >> osgood: not all human behavior is as honorable as that. consider what is happening behind the curtain of a distinguished ballet company just a few years back. with tracy smith we will take a look. >> reporter: on a snowy moscow night two years ago, the artistic director of russia's famous bolshoi balance hey was attacked on his way home with acid. his face covered in third degree burns, his eyesight gone. his future quite literally unclear. >> were there moments where you thought you would not be coming back? >> yes surely yes. >> later on sunday morning. we will show you the remarkable recovery of sergei filin. >> osgood: when it comes rising up from adverse i are the broadcaster steve harvey has quite a story to tell, and he will be telling it this morning to special correspondent james brown.>> ha wt the hell are you doing? >> steve harvey is one of the hottest stars on daytime television, but his career has been a roller coaster of ups and downs. >> two divorces, flunked out of college, lost everything i owned twice. a lot of times i was written off, you know, he won't come back from this. >> the good times and bad times with steve harvey ahead on sunday morning. >> osgood: speaking of ups and downs, a snack that was once a tough sell to gourmets is enjoying a bit of a boom. eric petersen will be experience ago taste sensation. >> the key again is good solid muscle, the way it is cut. >> she subsisted on it now dieters pay her for it and as jerky has become plenty it has become pricey too. >> we sell this bag for $13. >> that is not gas station jerky, that is a lot of money. >> jerky from gas station snack food to gastrono ma'am cal delight later on sunday morning. .. >> osgood: rita braver talks about stamps with some very devoted collectors. watch as dedicated doll doctor at work. nancy guiles says no sales to those long cash register receipts and more first the headlines for sunday morning, 18 18 of january, 2015 we are beginning to learn details of the state of the union address the president is expected to call for raising the tax rate on capital gains and eliminating a tax break on inheritances. the money would be used to fund tax credits for middle class americans. despite a heavy rain, a recorded 6 million people poured into manila streets this morning to see pope francis, it was the pontiff's final mass of his four day visit to the philippines. >> new government of indonesia made good on a promise to take a hard-line against blood trafficking, in jakarta today six people five of them farmers were executed by firing squad. >> despite pleas from the leaders of their countries. two kentucky teens accused of a crime spree across the south have been taken into custody police found 18-year-old dalton hayes and 13-year-old girlfriend asleep inside a stolen truck in panama city beach florida earlier this morning. >> protesters gathered outside are bill cosby was performing. the, but the show went on inside without incident. more than a dozen women have accused the comedian who is now 77 of sexual assault. we will have more on the cosby controversy later on sunday morning. now today's weather, an icy mix of snow and rain will cover much of the northeast wet and cool in the northwest, sun at this and warm down south. tomorrow for the martin luther king day holiday more of the same along with some snow in the midwest. >> coming up, postage due. >> this is rare, there are only two of them in the world. >> but first -- >> a little monkey business. >> free at last, thank god almighty, we are free at make us stronger. when a girl connects with a science mentor... her confidence grows. when schools connect with technology... a 5th grader's world opens up. and when a worker connects to online degrees... his opportunities multiply. the at&t aspire initiative. helpinmmunities across america. >> osgood: monkey business we have to show you this morning has nothing to do with fooling around, and everything to do with wildlife preservation. seth doane teamed one students from the university of british columbia's global reporting center for our sunday morning cover story. >> reporter: trekking through the mountains in this remote corner of china not far from tibet, these young film makers are in search of an elusive subject. >> as you can see, a little bit of a disability. even it is a long hike to get up here not to see anything. yeah. >> they are trying to spot a rare snub-nosed monkey which often means enduring grueling conditions and in sub zero temperatures only to be disappointed. >> ah! >> it can take weeks to find them and can involve waiting for hours at a time. in the end the film makers found these families of monkeys in an area where it is easier for trekkers to know their patterns, to spot them. >> there are just about 2,000 of these monkeys left in the wild, they live in a tiny part of a forest in china's yunnan province, it is one of the last unspoiled regions left in a country where wilderness is fast disappearing. >> these monkeys live at a higher elevation than any other primate on earth, so spotting them is a thrill says 25-year-old wildlife photographer jack can i upon. >> jackie poon. >> how is that to get that close to an animal, to something in the wild? >> i can't really explain it. it is like, for me, the feelings are like jumping out of an ainerpla ? >> really? >> i get shaky. i am trying to control that nowadays because when you film you can't shake when you film, right. >> poon grew up in hong kong and studied in england his parents wanted him to focus on math, physics or business, but his focus changed when he came across the work of a pioneering chinese photographer named xi zhinong. >> his passion of filming these monkeys is incredible, because he ran out into mountains and lived for three years and saw the monkey twice and that is some passion there, that is some passion there. >> in 1993, xi zhinong was a photographer for the chinese forest rest i have bureau who had been assigned to record wildlife for government documentaries. she captured these images the first photographs ever taken of the snub-nosed monkey. most chinese had never seen one and the photos became a sensation. they also served as a warning. >> these are your pictures in national geographic, "time" magazine, how is it to have them get so much coverage? >> after these were published and gained international attention, si told us, the monkey's fate was changed. >> no one knew there was a kind of monkey who has red lips and a pink face like us humans, when they first saw these pictures, they were like wow how can we sit and watch these cute animals go extinct? with the economy starting to take off logging interests were destroying the monkey's limited habitat. xi's photos sounded the alarm. >> there was a publish outcry and the government listened. the snub-nosed monkey became a species as protected as the panda. it was a victory that many say signaled a turning point. the birth of a conservation movement in china. >> how instrumental was mr. xi when it comes to saving this snub-nosed monkey? >> it is a hell of a lot, he is doing something no one else ever thought. to bring conservation ideas into china before everyone else starts. >> china hopes to modernize within the next 20 years -- >> for decades in china the environment took a backseat to development. beginning in the late 1970s leader deng xiaoping opened china to the west and foreign investment conservation was not the priority says jackie poon. >> it is a developing country no longer so people are still, you know trying to make a living, it is hard to tell people, when they can't even feed themselves properly. >> but as china began to prosper, a fledgling environmental movement took hold. when xi zhinong took his photos 20 years ago there were just nine environmental groups registered in china. today, there are nearly 8,000 such organizations. and in eco tourism i have has even started to grow around these revered monkeys. >> we know most individuals would not be all male group. >> jackie poon is one of those following in xi's footsteps. he is working on a film for an upcoming pbs nature series about these unusual primates. >> he says to protect them, therethere is still a lot more work to be done in a booming china. a new government report says in the first part of 2014, only nine of the 161 cities that monitor air quality met standards. and in 2013, there were more nothing dwi days than any other in the last half century. poon hopes his film will further inspire a new more prosperous more globally connected generation of chinese conservationists, much as xi's original photos inspire him. >> what i really want people to do is, the younger generation is getting so much better, they want to learn, to protect and what i would like them to do is influence their parents influence their grandparent, you know, because we didn't don't really have much time. >> >> osgood: next, the ayes have it. >> if you have medicare part d, walgreens gets that you might be at the corner of "looking for a good deal" and "sheesh, i wish i'd looked some more." that's why walgreens makes it easy to switch your prescriptions and save money. just stop by. and leave all the legwork to us. switch your prescriptions to walgreens where you could save even more on medicare part d with copays as low as zero dollars. at the corner of happy and healthy. push your enterprise and you can move the world. ♪ ♪ but to get from the old way to the new you'll need the right it infrastructure. from a partner who knows how to make your enterprise more agile, borderless and secure. hp helps businesves mo on all the possibilities of today. and stay ready for everything that is still to come. ophthalmology,. >> osgood: and knew a page from our sunday morning almanac, january 8 teen, 1908, 107 years ago today. the day the dutch ophthalmologist herman snellen died at the age of 73. you may not recognize his name, but he is the eye doctor you will certainly recognize his namesake creation, it is the eye chart, the big letter e on the top? the smell len features 11 lanes of progressively smaller letters, not just any letters, the smell len chart uses just nine, c d e f l o, p t and z. it is somewhat clunky appearance and the spacing were all carefully designed by snellen to test visual acuity and it is snellen who with deviced the system of rating one's vision as a ratio. the patient could read a line of type 20 feet away with what snellen judged to be normal acuity he proclaimed them to have 20-20 vision. ophthalmology has since far advanced past anyone snellen could have ever foreseen, even so the smell len chart and the smell len ratio are still in wide use today. the eye doctor business has taken to heart the late herman acuity chart working down line by line from the capital e a doctor could tell just how well we can see and though he was not one for crass braggadocio his his legacy includes the smell len ratio you would have to be some sort of felon to steal credit from eye doctor snellen. >> >> ahead on the rebound. >> did the attack make the bolshoi stronger? >> i am confident that, yes it did. >> this portion of sunday morning is sponsored by -- trivago.com. >> i kept on top of things. i was a doer. then the chronic, widespread pain slowed me down. my doctor and i agreed that moving more helps ease fibromyalgia pain. he also prescribed lyrica. fibromyalgia is thought to be the result of overactive nerves. lyrica is believed to calm these nerves. for some patients, lyrica significantly relieves fibromyalgia pain and improves physical function. with less pain i feel better, and can be more active. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worsening depression, or unusual changes in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling or blurry vision. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs, and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. fibromyalgia may have changed things, but with less pain, i'm still a doer. ask your doctor about lyrica today. lyrica. move forward with less fibromyalgia pain. i've smoked a lot and quit a lot but ended up nowhere. now...i use this. the nicoderm cq patch with unique extended release technology helps prevent the urge to smoke all day. i want this time to be my last time. that's why i choose nicoderm cq. gar >> osgood: for more than two years since behind the curtain intrigue at russia's bolshoi ballet escalated into violence. in that time the vick has come a long way toward healing. his story now from tracy smith. >> in russian bolshoi means big and in the world of classical ballet, few are bigger than this. >> for as long as the united states has been a country the bolshoi has been dancing. founded in 1776, the moscow based company has been a crown jewel of russia, mesmerizing audiences with tales of passion and betrayal, mostly on stage until one snowy night two winters ago. >> artistry and intrigue go hand in hand as russia's bolshoi ballet and today three men were arrested for an acid attack on the artistic director there. >> on january 17, 2013, bolshoi artistic director, sergei filin was viciously attacked outside his moscow home doused with acid. it left filin severely burned and almost completely blind. and it left the ballet world stunned. >> linn garafola heads the dance program in new york. >> i mean i was so shocked, this is the kind of thing you hear about in with the mafia in the 1950's how they elect question dated their enemies something like that, i couldn't believe it happened at the bolshoi. >> it was ordered by one of the bolshoi's own, a dancer named diminish diminish. >> dmitrichenko. >> that, upset they didn't get better roles. >> it is an enormously competitive environment. >> here you are a company of 200 people and only a finite number of roles everyone wants to be the january queen and not everyone is going to be the january queen. >> for his role in the attack dmitrichenko is now serving six years in prison and after nearly two years of treatment, sergei filin is still at the helm of the bolshoi. >> you think you speak some english. >> just a little, maybe. >> your english is better than my russian. >> we met filin this past summer in the middle of the bolshoi's two-week tour in new york. their first visit in nearly a decade. >> i have many surguries now. >> how many? >> now? >> how many? >> 30. >> 30? >> 30. >> filin is still undergoing medical treatment and he is more comfortable speaking through an interpreter. >> no, speaking about that night, it was far too horrifying for me, my family and those who surround me. >> you must have been terrified of losing your eyesight. >> what is terrifying about losing my sight is that i have a family and i have three kids and to know that you can never be able to see your own kids, it is terrifying. >> he still can't see anything out of his right eye and only 50 percent from his left. >> so ballet wise, you can still see what is happening on the stage? >> when i watch the ballet from the auditorium i do take off my glasses to see more clearly what is happening on the stage, as you see these glasses darken my vision a bit. >> and i would imagine with your family, they can get pretty close so you can still see them pretty well? >> surely i see everyone very well including you. and believe me you look amazing. >> oh, that's very nice of you. >> all kidding aside filin looks amazingly well, considering what he went through, there is little evidence of the attack that is partly because of how he reacted right after he was hit by the acid. >> you put snow on your face and literally saved your skin doing that? >> i put a lot of snow on my face i put a huge amount of snow on my face because the snow was relieving my pain. at the time, i didn't know it would be my salvation. >> i was less interested in how my face was going to look. i was more worried about my eyes and because of the snow i was able to save one eye. >> were there moments where you thoughtthought you would not be coming back? >> yes surely, yes. i understood this because it was a very tough fight. and at certain moments i couldn't see anything. >> but i was not putting my hands down. i didn't get into hysterics, i didn't allow myself to become depressed, i was continuing to fight, continuing to work every day. and to give me back my strength and to give me the opportunity to be back with the bolshoi company with a tour in new york. >> hiser dettiminaon paid off. the new york tour played to packed houses and rapturous reviews. >> are you all the way back and is the bolshoi all the way back? >> i came back a year ago already and from the beginning of the season i am continuing to work and i am continuing my work, that means i am back and everyone is back but we never really left. we were always at the bolshoi. >> even when i was treated at the hospital, not for a day i did not leave the company without my attention. i was on the phone every day. >> so you were lying in your hospital bed on the phone? >> in any position, i was continuing to do my job. >> but always with a phone? >> in some ways, did the attack make the bolshoi stronger? >> i am confident that, yes it did. >> why? >> today people are even more united and today they do everything possible. >> not through their words but through their actions, through the dance that they live for. >> to prove that the bolshoi balance play one of the best companies in the world. >> and i do believe that. >> first of all how is everybody doing? >> osgood: still to come tv and radio host steve harvey. but next, odd jobs. a new form of innovation is taking shape, bringing media and technology together for more people. together is more wi-fi access in more places. it's a home you control with the touch of a finger. it's reimaging tv to give more people more choices. it's bringing technology and people together in ways you never thought possible. comcast and time warner cable. together is better for more people. it is sunday morning on cbs and here again is charles osgood. >> osgood: in the 1999 film toy story 2 a cartoon doll doctor makes the old look new again. and so does the real life doll doctor faith salie has found. >> i think my grandmother would proud, would be proud for carrying on the tradition, i really do. >> >> brian taggerty thinks a lot about his work, not just his job as a carpenter but his labor of love the repair of vintage and antique dolls. >> every doll has a story to tell. we don't own our dolls. we are just the caretaker of the doll until the next owner. this old ragdoll from the back row -- >> taggerty or dr. tag as he is known, grew up not realizing that boys weren't supposed to play with dolls. >> i grew up with the help of my grandmother and my mother and my grandmother is a doll doctor, dolls in every room, dolls in every horizontal surface and i just grew up around dolls. this is where i bring my patients in. >> taggerty has turned his el mira new york home into part hospital, where the beds are almost always full and part doll menagerie indeed his door is always open for wayward dolls. >> she has seen better days. >> you are a doll repair doctor, what have you done for her lately? >> have you heard the saying a shoe salesmen's children are always needing shoes? >> is being a doll doctor an art or a scientist. >> a little of both, it is an art form, anybody can do it, but it is also a science you have to know the epoxy you are using and how it will react on the body you are repairing. >> the most common repair, needs to be strong the elastic within the body has dry rotted, stretched too far and snapped. >> so that means limbs are fallen off. >> that is easy for you. >> that is easy. >> arm less dolls not a problem for you. >> not a problem. >> what is tough? >> i think the eyes are the toughest part, because the guys say so much about a doll. >> the eyes are the window to the doll? >> yes yes. >> for doctor tag who is president of the nation's doll doctors association repairing the most complicated of eye mechanisms isn't a problem. >> it has 40 sleep eyes. >> yes. we will -- >> wow. >> but there are limits to his healing powers. >> there are dolls that come to me that i can tell have heart classic disease or sticky doll syndrome. >> is there a cure? >> there is no cure. >> if i had bad body odor it would be devastating but to tell going to stink the rest of her life how can you tell a doll that? >> is there a point you had to come out as a guy who likes dolls? >> well, i do come out all the time. i like people to get to know me first and then i come out and say, i repair dolls. itit just helps soften the blow. >> and why is ate who blow, do you think? >> because it is just wrong for a guys to play with dolls work with dolls, do anything with dolls in society's eyes. >> and how do you feel about it? >> i think they are wrong. taggerty has repaired thousands of dolls, most of which arrive by mail. >> like this talking doll from the 18 nineties whose voice box has gone silent. >> occasionally i get with someone local and i can almost see them fighting back tears those are the ones that have sentimental value sentimental value means something to somebody, it is that particular doll that is special. to replace the doll of the same type just isn't the same thing because it is not the one they had as a child. >> she looks brand-new. >> yes. >> she looks like she looked when my grandmother gave it to me when i was five. >> alessi couldn't contain her smile when she treated her doll katrina who had just been discharged from the hospital. >> is he is really the earliest recollection of my childhood and i moved a lot and i didn't hang on to a lot of things, and even though she was broken i hung on to her. so i am really happy to have her back. >> for restoring katrina and delighting her owner taggerty charged $20. >> i don't do this for a living. i do construction for a living. this is what i do to live. >> there aren't many doctors like dr. dr. tag left in the country, because most dolls today are not made to last. >> do you love dolls? >> i grew up around them. >> but do you love them? >> yes yes. >> they love me back, and it is unconditional because they don't ask if for any demands, they are just there for me to enjoy. >> how do you know they love you back? >> because they are always smiling. >> >> osgood: just ahead, he said, she said. >> milies achieve life-long financial security with innovative tools and strategies. talk to a financial advisor to protect your family and plan today. pacific life. the power to help you succeed. pacific life proudly presents "humpback whales", a whale-sized movie for giant screen theaters. ♪ [driver] started my camry. ♪ picked up someone i hadn't seen in far too long. ♪ went somewhere we'd both never been. ♪ did something we've both never done. ♪ and was reminded that the most important things in life aren't things they're people. ♪ the bold new camry. one bold choice leads to another. toyota. let's go places. patented sonic technology with up to 27% more brush movements. get healthier gums in two weeks. innovation and you philips sonicare save when you give philips sonicare this holiday season. our tent is falling... you got it? we need nails. anncr: with just five minutes' prep, campbell's oven sauces help you cook a real dinner right in the middle of real life. kids sometimes bring home more than homework. like cold symptoms. stuffy nose... a cough... chest congestion! fast acting mucinex multi-symptom cold breaks up mucus and relieves your child's worst cold symptoms. let's end this. charki,. >> osgood: bill cosby has been taking his humor on the road for decades now, but his current tour comes against a backdrop of charges of sexual assaults. carter evans has filed this sunday journal. >> everywhere bill cosby performs these days, protesters follow. >> bill cosby won't you please go home. >> nearly two dozen were outside the theatre in denver last night saying nothing was funny about the claims from now at least 30 women that he spiked their drinks and sexually assaulted them. >> it is any wonder he could continue in the public eye as he has. >> andrew wallenstein is co-ed for in chief of variety he says it is not easy watching the tragic downfall of a comic legend at a recent performance in canada cosby even joked about the ongoing controversy reportedly telling a woman who had left her seat to get a drink, you have to be careful about drinking around me. >> for bill cosby to perform and make a joke about these allegations, i guarantee you his publicity team was beside themselves. it was the ultimate in tone-deaf. >> while cosby has his defenders, notably felicia rashad his tv wife on the cosby show, the ranks of those in hollywood who criticize him are growing, director judd apatow spoke out on a pod cast this week with host mark maron i want to go on the record i believe these women, i am not comfortable with him running around the country doing stand-up like nothing is happening, this is wrong people who commit these action should be in prison. >> apatow is a respected figure in this town so if he is the one making this criticism you better believe a lot of people are taking it to heart. >> where do you see this going now and does it depends on bill cosby's actions moving forward? >> i would argue it neither debends on the growing chorus on bill cosby's actions. it may really reside with the justice system if the case is brought against him, if it sticks those are nails in the coffin. >> even though no case has been brought, and he has yet to be formally charged with a crime cosby has already lost several television deals, and tv land is no longer rerunning the show that made him america's loveable father figure cliff huck substantial. >> icon substantial is not immunity in this country or anywhere when you are facing the kind of allegations that he is .. there is just simply too much that would taint anyone, no matter how ex-ated they are in the pop culture firmament. >> robert greenblatt told tv critics cosby was no longer welcome there. >> when you see ahead of a network nbc essentially saying we are out of the bill cosby business forever well that is kind of precedent setting. >> it is hard to see how he really is going to be able to work in this town again. >> >> osgood: ahead -- it na rrator: gas prices are down helping middle class families. but now, the white house wants to impose title ii regulations on your internet meaning new government taxes and fees. every month: more taxes and fees. 11 billion dollars a year in new taxes and fees. internet freedoms can be protected with the white house and congress working together, but imposing new tax increases through public utility style regulations will hurt middle class families let's protect the internet we love without regressive taxes and fees. no to title ii. >> osgood: no true stamp collector would pass this up. it is an 1860s stamped envelope used by the pony interest. it is on loan to us from the robert a. siegel auction gallery and worth as much as $50,000. no wonder rita braver found dedicated philatelist stamp collectors, in all sorts of places. >> martha washington, come on aboard, step aboard. >> captain david robinson son not only loved piloting his water boat in the waters of richmond. >> and that's how richmond got its named named after richmond. >> he also loved all things virginia, especially his stamps. >> i have some stamps here from the confederacy and this is the first confederate stamp and has jefferson davis picture on it. >> he first started collecting at the age of ten. >> what made you stick with it? >> girls. >> girls? >> because -- >> wow. >> i make money buying and selling stamps, and the having of money translated into the geeky kid being able to get the girl. >> you had money to take her out? >> absolutely. >> he has been collecting ever since and recently made his biggest find ever. >> but the story really begins in 1918, when the u.s. postal service issued a stamp in of the ginny a world war i aero biplane, the stamp was red and blue. >> and they printed one with the blew up side down. >> one sheet? >> one sheet? >> those stamps are now worth millions. and people like david robinson son. >> in 2013, the u.s. postal service decided to commemorate its most famous mistake purposely issuing a new upside down ginny stamp and then a postal service did something really tricky. >> they announced they printed 100 with the airplane right side up. >> and those, of course, became the ones to have. >> yes. and all of a sudden, themp sta collecting world is shaken upside down. >> so david robinson son wanted one, badly. >> if you are going to open them, the correct way, which is sort of slowly and savor the experience you have to get it 0 out of the plastic first. >> so then you have got to get the cardboard. you have to fend with the cardboard. >> he spent almost $41,000 on sheets of ginnies. >> not a winner. >> no cigar. >> and do you do this 2,000, 200900 times. >> that is when robinson finally struck goal, finding a sheet of right side up ginnies. had he sold it at auction for $45,000 to an anonymous buyer. >> i beat the odds. >> of course, robinson is part of a proud tradition of stamp collecting. once upon a time, stamp collectors known as philatelists, seemed to be everywhere. >> in new york and across the nation sales of the new 3-cent stamp celebrating the movies 50th anniversary and everywhere it is a field day for the stamp collectors. >> the 1960s new film charade even features carey grant. >> the stamps. >> and audrey hepburn on a desperate search for lost stamps. >> there are still diehard collectors and somebody won but it is clear the hobby has lost a bit of its luster. which seems a shame to this man. >> i think american stamps tell the story of the american experience. >> patrick donohoe is postmaster general of the united states. >> if you go back to the first postage stamps of washington and franklin, the founding fathers of our country probably around the turn of the century, 1900 we started issuing what is called commemorative stamps and that's where we got into the history of the u.s. and now we have evolved overtime into culture and even things like birds and flowers. >> the story of american stamps is on display at the smithsonian's national postal museum in washington d.c. >> so there is a very important stamp you are going to show me in here. >> yes. the number one seller of all times, and here it is, elvis presley. >> when it went on sale in 1993 -- >> there it is. >> crowds went wild. >> the elvis stamp, right there ladies and gentlemen. >> elvis may be the king of stamps, but the gallery where he sits was funded by the king of stamp collectors millionaire bill gross. this is, he is cofounder of the global investment firm pimco how important he made headlines a few months ago just for changing jobs. >> but when it is time to relax -- >> my saturdays and sundays are always stamp collecting with sports programs, and so -- >> you sit there with your collection and you would be watching tv? >> yes. and -- and look at the front of the stamps. >> he sold many of his stamps and given the money to charity but acknowledges spending more than $100 million on his hobby over the years. >> you seriously collect a copy of every single stamp that the u.s. put out in the 19th century, every single one? >> yes. >> and how many were there? >> probably 350 to 400 in total. >> and that includes this one issued in 1868. >> doesn't look that interesting, does it? >> but only two exist in the whole world. >> and he also got his hands on a more recent rarity. >> it might look familiar, remember that anonymous buyer of david robinson son's big find? >> this one as you can tell is right side up, and so i call it the inverted -- >> that's right. bill gross was the winning bidder. >> did i know what it was worth? absolutely not. i simply knew that maybe at some point it could be worth 100,000. >> thanks for letting me show off the greatest city in america. thanks for coming out. >> david robinson son back captain in his boat doesn't care if gross makes a profit off the deal. for him a and his wife, it is not really about the money. >> we are famous. gale and i have written into fail list history now, we are on the front page of the linn's stamp news. >> for someone like you, this is really a big deal. >> that's the pinnacle of stamp collecting, it is to make an original discovery like this and basically every stamp collector in the world for a few weeks i want to be him. >> osgood: ahead -- >> >> osgood: one man. >> before you get in trouble you are going to call me, right? >> osgood: two missions. >> make us stronger. when a girl connects with a science mentor... her confidence grows. when schools connect with technology... a 5th grader's world opens up. and when a worker connects to online degrees... his opportunities multiply. the at&t aspire initiative. helping students and communities across america. >> osgood: when a dedicated employee earns praise for a job well done it isn't for the job he or she officially holds. steve hartman has a heart thing example of that. >> being a custodian trinity high school in euless, texas, isn't exactly the most important job in america but don't tell that. >> you see that trash. >> to the custodian. >> if i clean a toilet and you sit on that toilet, you can rest assured that is that is the cleanest toilet you will ever sit on. >> i will take your word on that. >> charles clark takes his job that seriously but his greatest asset has nothing to do with his cleaning, it is his counseling. >> see this right here. >> not long after he stas started at trinity 25 years ago he started pulling kids aside. >> kids he thought might be falling through the cracks,. >> i am not asking you to be a rhodes scholar. >> kids he thought might need a little mentoring. >> before you get in trouble you are going to call me. >> kid like 17-year-old jesse walehwa. >> he is looking out for me ever since i have been there. >> i can tell him anything he will give me his honest opinion, he is very wise, very loving. >> i am going to talk to you. >> they never had a man tell them they loved them before. once they trust you and they know you love them, you can get them to buy into what you are selling. >> what does the school counselor think of you. >> oh i get most of my clients from the counselor, really. >> >> peggy mcintyre is a clinical counselor at trinity with a masters in social work but she says charles has a better way with certain kids. >> he has worked with a lot of our students here who ended up going to college who ended up doing very well. >> he gets result results. >> he gets results, he sure does, he sure does. >> don't wait to your senior year -- >> by all accounts this custodian helped dozen of kids turn their life around not because it was his job but because it needed to be done. >> i am so proud of you as a young man. >> and there is a lesson in there for anyone who feels trapped by their title. >> hey how you doing? >> i am going to have a good life this custodian thing is what you are doing for me. >> i got it really nice. >> >> osgood: still to come, the value of a smile. >> steve harvey talks with james brown. >> and jerky. it is dry but it is not tough. >> osgood: now it is fine cuisine. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ all the goodness of milk all the deliciousness of hershey's syrup. nexium® 24hr. it's the purple pill the #1 prescribed acid blocking brand available without a prescription for frequent heartburn. get complete protection. nexium level protection™ lowe's presents: how to say goodby to 1993 forever. [footsteps heard.] goodbye... hurry in for 18 months special financing on the purchases $599 and above at lowe's. make a wish. i want to make $1 billion. >> it is sunday morning on cbs. and here again is charles osgood. >> osgood: steve harvey, who turned 58 yesterday, marked the occasion on his talk show with martha stewart joining in the festivities. it took many years and a lot of hard work for harvey to get where he is, and he is not about to take any of it for granted. special correspondent james brown has our sunday profile. >> how long does it take for the police to arrive after you call , thyou say? five minutes you obviously are not from where i live. >> steve harvey is one of the hottest daytime stars in show business right now. >> what the hell are you doing? >> last year he won not one but two-day time emmys as host of family feud and the steve harvey show. >> i take 10080 shows in 34 weeks and then as soon as i am done i go home to atlanta to take family feud, tape family feud and in eight weeks i tape 185 shows, and then every morning on the radio i do 240 live shows a year. the checks help get you there the moment they quit paying me, i am exhausted. >> first of all how is everybody doing? >> we caught up with him in chicago where he puts in long days recording his radio show and talk show under the same roof. >> your audience is as white as they may be black so what is your appeal across the racial spectrum? >> it is that, i am transparent. you know, my color is not a crutch see funny cross as lot of the color barriers, i am going to take this god-given gift of being funny and i am going to spread it out like peanut butter on everything i do. >> 100 million, there is something that is big and round. >> women's breasts. >> there is no way you have talked to 100 men and didn't get this answer. >> harvey says he has always had the gift to make people laugh. he grew up poor in cleveland ohio, the son of jesse a a manual laborer, and eloise a homemaker he credits his parent for much of his success. my father is one single role was to talk to me about man hood, manhood, you work hard, you don't be lazy. >> my mother was a sunday school teacher for 40 years she taught me about god and faith and prayer. that combination has gotten me to where i am today and i don't doubt that for one minute. >> god and manhood are two constant themes in harvey's life, a life that has had a lot of ups and an equal amount of downs. he dropped out of college and worked in a series of menial jobs from assembly line worker to carpet cleaner before he found his calling. >> how is everybody doing? >> bat in the world puts you in stand-up comedy? >> i have like 11 jobs. >> i have been fired 11 times. because i am not cut for that. you know, i was a great employee man everybody loved me coming to work, man. i am telling jokes on the assembly line and everythe, man. i was dying. i was dying. >> because? >> because i always knew, man that this was not my life, that there had to be more to this than that. >> so harvey took a leap of faith and trusted his gift. >> i think what this is funny you join in if you want to. don't look at me like you have never seen a black man before. >> i quit my job. i won amateur night october 8th 1985, i went to work the next day and quit my job. >> you jumped? >> i jumped completely, because of all the things i had done up to that point nothing i had ever done did the light bulb go off. >> is it scary for you too? >> but success didn't come right away. he struggled to make it on the comedy circuit. he ended up homeless and living out of his car for three years. >> as a matter of fact, when i went back on, i couldn't believe it was three years because i was so intent of getting out and working so hard to move forward. >> i am here in regular underwear. what would you buy from underwear that don't work? >> he was at his lowest point when one day while washing up in a hotel public bathroom, harvey says he had an epiphany. >> well, it is a promise i made. >> to? >> to god i told god if he let me make it when i got there i will tell everybody how i did it, and i just told him i said, look, if you let me make it, when i get there i am going to tell everybody it was you. >> please welcome our old friend >> on the verge of packing it in harvey picked himself up. that day he got a call for a stand-up job, a job led to others and soon steve harvey landed a gig hosting show time at the apollo in new york. >> all right. >> cat woman a! >> he had minor success with shows on abc and the wb networks, traveled the country on the kings of comedy tour. >> my momma -- i looked at my momma sometimes and i said momma, i am ready to go to hell. >> and he started a radio show. >> but by the year 2,000 his career had stalled. >> i plateaued a few times after kings of comedy what am i going to do now? >> again, divine inspiration seemed to come into play. on harvey's nationally syndicated radio show, he found that he had another gift, for dispensing no nonsense blunt relationship advice to women. >> all men can change, all men will change, but there is only one woman that we are going to change for. now if you ain't that woman then you get whatever we got. >> you have to be known as the relationship expert? >> from failure see god allows your greatest and most valuable lessons to be learned in failure:i failed at relationships enough time to where i learned, i know what, as a man i know how we function and operate operate so all i had to do is turn around and tell women that part. >> in 2009, that led him to write a book called act like a lady, think like a man. the back sold over 3 million copies. >> why do men do what they do? look at this. >> steve harvey is a traitor. >> in 20ten it was made into a movie that grossed just under $100 million. >> not bad for a guy who was on his third marriage. >> yan is stupid. >> now, i do not know how women think. now if i knew that i would be a billionaire. >> now at 58 harvey's career has skyrocketed to the next level. he is reportedly worth more than $40 million. he credits this latest success to meeting his current wife margery. >> you look at my life and career after 2005, i mean, gee whiz man, my career went crazy up to 2005, but that woman showed up. >> they were married in 2007, and have a large blended family of seven children. >> harvey says he never forgets the promise he made in that bathroom over 25 years ago before i get started tonight, i would like to say to, what say what god is to me, god is everything. >> but he has taken some heat for not being christian enough. >> i get slammed all the time for my the walk, you are supposed to be a christian i heard you cussing, i heard you cussing, yeah, you smoked a cigar. >> yeah. >> you drink a little bit. >> right. >> look at me. look at my life. look where i come from look where i am. now, i don't know what structures you used to get where you are about the the one i used is working, we were poor when i up, have you ever had a mayonnaise sandwich? >> at the end of the day, it is his ability to laugh in the face of adversity that steve harvey wants to share. >> two divorces flunked out of co owned twice, lived in a car for three years, more chapters to be written in your life huh? >> oh, yeah, man. i expect big things. i am looking for more things, exceed, i look for extravagant stuff to happen in my life. >> tastes good. >> osgood: next. >> good solid muscle. >> osgood: tough love. >> muscle fiber is running with that. >> ♪ edward jones. this is shirley speaking. how may i help you? ♪ oh hey, neill, how are you? how was the trip? with nearly 7 million investors he's right here. hold on one sec. you'd expect us to have a highly skilled call center. kevin, neill holley's on line one. ok, great. and we do. it's how edward jones makes sense of investing. ♪ resolve to rest up wherever you land. with beds of all shapes and sizes, at petsmart! and, for 4 days only save 50% on hundreds of items! petsmart®. sir, we're going to need you on the runway. (vo) theraflu starts to get to work in your body in just 5 minutes. (vo) theraflu breaks you free from your worst cold and flu symptoms. (vo) theraflu. serious power. push your enterprise and you can move the world. ♪ ♪ but to get from the old way to the new you'll need the right it infrastructure. from a partner who knows how to make your enterprise more agile, borderless and secure. hp helps business move on all the possibilities of today. and stay ready for everything that is still to come. test. >> osgood: here is a look at the week ahead on our sunday morning calendar. monday is martin luther king junior day, across the nation honoring the civil rights leader including the mlk peace walk in washington. on tuesday, president obama delivers his state of the union address to a joint session of i congress wednesday is the 75th birthday of jack nicklaus, the he legendary golfer who earned a record 18 major championship victories in his 44 year career. on thursday, the annual sundance film festival opens in park city utah. friday brings the annual giant panda zoo awards celebrating panda conservation efforts in zoos around the world. and saturday marks the 75th anniversary of the new york premiere of the classic film version of the grapes of wrath starring henry fonda. >> right now it is time for jerky, it comes in all sorts of tough varieties, but not a tough sell to some folks with indicate sophisticated tastes as our barry petersen recently discovered. >> you are going get our soy sauce and worcester sauce and get some of that tank that will hit the tongue about the same time the salt does, that heightens all of the flavors in it. it is not just a campfire smoke it is the gunsmoke. >> you sound like you are describing a fine wine. >> it is a fine meat. >> it is a fine jerky. >> yes a fine jerky. >> in this case, crafted by colorado springs byston rancher peter popp. >> once the snap food of last resort purchased with a tank of gas, jerky is shedding its plastic wrapper and junk food status no chain food snacking here, just award winning recipes like gunsmoke and kelley canyon not to mention buck-naked, bison, salt, pepper, and nothing else. >> do you think it is on the way or maybe it has arrived as kind of a four may food? >> i think it is already arrived and when i started the jerky i was really looking for something to do with a piece of buffalo i didn't have much market for and now it is probably 60 or 70 percent of my business, because people. >> people are responded? >> people have responded and tried it and want it. >> how much do they want it? >> in just the last five years sales of dried meat snacks have soared in the u.s. by nearly a billion dollars. >> and appetizer growing far beyond cowboy country. new york city's dean and deluca sells peter popp bison jerky for $17 a bag or more than $70 a pound, a price tag that shouts gourmet even louder than the ingredients. >> if by now you are dying to ask where is the beef? it is here in college station texas home to texas a & m university, where jerky making is part of the curriculum. there is a babe round, we will take in this and bone it out. >> when you start out with 100 pounds of these lean pieces, well you only end up with about 33 pounds of jerky. >> ray riley manages a&m meat and science center where he helped refined their recipe back in the early 1980s. >> lightly pepper and then hang the pieces to go into the smokehouse. >> he is a jerky expert but not an elitist. >> no, sir i am not a jerky snob. >> i do like our jerky and i do, if we are traveling i always have got to buy another person's jerky to kind of compare it, so like ours is still the best. >> good taste cannot be heard riley's jerky takes a week to prepare rather than hours like most mass market products. >> after our 12 and a half hours, we end up with this beautiful dried beef jerky. >> that is fitting for one of human kinds most primal foods the original meal to go. every ancient culture had its own recipe for preserving meat, we owe the word jerky to quechua of south america who called salted dried meat charki. >> the way it is cut, so that the muscle fiber is running throughout, it is dry but it is not tough. >> as a&m faculty and students prepared for their weekly barbecue, distinguished professor jeff savell enjoyed a jerky appetizer. >> to me, i like doing it more like that, instead of taking a big piece of jerky and trying to tear across, i like kind of taking these small pieces. >> in other words take your foot off the gas and savor the taste. >> enjoy jerky in the slow lane or even yet out here. >> osgood: next receipts, the long and the short of it. >> so let's do something about it. premarin vaginal cream can help it provides estrogens to help rebuild vaginal tissue and make intercourse more comfortable. premarin vaginal cream treats vaginal changes due to menopause and moderate-to-severe painful intercourse caused by these changes. don't use it if you've had unusual bleeding breast or uterine cancer blood clots, liver problems, stroke or heart attack, are allergic to any of its ingredients or think you're pregnant. side effects may include headache pelvic pain, breast pain vaginal bleeding and vaginitis. estrogens may increase your chances of getting cancer of the uterus, strokes, blood clots or dementia so use it for the shortest time based on goals and risks. estrogen should not be used to prevent heart disease heart attack, stroke or dementia. ask your doctor about premarin vaginal cream. as soon as your debit card goes through, the machine starts pumping out a receipt that just goes -- it is sometimes like half the length of a football field. it is coming and coming to the point where you almost need a second bag just to carry the receipt. >> osgood: top show host jimmy kimmel clearly has had it with those overly long checkout counter receipt and so is our exhibitor nance i didn't giles. >> it, it used to be a simple exchange with cash here is your change and here is your your reseat, with a credit card, sign here and here is your receipt. and the occasional would you like your receipt in the bag? and that was it. exchange over, you you went on with your life. >> but these days receipts are looking more and more like the dead sea scrolls. >> to make your purchase and the register spits out this thing that keeps coming and coming and coming, when it finally reaches a stop that receipt is long enough to comb. i mean if you are like me there are dozens of them, folded like accordions jammed into your wallet i want to throw them out but these slips of paper are so much more than a receipt. >> at the top they appear normal date, store location, phone number, maybe a store logo and then your typical items, prices and totals that used to be it. now notice how it keeps going there are bar codes website addresses, smart phone codes those are the weird looking squares i still don't understand coupons contests and offers of instant gratification. >> keep your receipt for your morning coffee bring it back in the afternoon for more for just a buck and speaking of bucks some stores actually give you bucks to spend depending on how much money you have already spent, not real money but fake bucks, that have to be redeemed in a timely manner, but guess what? you have to bring back the original receipt. original. do these stores think we are making copies? >> now scroll down and you will see more, help us serve you better it says tell us about your recent experience. the receipt gives you a chance to praise whine or give instant feedback about anything from a poor choice in mosque rick music to an extra nice barista your opinion counts it says and maybe it does .. but then there is a dark side to receipts, the so-called point system that despite all the crumpled scraps of paper you save never seem to add up to much. are those points really worth your time, your effort, the space in your wallet who can say? >> i know for me it is time to get off this receipt merry-go-round once and for all and let them all go. i always wonder about the receipt that got away. >> when i was 21 ♪ >> osgood: next, some very good years. >> -- it was a very good year ♪ patented sonic technology with up to 27% more brush movements. get healthier gums in two weeks. innovation and you philips sonicare save when you give philips sonicare this holiday season. >> osgood: it happened this past week, word of the loss of two talented americans who had much to tell us about the years of our lives. the word of the death earlier in seattle of dorothy thomas known as a mother of bone marrow transplants, a trained hematology technician thomas assisted her husband the late dr. e. donnall thomas, his transplant research won him a share of the nobel prize for medicine in 1990. their work is credited with extending the lives of thousands with leukemia, among other blood cancers. dorothy thomas was 92. songwriter ervin drake died thursday in his home outside of new york city, drake broke from his father's furniture business at an early age to become a composer of a number of popular songs among them it was a very good year. >> ♪ it was a very good year. >> osgood: cbs news anchor walter cronkite had a front row seat when frank sinatra recorded that poignant ballad in 1965. >> ♪ it was a very good year for blue blooded girls of independent means. >> osgood: speaking of very good years ervin drake was inducted into the songwriters hall of fame in 1983. >> "the new york times" quotes him assaying, i had a feeling i never would have been in the furniture man's hall of fame. ervin drake was 95. >> osgood: now bob schieffer in washington for a look at what is ahead on "face the nation". good morning bob. >> good morning charles. we will be talking to british prime minister david cameron about the threat of terror. >> osgood: thank you bob we will be watching. and next week, here on sunday morning -- >> stop the saw blade from going into -- ah! >> osgood: it is magic. >> he is okay, he is okay. >> osgood: penn & teller. >> takes it to a whole new level. sunday morning's moment of nature is sponsored by viking river cruises. >> >> osgood: we leave you this sunday in the cedars north of northern oklahoma where cardinals seek settler from the snow. >> seek shelter from the snow. >> i am charles osgood, please join us again next sunday morning. until then i will see you on the radio. >> i've smoked a lot and quit a lot but ended up nowhere. now...i use this. the nicoderm cq patch with unique extended release technology helps prevent the urge to smoke all day. i want this time to be my last time. that's why i choose nicoderm cq. captioning made possible by johnson & johnson where quality products for the american family have been a tradition for generations captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org make us stronger. when a girl connects with a science mentor... her confidence grows. when schools connect with technology... a 5th grader's world opens up. and when a worker connects to online degrees... his opportunities multiply. the at&t aspire initiative. helping students and communities across america. >> i am bob schieffer, today on "face the nation" world leaders brace for another terrorist attack, and here at home, campaign 2016 is underway. >> around the world, the fallout from the paris attacks continues. violent protests broke out in the mideast over the new charlie hebdo depiction of the prophet mohammed and european countries remain on edge after its meeting with president obama, british prime minister david cameron minced no words about the attack. >> we believe an attack is very likely. >> we will hear from senator marco rubio on that and his book american dreams, white house senior advisor dan phfieffer previews the president's plan to raise taxes on the rich, and we will have the surprising results on the cbs news

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