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tv   CBS This Morning Saturday  CBS  June 12, 2021 4:00am-6:01am PDT

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good morning, it is june 12th, 2021. welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." resetting relations. president biden attempts to reforge relationships with u.s. allies at the g7 summit. hear how putin and the pandemic are also at the top of the to-do list. california breathing. the nation's most populated state announces it is dropping mask and distancing requirements for the fully vaccinated. we'll have the latest on the nation's numbers. under water nightmare. a massachusetts lobsterplan is recovering in the hospital after he says he was nearly swallowed
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by a whale. we'll talk to experts about why it may have happened. and tea for two. this weekend, president biden will join queen elizabeth for their first private gathering since his inauguration. we'll look at the history of her majesty's meetings with our past commanders in chief, including some high-profile gaffes. first we begin with a look at today's "eye opener," your world in 90 seconds. >> breaching the pandemic together, discussing how we'll never have a repeat of what we've seen, but also that we're building back better together. >> reporter: face-to-face dip may back on the global stage. president biden and the g7 allies have wrapped up their first day of meetings and had dinner hosted by the queen. >> yes, definitely. >> reporter: first lady jill biden did spend time with kate middleton. she opened up about her newborn niece. >> i wish her all the very best.
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i can't wait to meet here. we haven't met her yet. >> reporter: a lobster divers swallowed by a large humpback whale and lived to tell the tale. >> then i realized, oh, my god, i'm in a whale's mouth. in a whale's mouth. and he's trying to swallow me. stephen colbert returns monday in front of a live audience. >> he's genuinely nervous he won't fit into his suit. djokovic -- >> one of the rarest occurrences in all of sports. all that -- >> let's scare the hell out of these cardinals. let's scare 'em. >> the chicago cubs reopening wrigley field to full capacity. bill mawrurray was there to wele them back. and all that matters -- >> this one might put a tear in your eye. a dog's loyalty caught on camera. >> the dog took matters into its own paws and ran all the way to the hospital. i'm almost crying watching that.
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on "cbs this morning saturday." >> virginia's pitcher. a different cat as you can see. we also know he's a great interview. this is making the rounds -- >> i heard a fan offer free dip n dots in i blew it. with inflation, it's unreal. for a brief moment i was like, damn, sound good. >> a special delivery, a shipment of dip n dots. [ cheers ] this morning's "eye opener" is presented by progressive -- making it easy to bundle insurance. >> dip n dots, they're good. >> i literally am trying to google. how much do they cost? how much do they cost? i couldn't find it fast enough. >> jack and victoria have them all the time. >> really? i want the full-fledged ice cream. >> not a fan. i'm like you. >> they're still good. nice to see friend of the show bill murray there singing at the cubs game. >> nice to see the cubs back. >> yes. >> all these things coming back. >> all coming back. welcome to the weekend, everyone. i'm jeff glor along with
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michelle miller and dana jacobson who is back after some time off. >> speaking of things coming back. this morning, we're going to take you to the sandy beaches of guam. with sites like these you wouldn't be surprised to hear that tourism is booming but not the way you think. the island is catering to vaccinated tourists, namely the millions of americans who live overseas but have been unable to get the covid vaccine. see how it works and why some say it's not necessarily a good idea. then we will take you inside the art world's latest endeavor -- works created by using artificial intelligence. that's right, computers tasked with making a unique piece of art that is then sold in some cases for six-figure sums. see why the people behind it say sometimes the work is a bit shocking -- shocking commentary in our own society. plus, we'll get a summer east from one of the most famous chefs alive.
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jacques pepin is best known for teaching us all how to cook on tv, and the pandemic never slowed him down on that front. we will visit him at his home to get a summer feast, and he's going to challenge jeff in one of the chef's favorite pastimes. >> bring it on. bring it on. >> is it bocce? >> you'll find out. and noel gallagher wrote the songs that made his former band oasis one of the biggest bands in the world. now he's celebrating ten years of going solo with a new album and tour. we will catch up with him, and he'll perform a new song and an oasis classic in our "saturday session." that and so much more is all ahead. we begin with day two of the three-day g7 summit in england. a meeting that has wide-ranging implications as a defining moment for president biden and the united states. mr. biden will be attending another round of talks with alliance leaders where they've been discussing topics ranging from the pandemic to russian president putin. this is the first g7 for mr.
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biden who is now the newest member of the group of seven. it's also the chance for the u.s. to redefine its role on the world stage. nancy cordes is traveling with the president in cornwall. good morning. >> reporter: michelle, today the leaders are talking about infrastructure and building back after the covid pandemic. that follows a royal reception last night where president biden was hosted by the queen, meeting her for the second time. the first was nearly 40 years ago. three generations of royals including prince charles and camilla and the duke and duchess the president. amid all the carefully staged moment of a g7 summit, there was some diplomative levity provided by the 95-year-old queen. >> are you enjoying it? >> yes -- >> reporter: earlier at the start of the summit, the group of seven leaders posed for the
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traditional family photo. >> here we go. everybody -- >> reporter: it's the first time in nearly two years that the heads of the g7 nations have been able to meet in person. yesterday they welcomed the newest head of state into the fold. before sitting down for the first of three days of talks about china, russia, trade, taxes, and covid. >> i actually think this is a meeting that genuinely needs to happen because we need to make sure that we learn the lessons from the pandemic. >> reporter: president biden says he's looking for a reset of relations with u.s. allies after four years of division under the trump administration. te karen pierce is the british ambassador to the u.s. we hear president biden and prime minister johnson say america is back. was america gone? >> i don't think so, but i think it fair to say that there were some people around the world who did wonder if that implicit,
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generous undertaking from america to keep the world safe and prosperous since 1945 was that really there anymore, or was it fading. and i think what president biden's been able to do is say it isn't fading, america is back. there are things we want to see as america. we are determined to value alliances and what we can achieve together. and people needed to hear that. >> reporter: tomorrow president biden heads to brussels where he will attend a nato summit and recommit to the common defense. a welcome show of support for an alliance that former president trump openly disdained. jeff? >> okay. thank you. while the president deals with foreign affairs at the g7 summit, the push for his domestic agenda continus at home including a search for a compromise infrastructure noon can get through -- plan that can get through congress. our political reporter, caitlin huey-burns, joins us for more from the washington bureau. so good to see you this saturday
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morning. in is not the first time -- this is not the first time that joe biden has met many of these world leaders but the first time he's meeting them as president biden. what are you hearing from your sources on how that dynamic is playing out? >> reporter: good morning. the first time that they're meeting face to face. no more zoom interactions, a welcome development for president biden who likes this one-on-one engagement. what's really interesting here is that foreign policy has largely been on the sidelines over the past several months and almost year in the 2020 campaign and in the early days of biden's presidency with domestic issues -- the pandemic, the economy front and center. but foreign policy has always been biden's big calling card, as he demonstrated as the attorneys from relations chair in the u.s. senate and in his runs for higher office. so as he said earlier this year when he addressed the state department, american diplomacy is back. and that certainly is the message that he has been trying to send across the pond in his
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visits there. and interestingly, even though the pandemic has been front and center for this administration, the first team that biden introduced was his foreign policy team during the transition. and that was an effort to show this message. the question is, how is this received by these leaders. yes, they have been giving positive responses so far, a welcome contrast, they say, to the former president who pushed the message of america first and challenged these alliances, but given the fragility that we've seen of american democracy here at home and the volatility really of american politics, that places a greater challenge for biden to spread that message of stability and reliability. but that certainly is the goal and what we've been hearing from him as he's been meeting with these leaders. >> let's go closer to home and here in the u.s., the infrastructure plan and a bipartisan group hammering something out, what can you tell us? >> reporter: that's right.
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a new bipartisan group, this includes five republicans, five democrats, in contrast to the previous proposals that we've seen, this includes more investment in new spending which is something that the biden team wanted. this is about a trillion dollars over five years, so, again, closer to biden's number. and there are also -- is a pledge to have no new taxes. remember, that's the big sticking point here and the big question is is this something that biden could accept when he returns back stateside. he has said that he does not want to raise taxes on those earning less than $400,000 a year. in fact, he wants to pay for this program by increasing the corporate tax rate and on wealthy americans. that has been his red line about how to pay for it. the big question is where are the votes. and that's what's going to be guiding biden as he navigates this new bipartisan deal. and to kind of understand that, you have to consider all of the politics at play within the parties. so for republicans, there is
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political incentive to support an infrastructure plan. democrats, however, want to go it alone and not wait because the midterms are on the horizon, and they are at risk of losing the house and senate. they want to go big and bold now and not wait for republicans. >> yeah. what's going to happen in the senate, that is the big question. caitlin huey-burns, thank you so much. the internal watchdog of the justice department says it will investigate the trump administration's seizure of communication records of two democratic members of the house intelligence committee. the requess were made by former attorneys general jeff sessions and william barr in their aggressive investigation to locate the source of leaks about trump's 2016 campaign ties to russia. jeff pegues reports. >> reporter: the logs date back to 2017 and 2018 as the house intelligence committee's russia investigation was under way.
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president trump wanted to know where the leaks were coming from. justice department prosecutors secretly subpoenaed phone information from apple for democrats eric swalwell and adam schiff and people close to them, including a minor. >> it's another terrible abuse of the justice department, another shattering of the norms since watergate. >> reporter: schiff had been a frequent target of the president. >> and shifty schiff, how about this guy? >> reporter: attorney general william barr continued the leak investigation and stumbled when asked by then-senator kamala harris if the president or anyone at the white house had ordered him to open an investigation. >> i wouldn't -- i wouldn't -- >> yes or no? >> could you repeat that question? i don't know -- i wouldn't say suggest -- >> hinted? >> i don't know. >> reporter: former republican attorney general alberto gonzalez says the phone record subpoenas are troubling. so based on what you know, was
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-- was that contrary to doj policy? >> what is being reported is certainly if not contrary to policy, certainly inconsistent with the finest traditions of the department. >> reporter: the inspector general will investigate the doj's use of subpoenas to apple and microsoft. not tonight obtain a cell phone and -- not only to obtain a cell phone and email record from congress but of the news media in connection with recent leak investigations. also democrats in the senate are demanding that former ags william barr and jeff sessions testify on capitol hill. for "cbs this morning saturday," jeff pegues in washington. california is just days from announcing it is dropping all of its mask and social distancing requirements for fully vaccinated people. turning the page on the coronavirus comes with risks, example two vaccinated passengers a cruise ship tested positive for covid. it comes as 52% of the country has received at least one dose of the covid-19 vaccine, and 43%
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of adults in the u.s. are now fully vaccinated. michael george is here with the latest. michael, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, jeff. as masks come off and many places reopen, there are reminders that the world is still in a pandemic, and the signs of risk keep resurfacing. aboard the "celebrity millennium," two passengers tested positive, causing a ship-wide safety check. the cruise company, which requires proof of vaccinations, told cbs news this demonstrates safety protocols work. the cdc recommends 95% of crew and passengers be vaccinated. on shore, people are still getting sick. variants are looming. >> one of the things that covid has proven, it's really good at curve balls. we hear about this new delta variant that is now surging through the uk and beginning to come into the u.s. the good news about it is when you're fully vaccinated, you appear to be fully protected against that. >> reporter: each vaccination
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has become a victory. this one yesterday in new jersey was celebrated. >> you did it. [ applause ] >> reporter: also in san francisco this week. with 80% of eligible residents now vaccinated, that's above the president's 70% vaccinated july 4th goal that many state governors are championing. >> that means we have approximately 93,000 oregonians left to hit our goal. >> reporter: lotteries in california, beer in minnesota. >> and to remind folks that not only is the beer free, the vaccine is free wherever you take it. >> reporter: part of the push, but vaccine hesitancy in oklahoma is not helping. >> well there has been an anti-vaccine movement, and it's quite strong in oklahoma unfortunately. >> reporter: oklahoma ranks near the bottom, just 54% of adults have had at least one dose. nationwide, it's 64%.
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>> we do need to race against the risk of a resurgence. we need get that number as high as we can before the fall so we don't have a re-emergence of covid. >> reporter: and another concern was raised yesterday. new data shows there have been at least 226 cases of heart inflation in people 30 and younger who received a pfizer or moderna vaccine. the cdc will hold an emergency meeting of advisers next week to discuss the possibility of a new and extremely rare side effect of covid vaccines for young people. dana? >> michael, thank you. tomorrow is a new day for israel. a new government is expected to be sworn in, ending the long and often rocky tenure of prime minister benjamin netanyahu. in its place, an unlikely coalition that includes for the first time a party from israel's arab minority. it's a political shakeup that will have its work cut out for itself. charlie d'agata reports. >> reporter: violence erupts again on the streets of east jerusalem. riot police fired stun grenades
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to disperse palestinian protesters. the trigger this time -- right-wing politicians contesting police orders postponing a planned march. why did you decide to come today? >> because -- >> reporter: "this is jerusalem," he said, "it is our country and our capital." hamas militants call it provocative and aggressive. while small and scaled, they're exactly the kind of street battles that quickly escalated into a full-blown conflict in gaza last month. a dark moment of the volatile days ahead as israel swears in a new government on sunday pushing prime minister benjamin netanyahu out of a record 12 years in power. netanyahu's called it the worst election fraud in the history of democracy and stands accused of inciting violence among his most fervent supporters. ♪ >> reporter: former prime minister ehud barak told us
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they'd better accept that in the in -- that netanyahu's political days are over. >> to come three months after netanyahu left office, and people will not believe how fast he went out of the focus of the interest of the public and how profound change had been achieved. >> reporter: in the first serious test for the new government, police have allowed that right-wing march to take place on tuesday. that risks not only street clashes but hamas rocket attacks in retaliation. for "cbs this morning saturday," charlie d'agata, tel aviv. a massachusetts lobsterman says he is lucky to survive an animal encounter in the open sea. he says it happened friday morning near provincetown on cape cod. tom hanson is here with the details. tom? what is all this talk about?
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a whale of a tale. >> reporter: yeah, quite a crazy story. michael packard has been making living for years diving for lobsters off the coast of cape cod. on friday for a few seconds, he says he almost became the prey when he ended up inside the jaws of a humpback whale. >> all of a sudden i just felt this huge bump, and everything went dark. and i could sense that i was moving. >> reporter: veteran lobster diver michael packard was hoping to make a catch yesterday, but he says he almost ended up on the menu for a medium-sized humpback whale. >> and i thought to myself, okay, this is it. in is -- i finally -- i'm going to die. >> reporter: for 30 terrifying seconds, packard says he was trapped in the whale's mouth. >> then all of a sudden he went up to the surface and just erupted and started shaking his
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head. and i just got thrown in the air and landed in the water. and i was free. >> the whale does not want a human dessert. >> reporter: dr. ian kerr is a marine biologist at the ocean alliance. he's been studying whales in cape cod for more than a decade. >> i've been in this business 30 years, and this is the second time i've heard of it happening. this area down by provincetown is a highly productive area which is why the fishermen are there, the lobstermen are there, why the whales are there. basically he happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. >> reporter: kerr says hauump backs, 25 to 40 tons, are gentle giants that pose no threat to humans. how lucky is the diver to make it out of this situation alive? >> i think he was very lucky. i think he's very lucky. it could have been a nasty situation. but i am sure the whale was almost as freaked out as michael was. >> reporter: bruised and
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battered but happy to live and tell the tale. >> as soon as i'm healed up, i'll be back in the water. >> reporter: not exactly the choice i would make. we asked dr. kerr if he finds anything fishy about packard's story. he tells us that as humans spend more and more time in the ocean for commerce and pleasure, encounters with sea life will happen with more frequency. dana? >> i like the use of fishy there. >> yeah. >> i do. we were saying -- maybe opened his mouth and he -- >> it was bizarre. we were off the coast just in week looking for whales for a story, an upcoming story we have. there are a lot of whales there, humpbacks, fins, minkies. >> you didn't get swallowed. that's -- you would be a tasty bite. i have to say the inside of a whale's mouth, that's what i want to know about. it's about 22 after the hour. here's a look at the weather for your weekend. ♪
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it has long been a problem, but the flow of drugs into the u.s. from mexico appears to be worse than ever. that includes huge volumes of one of the most dangerous substances of all. we'll look into the worsening situation just ahead. plus, a low-tech but effective response to the covid pandemic. we'll see where those motorized rick shaws are being put to surprisingly good use. and later, class act. the schools he helped create educated thousands of african-american children when their own states and cities were doing little to help. we'll remember his enduring legacy and his partnership with a civil rights legend. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday."
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if the artist behind works like these did a self-portrait, you'd see only ones and zeros. ahead, we'll see how artificial
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intelligence is being trained to produce art of all kinds from painting to sculpture and even music and comedy, including an episode of "seinfeld." that's coming up next. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ monitor,r, check andnd lock dowown you moneney with secucurity from m chase. contntrol feels s good. chase. make m more of whahat's yoyo.
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"cbs this morning saturday" will return in a few minutes. for now, i'm ian lee with a look beyond this morning's headlines. amazon is launching technology which uses your wi-fi to create a shared network across homes. nichelle medina tells us how it works and why some have concerns. >> reporter: if you own certain alexa-enabled echo devices or some ring camera models, amazon will soon be able to use part of your home's wi-fi to create a new network called amazon sidewalk. >> amazon sidewalk is an ad hoc mesh network that takes advantage of your amazon smart devices. >> reporter: cbs news tech reporter dan patterson says the
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new service takes a small sliver of wi-fi at homes with certain amazon products to create a shared network within neighborhoods. amazon says sidewalk is designed with multiple players of privacy and security, and sidewalk bridge owners do not receive any information about devices owned by others connected to sidewalk. >> the amount off network that they say that they're going to be using is both very low bandwidth and relatively small. >> reporter: john callus from the electronic frontier foundation believes the network won't affect wi-fi speeds, but he has concerns because users are automatically enrolled. ash con saltani, former technologies at the federal trade commission, has the same concerns. >> people pay a service fee to the cable or cell phone provider for these services. for amazon to help themselves to that bandwidth is pretty questionable i think. >> reporter: people who want to opt out of the shared network can go into their ring or amazon
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app and turn it off. nichelle medina, cbs news, los angeles.
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welcome back to "cbs this morning saturday." oficials along the southern border say mexican drug cartels are moving much larger shipments of drugs into the u.s. the amount of fentanyl and especially dangerous substance confiscated by the texas department of public safety, jumped 800% in just one year. janet shamlian got an exclusive look at one area where agents and state troopers say it's harder to track drug smugglers because more migrants are also crossing the border. >> reporter: border patrol agent gerry galvan oversees a patch of the border west of el paso, a spot where he says 11,000 migrants tried to enter the u.s.
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last month. in fact, this is the spot where smugglers dropped sisters, ages 3 and 5, over the 14-foot-high barrier in april. >> it's very vast here. what are you seeing in terms of the cartel movement? >> well, they're profiting a lot right now. >> reporter: galvan says traffickers have been able to smuggle more drugs through the border because so many agents are focused on people coming across. if we didn't have as many migrants coming over at this point in time, would it be harder for them to move the product? >> definitely. definitely. the fact that they know that the migrants ate up a lot of our time and effort. >> reporter: the dea says the biggest increase is in fentanyl. the synthetic opioid so potent a teaspoon is enough to kill as many as 3,000 people. this is some of the 59 pounds seized in el paso by texas troopers the last six months. if that almost 60 pounds of fentanyl had reached the streets
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and not been stopped, what could have been the result? >> the result is mass casualty. we cannot afford to stand by and let fentanyl come across the borders. >> reporter: when it does, street-level networks use the interstates to send it across america like i-10 to california owe i--- or i-25. 13 people died last year, the most this state history. 31-year-old sara wittner was one. her sister and father speaking out to help others. >> i was doing cpr on my own daughter knowing it wasn't going to work, we had to try. not something i would wish on anyone because that will never go away. >> reporter: border patrol agent joel freeland says even with agencies working together and advanced technology, they're often outnumbered. >> they use these opportunities when our agents are occupied at apprehending people coming over, and that's when they're moving their drugs at the same time. >> reporter: an escalating war
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with casualties far beyond the border. for "cbs this morning saturday," janet shamlian, el paso. we have much more straight ahead. first, here's a look at the weather for your weekend. ♪ it's a very old way to move things around that's been useful in recent days. how the rickshaw has been an essential tool in one country's fight against a raging pandemic. you're watching "cbs this morning g saturday."."
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a delta airlines flight from los angeles to atlanta ended up landing in oklahoma city late friday following this struggle in the cabin. one passenger says a man took control of the plane's intercom and tried to open an exit door after getting into a fight with another passenger. flight attendants called other passengers for help in subduing the man. police in oklahoma city took the man into custody. we are seeing more and more of these -- you just saw one -- >> i had it thursday. we got diverted to detroit. it was not like that. there was an issue in the back of the plane with a passenger that we weren't near. but they -- they landed the plane because of a security threat was how they phrased it.
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>> it's happening a lot more now. but it's good to see passengers step up and take action. >> right. and flight attendant the, their job is to -- flight attendants, their job is to keep you safe. >> the main job is ton give you food and drinks, it's to keep you safe. we thank them for doing that. covid's recent surge in india has been devastating. the virus has caused at least 29 million infections and 363,000 deaths. most of them since the middle of april. while new cases are declining, the nation of more than one billion people continues to struggle with the societal effects of the virus. in one major city, an army of volunteers is trying to deliver help and hope all on three wheels. chris livesay has the story from new delhi. >> reporter: good morning. they're called auto rickshaws, and they typify the chaotic streets. now as the pandemic rages, they're also typifying efforts to save lives. one rushes a 60-year-old patient
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to the hospital. another zooms food to victims and their families. it's a lot to ask of these modest three-wheeled taxis, but as india reels in a catastrophic second wave of covid, heroes have emerged in unlikely shapes and sizes. new delhi is choking under covid, says cabbie raj kumar. "i'm provided this ambulance service to help the public. if everyone stayed home because they were scared, who's going to help those in need?" other rickshaw drivers organize here at the gurudwara bangla sahib, a sikh temple where cooks prepare 35,000 hot meals every day. zipping them out to the poor among those hit hardest by this pandemic. this country is so huge and the virus so punishing, we have no idea how many people are sick or dead. what we do know is food deliveries like these are one thing helping keep them alive. once they arrive, drivers
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descend by foot into some of the poorest neighborhoods in new delhi where covid plus hunger is a lethal combination, says resident rita malhortra. "there's no work amid the lockdown and the pandemic. if it weren't for this food, people here could starve." even many of these volunteers are out of a job. gagandeep singh worked as a school bus driver until a city-wide lockdown closed all the schools. "now i have a lot of free time," he says, "so i thought it was a good idea to use it to help save the lives of covid patients. my neighbors." we know covid's been killing indians in record numbers, but it's also been killing the economy. in a country where millions upon line, these food deliveries are nothing short of a lifesaver. for "cbs this morning saturday," chris livesay, new delhi. >> creativity continues for
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people within the pandemic and trying to battle in any way they can. >> you make do. you find a way. they're modest buildings but had a huge impact. the little-known story of schoolhouses that dot the american south and the unlikely duo that managed to get them up and running. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." sosome days, y you just don't t have it. not my uncncle, thoughgh. he''s takingng trulicityty fors type 2 diaiabetes and d now, he's really o on his gameme. once-weeeekly trulicicity lowewers your a1a1c by helelping your r body relee the ininsulin it''s alreadady m. momost people e reached an a1c undnder 7%.
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rosenwald schools, built between 1912 and 1937. they provided an opportunity for hundreds of thousands of poor african-americans to be educated in the segregated south. in fact, their construction has been called one of the most effective philanthropic endeavors of the 20th century. the story of the schools and their benefactor remain largely unknown today. we traveled to georgia last week to learn about the past and the impact of these institutions and what they're still having on us today. from above, it seems ordinary, a simple white house an hour northwest of atlanta. but when the noble hills school was constructed nearly 100 years ago, it was revolutionary. >> this was my school. before we weren't even allowed to be taught. >> reporter: marian coleman and four generations of her family were educated here. one of thousands of schoolhouses built over three decades that
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transformed african-american education in the rural south. >> we weren't really free to do or to think that we could accomplish more. but when we were able to get the school, and this has made the foundation so that we could really believe in ourselves and the teachers helped us to know that we were able to move forward now. >> reporter: they became known as rosenwald schools, named after wealthy industrialist julius rosenwald, the president of retail giant sears. >> this is an important southern story. this is an important american story. this story transforms america. >> reporter: photographer andrew filer is telling that story in black and white. a story that grew out of a friendship between rhodosenwaldd noted educator booker t. washington, founding president of the tuskegee institute. >> the institute which he founded -- >> reporter: together they sought to reverse years of
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inequality in education because of slavery and segregation. >> the story are the pillars of my life. the relationship between julious rosenwald and booker t. washington is the foundation of the black/jewish alliance that becomes a pillar of the civil rights movement. >> in 1912, they launched a pilot program, building six schools in alabama, requiring local communities to donate the land and raise matching funds. what were they trying to defeat? >> school started off as being segregated. they were trying to get through that part. >> reporter: what does that do to a child? >> to me that would dishearten them and made them feel like they didn't matter. >> within 25 years, 4,978 schools were built across 15 states. buildings of basic design, two rooms with a removable partition, large windows to let in light, and a plain exterior
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to avoid unwanted attention. these little schools had such a profound impact. can you put it into words? >> there are economists at the federal reserve bank that have done five studies of rosenwald schools. and what their analysis shows is prior to world war i there was a wide and persistent gap. that closes between world war i and world war ii. the single greatest achievement, and it is an achievement, is rosenwald schools. >> i think of our educational system today -- >> yes -- >> i wonder what could be learned from a deeper dive into the rosenwald history. >> we often think the problems in america, public policy problems in america are so intractable, particularly those related to race. at the center of this story, julius rosenwald and booker t. washington reaching across divides of race, religion, and region, partnering with black communities and white school boards to fundamentally change
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america. >> only about 500 schools remain, relics of a time before legal segregation ended in 1954. some have been repurposed or rebuilt. many are in disrepair. forgotten by the communities they served. filer spent 3.5 years documenting them. his photographs are on display at the national center for civil and human rights in atlanta, an effort to help preserve their legacy. why don't we know this? >> julius reasonwald is a very modest man. he did not name these schools rosenwald schools, they've become known as rosenwald schools. one of the reasons why we don't know the rosenwald name as much as we know the names. some of his philanthropic contemporaries like carnegie, rockefeller, ford. >> they were monument builders. >> they were. >> he was a legacy builder. >> yes. >> that legacy is still being felt. many of those educated at
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rosenwald schools went on to higher education and, in turn, educated future generations. ♪ >> blacks and whites together -- >> and prominent leaders of the civil rights movement like medgar evers, maya angelou, and congressman john lewis came through these institutions. today nobody hill is a museum run by marian's niece valerie. generations removed from the school but steeped in its history. >> it's not just african-american history to us, it's also american history. this is not just a job for me. this is legacy. >> it is such an amazing place to go and to see how a community has so embraced -- re-embraced the school. i knew nothing about these schools. >> makes me want to visit noble hill. >> i know. there is a book that filer put together, "a better life for
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their children," the forward written by john lewis. he says their partnership demonstrates that concerted action can make america better and the world better. education is the cornerstone of democracy. >> come across the aisle, come across colors, come across religion, come together and educate. >> yes. >> beautiful piece, michelle. >> thank you. thank you. chris, live shout out to him. >> thanks, chris. that's me on friday. the pulitzer prize, in is big, the board -- this is big, the board recognized darnela frazer, the bystander that captured the killing of george floyd. the board awarded her the prize and said the cell phone video revealed discrepancies in the initial police reports. it also said the video highlighted the crucial role citizens play in journalists'
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quests for truth and justice. that's amazing. i feel as though i buried the lead. she won the pulitzer prize, everybody, which is -- cornerstone of what we do. i mean it is one of the most amazing prizes. and again, it remind me of what john filer did, a photographer that but a piece on. >> we focused on the kent state shootings. he was just a college student at the time. >> there it is. >> cancelations to her. there are plenty of perks that go with being the queen including not one but two birthdays. one is being celebrated right now in london. we are going to take you there next. and if are you heading out the door -- sorry -- don't forget to record "cbs this morning saturday." coming up in our next hour -- royal encounters. also on queen elizabeth's agenda. tomorrow's tea with p president bibiden and ththe f financirsrs. and we'rere going too look baca the i incrediblyy long hisistor ththe queen's meet-ups with american presidents. plus, ai art. some of these piazeces have sol
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for hundreds of thousands of dollars. the new ways artificial intelligence is being used to create coveted works of art. and we'll catch up with singer/songwriter noel gallagher. he will perform in our "saturday session." you are watching "cbs this morning saturday." you lolove rich, dedelicious icice cream. but your s stomach doeoesn'. ththat disagrereement endsds right nowow. lactaiaid ice creaeam is the creamymy, real icece cream youe ththat will nenever mess wiwith your ststomach. lalactaid ice e cream. ♪ ♪ ththe light. ththat will nenever mess wiwith your ststomach. it comeses from withthin. it d drives you.u. and it g guides you.u. to shinene your brigightest. asas you chargrge ahead. illuminanating the w way forwa. a lilight maker.r. rerecognizing g that the impapact you makake, comes frfrom the energygy you creatate. introducining the e all-electrtric lyriq..
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whwhere certaiain fungal infectctions are c common anand if you'v've had tb,, hepatititis b, arare prone toto infection, or have flflu-like symymptos or soreses. don't t start humimira ifif you have e an infectit. be therere for you, , and th. ask k your gastrtroenterologt ababout humirara. with humirira, remimission is p possible. ♪♪ ♪ britain is celebrating its queen in grand tradition today for the first time since the pandemic began. more than 1,400 soldiers marche in the trooping the colour parade in front of windsor castle to celebrate queen elizabeth's 95th birthday much the scaled down celebration is the first since the death of her husband of 70 years, prince philip. the queen's cousin, prince edward, served as her escort. her actual birthday is in april. but the second saturday in june is always a celebration, as well. look at that. >> why i wonder why they do
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that. >> she's the queen, and she's 95. why not celebrate twice? >> worth it. it's a vacation that comes with a little sting, and we don't mean the hotel bill. where people are traveling for rest, relaxation, and vaccination. for some of you local news is next. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." for those of you without local news, "cbs this morning saturday" will return in a few minutes. for now, i'm ian lee with a look beyond this morning's headlines. food waste is a growing issue across the globe with rather unsavory consequences in the long run. that's why one country is making people pay for what they waste. it's lunchtime in seoul, and they're serving up quite a spread. south korean meals typically have free and unlimited side dishes, and when diners don't finish their food, it goes to waste. but instead of chucking the leftovers in the trash, restaurant owners are required by law to separate food waste for recycling.
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it's the same at home. residents pay for every pound of food they toss. either in a prepaid bag or at a machine that weighs the waste. in the summer, it smells bad, this gash -- this garbage man said. south koreanies mobilized to make change. this activist says the government turned food wasters into food recyclers. three decades later, more than 95% of food waste is recycled, becoming compost, biofuel, and at this factory, it's dried and turned into chicken feed. south korea's system isn't perfect, though. there's still a lot of food waste to recycle, and processing plants are struggling to make a profit as most provide their services for free. many residents say as long as that smell stays away, they're happy to continue to pay. that's extra incentive to be part of the clean plate club.
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"cbs this morning saturday" will be right back. ♪ i'd do ananything ♪ [ dodog stomach h grumbling ] ♪ for yoyou dear anynything ♪ [ dog g stomach grgrumbling ] followow me. hihill's scscience dietet perfrfection digigestion is one of f the many ' 'anyth' petstsmart provivides. ♪ anytything for y youuuu!! ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ hey gogoogle, turnrn up the he. ♪ ♪ ♪ receive a a chargepoinint homeme flex chararger or a public charging credit. see you volvo retailer for dedetails. meet bob minetti, loving husband, father and pancreatic cancer survivor. i am so glad i learned what was possible for me.
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to learn more about the latest research, including clinical trials, visit pancreatic cancer collective.org. welcome to "cbs this morning saturday." i'm dana jacobson with jeff glor and michelle miller. coming up this hour, putting the art in artificial intelligence. we'll see how computers are being trained to produce works like these and how plenty of human collectors are eager to buy them. and painting is one of his lesser known creative pursuits. he's best known for his incredible cooking and his decades teaching the rest of us how to do it. we will visit with legendary chef jacques pepin and sample a springtime meal both simple and savory on a special edition of "the dish." >> yum, yum.
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and later, he rose to fame as the co-front man of oasis before starting a solo career a decade ago. we'll talk to noel gallagher, and he'll perform new music and an oasis classic in our "saturday session." that is just ahead. we kick off this hour with a look at the latest trend in travel vaccines. new york has set up mobile popup vaccination sites aimed at out-of-towners. alaska now offers shots to tourists as soon as they step off the plane, right in the airport. from the maldives to the micro state to moscow. it's not without detractors. lucy craft has this report from the american island of guam. >> reporter: the u.s. territory of guam is a sleepy, compact island about 3,000 miles west of hawaii. its main attraction -- beaches, palm trees, and sunsets. for more than a year, guam's instagram perfect aquamarine
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waters have been nearly deserted, imperilling livelihoods for a third of its work force. in recent months, officials noticed a steady stream of americans living in asian countries with slow vaccine rollouts, flying in to get their shots. americans like us. no sun and sand on this trip. i've finished a week in quarantine to be able to come here to the university of guam field house for my coronavirus shots. lou leon guerrero is a registered nurse. she also happens to be the governor of guam. >> i kept up my license. i figured, you know, if they fire me, i'll still have a job. >> with most of her constituents inoculated, governor guerrero said guam is launching vaccine tourism packages for u.s. ex-patriots. >> the win-win is really all over the place. we can vaccinate the u.s. ex-pats, and in the meantime, they're having a nice time in guam. they're enjoying the
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hospitality. we are benefiting from their economic input as a result of that. >> reporter: pre-pandemic guam drew nearly two million visitors, mostly from japan, south korea, and taiwan. it aims to extend vaccine vacations to asian travelers, immunizing americans is one thing, but wooing foreign tourists with vaccines, health experts like binghamton university's nicole hasun, say is a grayzi zone. >> it shouldn't prioritize people because they're wilt enough to come to the united states. >> reporter: spurred by similar schemes across the u.s., guam is banking on vaccine tourism to help refill its beaches this summer and provide a shot in the arm to its flat lining tourist industry. for "cbs this morning saturday," lucy craft, hagatna, guam. count this among the expressions i never thought i'd hear -- 15 month ago -- vaccine
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tourism. >> right? rig right? i can't say andrew cuomo or phil murphy giving the shot -- >> probably because they're not medical professionals. >> you know, i loved seeing the governor -- >> the good news is that some of the richer, wealthier nations have said they're going to get shots to the places that need it, as well. >> speed it up. >> not just those who afford it. it is about four minutes after the hour. here's a look at the weather for your weekend. ♪ much ♪ computers have taken over many routine tasks. now they're getting creative, being taught and sometimes teaching themselves how to generate artworks of all kinds. we'll get a cutting-edge update. that's next. you're watching "cbs this
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soso we did itit for you.. v8. the ororiginal plant-powewered drink.k. veg up. v8. the ororiginal plant-powewered drink.k. at worksman cycles, we've been building bikes for a hundrered years. but our cucustomers' needs s have changnged, so w we expandeded our produt line t to include e electric c . we used ththe unlimiteted 1.5 5 percent cacash back from o our chase i ink busines unlilimit ® crcredit cardd to help p purchase t tools ad materialals to buildld new mod. anand each timime we use o our, we earn cacash back to help p grow our b busines. it''s more t than cyclining, it's fifinding innonovative ways to momove forwardrd. chase for r busine ® . mamake more ofof what's s ® .s albert einstein has been credited with saying "creativity is intelligence having fun." we can only guess what einstein
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might think about the artificial intelligence now being used to help create modern works of art. and that term has a broad definition from painting and sculpture to music and even the written word. brook silva-braga met some of the humans bringing these ai creations to life. okay, venus de milo. i recognize her. >> reporter: ben snell starts out with a library of 1,200 classical sculptures. >> got a cesar -- at some point you would wind winged victory. >> reporter: and tells a computer to study them. >> i ask to try to find connections between the sculptures and to instill them into the most bake forms. >> reporter: a machine learning algorithm churns for about a day and then snell tells it to design a sculpture itself. how many tries do you give it? >> i just give it one. this is it. this was the first one it made. >> reporter: he turns the computer off, chops its bits into bits, and casts that computer dust into the sculpture
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it itself dreamt up. >> the device's creativity, for lack of a better way, and my creativity are inextricably intertwined. we're beginning to have dialogues with these machines. ♪ >> reporter: we're also singing duets. holly herndon trained in ai to harmonize on the album "froto." ♪ programmers coax the machine learning network into painting of edmonde de belamy. christie's sold it for $32,000. >> what you're seeing are the sensors on my head. >> reporter: alexander reben taught an algorithm to interpret his eye movement and brain waves. it judges what pictures he likes best -- >> that landed on for this round -- >> reporter: and uses his preferences to create a new portrait. >> i think an interesting question that arises from this is do we value art made by people more than we're going to value art made by a machine.
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>> reporter: to test the question, he's intentionally blurring the line. >> this is a sculpture described by the ai. >> reporter: programming a computer to type up art ideas that he executes himself. >> the first one is simply a northam plinchlg -- normal plunger. the second has the handle removed. the work is considered a landmark of conceptual art and was featured on an episode of "seinfeld" in 1997. i then asked it to create a "seinfeld" script, and it did just that. ilane hits george on the head with a plunger, and there's an argument of whether it's art or not. it's quite funny. ♪ yeah, the things it comes up with seem creative which, again, is what surprises me. >> reporter: but it's not creative, right? or is it? >> it's a good question. i mean, that's the kind of a philosophical question. probably doesn't have image nation, but maybe it has something different that we don't have a name for. maybe it has a different way of thinking. here i am talking now like it
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has this or does that. even knowing the systems, i find myself putting animal like or human-like attributes into them. >> reporter: artists emphasize that general artificial intelligence in independent conscious machine, that's a long way off. for now, machine learning networks simply find patterns in existing work and with human help spit out a variation on the theme. >> it's like we have found a way to get a bunch of stuff humans did and give it hands so it can type or mouth so it can talk. what would this pile of screenplays type if it were able to type -- >> reporter: oscar sharpe has written four short films using ai. >> you don't have to be a doctor. >> i'm not sure. >> reporter: when sharpe trained his ai writer on action films for the forthcoming "bobo and girlfriend," what came out was mostly a commentary on what went in. >> when you turn on the machine that you've trained in movies it spots out white-hot misogyny.
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all of the dudes doing super tough-guy stuff and blowing things up and killing people. >> reporter: and the female lead doesn't get a name. >> yeah. bobo basically assaulting this woman whose name is literally girlfriend. >> hey -- >> reporter: this is one of the big concerns about the technology, though, right? it just reflects back humanity and maybe humanity needs to be improved upon. >> it's a mirror on this shows us ourselves and exaggerates things that we maybe were ignoring. >> reporter: the machines aren't just training on human art but being trained by human engineers. are they artists now? enter the human lawyers -- if you make an algorithm that can produce paintings, and i use the algorithm to produce a painting, whose painting is it? >> it might be both of ours. >> reporter: harborview law's jessica feld points to the case of the edmonde de belamy painting made and sold by the french art collective obvious using a toolkit made by american teen robbie barrett. >> they did not credit me. and you know, i was not mentioned. i didn't get any of the money.
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>> reporter: as a legal matter, does robbie barrett have a claim to any of that money? >> this is all in dispute right now. does he have an argument that he's entitled to a portion of that work? yes. >> reporter: we found so much of this generative art is ultimately a commentary on our relationship to machines. this was a computer. it made this. for ben snell, an appreciation of what they do for us. >> creating the sculpture is affording the computer a body. >> reporter: and what he says they'll never do alone. >> ai can write poetry. but you can't have a conversation with it. you can't understand why it made what it's made. i don't think purely generative work will ever have the same place in our heart that regular sort of traditional art does. >> reporter: in the tradition of the greek god who mutilated himself and was reborn as a tree, snell named the sculpture "attus." for "cbs this morning saturday," brook silva-braga, new york.
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>> i actually shot a story of a computer that wrote a musical in london. it never aired -- >> one of the computrs in this story did, too. i'm not sure they make a lot of sense. >> i feel like it's this round circle conversation as they were saying. and if you created the technology that then makes the beautiful art, whose is it, all of that. >> should we make the remaining 45 minutes of the show -- >> it could be -- >> keep going around and around. >> it could. >> maybe the ai could join us. >> don't you think -- >> the movie part was fascinating about all the -- >> the girl has no name -- >> maybe they're on to something. >> this is where we hear in our ears "got to go." >> continue the conversation at home. the art of the perfect place even when it's something as simple as two cracked eggs. next we will visit with the legendary jacques pepin and share two meals. >> ooh. >> and then a male for you guguys -- a meal for you guys. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday."
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♪ this morning on "the dish," the man who might be the most famous chef alive. jacques pepin has been cooking for more than 70 years. he was the personal chef to three french prime ministers before he turned down president kennedy to work at howard johnsons. he's been elevating the way americans have been cooking and eating including over the last year. as his short online videos made during the pandemic became a sensation. we met jacques pepin recently at his home in connecticut where at age 85, he seems to be busier than ever. [ speaking foreign language ] what are you looking for? our day with jacques pepin began
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on a splendid late spring morning in his herb garden. >> much stronger than what you get at the market. even testing it -- [ speaking foreign language ] >> reporter: that does. oh, yeah. we picked ingredients for hissies are fee create the perfect plate -- his recipe to create the perfect plate of morning eggs. >> you cook a lot. >> reporter: not well. >> oh, well. is it good? >> reporter: i try. >> okay. >> reporter: the key in this case is both covering the eggs while they cook and adding a little water to the pan. >> so as you can see, now it glazed the top -- >> reporter: yep. >> mirror. glaze the top like that. and of course you can check it by pushing a little bit like that to know -- i like it pretty runny. some people like it less, just cook it longerment. >> reporter: it's not a complicated recipe, but it's the
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sort of technique that he's spent a lifetime perfecting. growing up around his parents' restaurant outside lyon, he apprenticed in french cooking as a teenager and worked his way up to becoming a top chef in france. in 1959, he moved to the u.s. where he worked for howard johnsons developing recipes in their new york city test kitchen. it was through his friendship with julia child that he became a household name here. [ applause ] co-hosting the pbs show while introducing america to a whole new array of culinary delights. >> and even this one here which was the big hand -- >> reporter: the big hand? >> you said hand -- >> this is boston. but i live in connecticut. the accent is different. [ laughter ] wealth of experience to produce these short videos during the pandemic. >> i am doing a mint julep -- >> what is it about doing television and videos that has sustained you and kept you
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interested for so long? >> well, i'm hungry all the time. so i eat. cooking has been my life, you know, for over 70 years. and this is what i am. a tablespoon of butter, two eggs, break the eggs on something flat like this -- >> reporter: his latest videos are a treasure trove for experienced home cooks and those still learning. >> is it a special trick, a teaspoon of water -- >> it seems like the memories made in the kitchen with kids especially -- >> oh, yes. >> -- are so visceral. >> if you are a kid when you come back from school, sitting down in that kitchen, his father, mother's voice and the smell and the taste of that, that stays with you the rest of your life. at that point, the food transcends the level of feeding yourself. the food becomes home. it becomes -- it becomes love. it becomes family.
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you know, food memories are very, very powerful. >> in addition to the videos, his 30th cookbook is out. it's called "quick and simple." >> i wanted to focus on making people's life easier, you know. and actually using the supermarket as a prep cook. you can go to the supermarket, get boneless, skinless breasts of chicken, pre-sliced mushrooms, prewashed spinach. you have a nonstick pan with a minimum amount of effort you can do good food. >> with us for lunch, he shared another slice of culinary nirvana. mussels in hot sauce. zucchini and eggplant gratin. tomatoes provencale. and crab meat croquettes served with white wine followed by orange cake with grand manner yay sauce. -- marnier sauce. it seems like the kind of plate that gets you ready for summer. >> absolutely. >> do you have a favorite season you like to cook in?
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>> i love spring. asparagus, the strawberries, things coming in season. always tell people to buy in season because when you buy a tomato in full season, it's really a taste. secondly, it's one of the least expensive. thirdly, while it has all the nutritional good that it should have in it, why not buy in season? i mean, without any question. >> we'd had breakfast and lunch. but for pepin, the day was still young. you just find your way everywhere. there was a trip up to his art studio. another one of his passions for more than 50 years. this is -- 21. you just did this. >> yes, not too long ago, yeah. the umbrella here, pepin, my name is umbrella. >> finally no visit to his place is complete without playing a round of the century-old french game -- >> this is the question -- >> okay. >> you score one.
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you have to throw it between 20 and 30 feet. okay. about there. and then get as close as you can. >> you got the backspin on there. pretty good. >> yeah -- >> each team gets a set of steel balls. the object is to get the most closest to the jack which translated from french is called the little pig. i'm going to try to knock you out. oh -- >> look at that. look at that. i think he's a hustler. i got to watch. >> at 85 years old, one wjacque pepin has barely slowed down. he's got plans for an art show this fall. his 31st cookbook is due out next year. after seven decades, he doesn't talk about leaving a legacy. for him it's all about continually sharing his wisdom. is there anything better than good food, good wine, and a game of patunk? >> maybe sex.
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i don't know. yeah, probably. >> there you go. where am i supposed to go with that? >> he made you turn red. i love that. >> i know. you know -- not easy to do. >> no. >> patunk, i guess. >> okay. next -- this is a dessert orange cake -- >> one version of it. >> wow. with the grand marnier which was excellent. thank you to jacques pepin. >> what a lovely man. >> so lovely. it's worth checking the videos with kids, wife, husband, whatever else. you know, they're short and like they're just -- you keep watching them. and you want to learn and you want to get better at cooking, and you want to eat the stuff the way he makes it. >> love the cameos by mrs. glor and victoria. way to go nicole and victoria. one lighter meal is on president biden's agenda -- tea with queen elizabeth. tomorrow's meet-up will be the
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latest in an incredibly long line of encounters between britain's monarch and america's commander in chief. we'll delve into that history next. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." for those of you without local news, "cbs this morning saturday" will return in a few minutes. for now, i'm ian lee with a look beyond this morning's headlines. scientists in italy are working to create a robot at that can detect and respond to a range of human emotions. they believe this technology could benefit people with mental and cognitive disorders. able is learning to smile, snarl, and frown. 20 motors under his artificial skin give the robot emotions just like us. engineers in italy hope someday able will be a friend for people with behavioral, social, or cognitive disorders like autism or alzheimer's disease.
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this researcher says, we want to know how people are feeling to keep them healthy not just physically but mentally and emotionalli. to make able look real, engineers teamed up with this special effects artist. his company has created animatronics for "star wars" and "jurassic park." right now someone has to wear sensors for the robot to recognize their emotions. the next step may seem like something out of science fiction. >> to give able a human brain -- >> reporter: with the help of tissue taken from stem cells. >> it's basically an aggregate of stem cells which self-assemble and self-organize to resemble the structure and function of a mini human organ. >> reporter: scientists say that would allow able to read our expressions all on his own. if they're successful, expect the team and able to look a bit smug. still can't get over the realness. those faces. "cbs this morning saturday"
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[ dog g stomach grgrumbling ] followow me. hihill's scscience dietet perfrfection digigestion is one of f the many ' 'anyth' petstsmart provivides. ♪ anytything for y youuuu!! ♪ ♪ britain's queen elizabeth with the leaders of the g7 nations during this week's summit in cornwall, england, there. president biden was seated to her left and was a few steps ahead of the queen as the dignitaries walked to the stage. tomorrow the president and first lady will share afternoon tea with the queen at windsor castle. while that gathering will be a first for the first couple, the queen's encounters with american presidents and their wives is a piece of history all its own. ♪ today marks the official celebration of the queen's 95th
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birthday, and she's about to mark 70 years on the throne. there's another remarkable number she can boast about. in her long reign, the queen may well have met more u.s. presidents than anyone else alive today. some were a bit out of order. she met the nation's 31st president, herbert hoover, at a 1957 luncheon. 24 years after he left office. she was only princess elizabeth when she and her latest husband met president harry truman in washington on behalf of her father, king george. most of the encounters have been as queen and with the sitting president, including a 1959 visit by dwight eisenhower to balmoral castle in scotland. a 1961 dinner at buckingham palace for john and jackie kennedy. a 1969 palace tour for president richard nixon. in 1976, president ford played
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host, waltzing with queen elizabeth at the white house to celebrate the nation's bicentennial. jimy carter also made quite an impression on the queen and her mother. during a 1977 buckingham palace state dinner. instead of bowing his head or shaking the queen mother's hand, he decided to kiss her right on the lips. ronald reagan, a personal favorite of her majesty -- >> very nice to see you again -- >> reporter: >> bonded with the queen over their mutual love of horses. and in 1991, president george h.w. bush took the royal couple to one of america's favorite pastimes -- a baseball game between the baltimore orioles and the oakland as. bill clinton and george w. bush met with the queen and prince philip without breaches of royal protocol. unfortunately, more recent presidents weren't so lucky. >> to her majesty, the queen. to the vitality of the special
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relationship between our peoples -- >> reporter: while toasting the monarch the a 2009 state dinner, president obama kept right on talking as the band played the british national anthem. and most recently, donald trump drew some raised british eyebrows when he walked ahead of the queen during their 2018 visit. only time will tell if the bi bibide -- bidens' visit will be as smooth as a cup of tea. >> i think the queen was trying to get around president trump at the time -- >> as quite a few people attempted to do. >> it's amazing the things you have to cover. how many presidents she met. >> that's amazing. what longevity. >> she looks good. >> she does. she does. well, we've got to go to weather now. let's just go. ♪
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he rose to fame along with his brother in one of britain's best-known bands. now noel gallagher's "oasis" is a recording studio or in the recording studio where he spent much of the pandemic. we'll talk to him about his decade-long solo career and he'll perform for us in our "saturday session." that's up next. you're watching "cbs this morning saturday." 4d
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♪ this morning on our "saturday session," noel gallagher's high-flying birds. gallagher is best known as co-founder of oasis, one of the bestselling rock bands of all time. a decade ago, he launched a solo
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career, and this month he celebrates the release of a double album of greatest hits. he'll perform for us in just a moment. but our anthony mason spoke with gallagher about his career and how he's been spending the long months of this pandemic. in the middle of the pandemic, noel gallagher finished building a new studio. it's been his refuge. >> creatively it's been the best ever because i've written lots and lot of songs and songs that were hatch finished, it's -- half finished, it's like i'll do that today because i don't have anything else to do. ♪ >> his new album, "back the way we came volume one," is a best of the first decade of noel gallagher's high-flying birds. the band he formed after he split with oasis. what do you see when you look back over those ten years? >> you know, i came out of a band with a very strong
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identity, very famous band, a band that fans really, really loved, and i didn't want my solo career to be a sugar-free version of that. you know, like -- like diet oasis. a great idea for a drink. somebody should write that down. ♪ >> with the high-flying birds, gallagher's music broke free from the oasis sound. has it been liberating somehow? >> in a sense i'm allowed to work at my own pace, and i'm not writing songs for a brand. you know, we were a stadium rock band. therefore, i was writing stadium rock songs, writing for the singer -- ♪ and after all ♪ >> that singer was his brother liam. you said recently that "wonder wall" is actually one of your least favorite oasis songs. >> well, my least favorite recordings. >> aha. >> the song is great. i mean, the song isn't -- still
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haven't finished it. i've longed for a pandemic back then. i would have finished it properly. one verse, one chorus, and that's it. it's ironic that the biggest album we made had half the songs. >> the 1995 album, "what's the story morning glory," sold more than 22 million copies worldwide. ♪ in a super nova in the sky ♪ >> you may know about this -- me and my brother fell out halfway through the recording of the album. >> yes, i've heard. >> i never quite got to finish them. just said, this will have to do. ♪ >> another track off that album, "don't look back in anger," is one of gallagher's favorites. ♪ don't look back in anger i heard you say ♪ >> what it's become is something that i could never, ever, ever
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have imagined. >> what is it you're especially proud of in the writing of it? >> i don't know. i touched on something -- what it is. >> in 2017, a terrorist bombing in gallagher's hometown, manchester, england, killed 22 people. during the memorial, a woman in the crowd began singing the song. ♪ >> that's when it hits you like, well, this song people have taken it into their lives, and it served a purpose that day. it's something i try not to think about because it will drive me mad of why -- what is it about that song. and i just put it down to something was in the they're night i wrote it in paris and fell out of the sky. and thankfully london -- >> we will have a special performance of "don't look back in anger" coming up. now from the double album "back the way we came volume one," here is noel gallagher's high
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flying birds with "we're on our way now." ♪ remember what might have been had i walked to you and said i'll see you later ♪ ♪ you were living the dream but the morning comes you'd gone to meet your maker ♪ ♪ good luck in the afterlife i hear the morning sun doesn't cast no shadow ♪ ♪ you chose to drift away but look at you now ♪
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♪ we're on our way now the truth can be so hard to swallow ♪ ♪ hey now cause you got the love you got the love lady ♪ ♪ i'm worn out cause with every little trick they try to drag you down you don't know why ♪ ♪ stood on top of the world and when the cold wind blowed you said the chill don't matter ♪ ♪ having the time of your life but when you take those pills does it make it better ♪
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♪ bulk in the afterlife i hear the morning sun doesn't cast no shadow ♪ ♪ you chose to drift away but look at you now ♪ ♪ we're on our way now the truth can be so hard to swallow ♪ ♪ hey now cause you got the love you got the love lady ♪ ♪ i'm worn out cause with every little trick they try to drag you down you don't know why ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ we're on our way now the truth can be so hard to swallow ♪ ♪ hey now cause you got the love you got the love lady ♪ ♪ i'm worn out cause with every trick they try to drag you down you don't know why ♪ ♪ ♪ cause you got the love you got the love lady you got the love you got the love lady ♪ don't go away. noel gallagher will perform an
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♪ take what you need cuz it hurts to picture me ♪ have a great weekend, everybody. >> we leave with more music from noel gallagher's high flying birds. >> some performance of an all-time classic, "don't look back in anger." snowden slip ins--
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♪ slip inside the eye of your mind don't you know you might find a better place to play ♪ ♪ you said that you'd never been bawl the things that you've seen will slowly fade away ♪ ♪ so i start a revolution from my bed cause you said the brains i have went to my head ♪ ♪ step outside the summertime's in bloom stand up beside the fireplace take that lock from off your face ♪ ♪ cause you ain't ever gonna burn my heart out ♪ ♪ so sally can wait she knows it's too late as she's walking on by ♪
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♪ her soul slides away but don't look back in anger i heard you say ♪ ♪ ♪ take me to the place where you go where nobody knows if it's night or day ♪ ♪ please don't put your life in the hands of a rock 'n' roll band who will throw it all away ♪ ♪ so i start the revolution from my bed cause you said the brains i have went to my head ♪ ♪ step outside the summertime's in bloom
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stand up beside the fireplace ♪ ♪ take that look from off your face cause you ain't ever gonna burn my heart out ♪ ♪ so sally can wait she knows it's too late as she's walking on by ♪ ♪ my soul slides away but don't look back in anger i heard you say ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ so sally can wait she knows it's too late as she's walking on by ♪ ♪ my soul slides away but don't look back in anger i heard you say ♪ ♪ so sally can wait she knows it's too late as she's walking on by ♪ ♪ my soul slides away but don't look back in anger don't look back in anger ♪
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♪ i heard you say at least not today ♪ >> oh, yeah. for those of you still with us, we have more from the lhigh flying birds. >> this is "holy mountain." ♪ ♪ dance dance if you do that dance i'm gonna let you join my one man band ♪ ♪ be my doll be my baby doll
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come get to know me like the back of your hand ♪ ♪ she fell she fell right under my spell ♪ ♪ on now pretty baby come on she danced she danced ♪ ♪ right into my hands oh now pretty baby come on ♪ ♪ be my butterfly wonderful you and i will shake it ♪ ♪ we can role in at the top of them all and if you feel the need i'll send you god good speed ♪ ♪ to meet your maker at the break of down ♪ ♪ get out of the doldrums baby now you liar i'll set you on fire ♪ ♪ get out of the doldrums baby now ♪
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