tv CBS News Roundup CBS July 2, 2024 2:42am-3:30am PDT
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al worth. - thanks, tom. now we're almost finished with our time here, but we do want to remind everyone at home that the team is available to take your call 24/7. so just because our time here's almost done, we're still available to take your call 24 hours a day, seven days a week. so if you or a loved one we're injured in an accident, i strongly recommend you don't go it alone. there are too many things that can go wrong and ruin your case, and you want to make sure that you get a great settlement fast. you need someone on your side looking out for you. - that's right, gina. it's so great to see everyone fielding the calls and really taking care of the viewers because that's what it's all about, all of you watching from home and making sure that you get the help that you need. the last thing you want is a car crash or any type of accident to ruin your life because we've seen it too many times before. so i'll remind you one last time, if you or someone you know are injured in an accident that was not your fault, call now.
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speak with a live person and get the help you need. this is a service to you, the viewers offering you a free consultation. so if you've been injured in an accident and you're sitting at home thinking of how are you going to pay those medical bills, we can help. as a matter of fact, we're here to help and we're here for you. so pick up the phone, we have agents available for you right now. they'll answer any questions you have, let you know how much your case is potentially worth. take care everyone, and thank you for watching. (bright upbeat music) should we take a beat and say, what is all of this doing? >> there's no legal basis for it. they cited no legal basis for it. >> reporter: louisiana attorney general liz murrill is one of 16 state attorneys general suing the administration over the pause. she thinks president biden is trying to appeal to climate voters.
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>> so do you think this is just politics in an election year? >> i do 100% believe it's just politics in an election year. >> do you worry about the potential climate impacts? >> no. >> why not? >> because that's not my job. i mean my job is to hold them accountable under the law. >> basically that's where they want to build their export terminal. >> reporter: john allaire is now fighting another lng plant that would be built right next to his property. >> that will be their fence line. >> reporter: he says these companies making billions selling gas overseas should think about more than just money. >> we need to conserve our natural resources for us. >> this feels like a big fight. goliath is literally over your shoulder. you think you can win this? >> i wouldn't be fighting it if i didn't think i could. >> reporter: ben tracy, cameron, louisiana. as the nation now moves into a cleaner energy future, people who live in coal country are left to find new ways to make a living. now there's a program in west virginia that's helping out.
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mark strassmann reports. >> reporter: in west virginia's hollers deep in appalachia, jobless coal miners now find a seam of hope. >> i wasn't 100% sure what i was going to do. >> reporter: a mine laid off james damron two years ago. >> i did know i didn't want to go back in the deep mines. >> reporter: instead, damron found coalfield development and its incoming ceo, jacob israel hannah. >> hope is only as good as what it means to put food on the table. >> reporter: the program is a community-based nonprofit, teaching a dozen job skills and personal ones -- construction, agriculture, solar installation. >> they're going through this process here. >> reporter: someone can get paid up to three years to learn all of them. >> that's a good deal. >> we want to make sure you have all the tools in your tool kit to know when you do interview with an employer, here's the things you lay out that you've learned. >> reporter: it's working. training more than 2,500 people, creating 800 new jobs, and 72
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new businesses. a program delivering with roughly $20 million in federal grants. >> instead of waiting around for something to happen, we're trying to generate our own hope. >> this isn't pie in the sky. this is nitty-gritty. >> meeting real needs where they're at. >> reporter: stephen spry is a grad. he's helping reclaim an abandoned strip mine, turning throwaway land into lush land. >> now i've kind of got a career out of this. i can weld. i can farm. i can run excavators. >> you can always find a job doing something. >> yeah, absolutely. >> reporter: with the program, james damron now works only above ground. >> that was a big part of my identity, was being a coal miner. leaving that, i kind of had to find myself again, i guess. >> and now you have. >> i absolutely have. >> reporter: appalachia is mining something new -- options. mining something new -- options. mark strassmann, i talenti mango sorbetto is made with a hundred percent real fruit. -with alphonso mangoes. -yeah, i know. -oh?
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and, yes, these days we call it breaking, not breakdancing, because that's what its practitioners, known as b-boys and b-girls, tend to use. folks like victor montalvo, aka b-boy victor, who will compete this summer for team usa. >> that's something we're trying to bring to the olympics, like that hip-hop flavor, you know? >> reporter: in fact, breaking runs in victor's family. one day when he was 6 -- >> my dad just busted out like a windmill. my uncle was doing head spins, and we were just like so amazed. >> reporter: victor was inspired, and so was his dad, who built him a practice studio in their backyard in florida. ♪ >> and he always tells me, like, i'm living through you. >> reporter: one of the things montalvo loves about the sport, you don't need any fancy equipment.
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in his case, just a simple floor he installed in his tiny venice, california, garage. >> i love when it's all rugged because honestly, that's what breaking comes from, you know? it comes from the streets. >> we started it on the concrete. i had a bald spot in the middle of my hair right here because i kept doing head spins. >> reporter: that do-it-yourself vibe is something breaking's pioneers know all about. of course we mean noel mangual, aka kid nice. chino "action" lopez. corey montalvo, aka icy ice. and london reyes, known as b-boy london. they came up with many of the sport's original moves in the bronx back in the late '70s and early '80s. >> he had a hole in his afro. >> i did. >> but wait. so you weren't putting any cardboard down at this point
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yet? >> breaking was developed on concrete. >> it was kind of like, you know, for example, you start a job and hope you get promoted. so you start with concrete. now we got promoted to crdboard. then we got promoted over to linoleum. >> and then we graduated and went on to wood. ♪ >> reporter: their crew, the new york city breakers, and others like them, blended older dances like rocking and popping with martial arts and anything else they thought looked cool. and whenever there was a party, they'd show up and then show off during the musical breaks on the records. hence, the term "breaking." but london reyes and chino lopez say this was more than just entertainment. this was a way to break out of an impoverished south bronx. >> keep in mind we're kids that are trying to find a way through this war zone that we had nothing to do with, but we have to live this. >> i've had a lot of friends
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that are not with us today, you know, unfortunately, whether it was violence, whether it was drugs. i mean it was there. but the path that we chose was to get away from all that. >> right. >> and stay away from all that. >> ladies and gentlemen, the new york city breakers. [ applause ] >> reporter: that path took them places they never could have imagined. ♪ like the kennedy center honors in washington, d.c., hosted by walter cronkite, where they impressed none other than charles osgood himself. >> so someday if somebody asks you, grandpa, how did they dance in your day, you'd just get right down and show them this. ♪ >> reporter: these days, breakers come from all over the world and all walks of life. and everyone is eager to see the dance take its next step on the olympic stage a month away. >> the next generation to carry
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this on for the next 40 years. >> it's just a dream of ours, and it's always been a dream of mine since 1983. >> if these kids don't give me a heart attack with all the moves they're doing these days. >> it's insane what they're doing today. >> oh, my god, these kids are like -- >> they're incredible. >> what we thought of back then, these kids are doing it today. >> right. >> so in speed, one, two, three, four, five, six. >> whoa. that was really fast. it's like this when you do the go-down. >> yes. you got it, yeah. >> i may have pulled something. >> reporter: breaking might make its only appearance at this year's summer olympics, and it might be b-boy victor's one chance to achieve that dream his dad had so many years ago of achieving international acclaim for a dance invented by kids
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just looking to escape their reality in the bronx all those years ago. >> i just want to show that it's evolved and it's a beautiful art form. it's a beautiful sport. you don't need much money to get into this sport, you know. you just need a dance floor and self-expression. ♪ i just can't wait for it to be at the olympics just to show, like, yo, guys, like we have a lot to offer. ♪ >> that was luke burbank reporting, and this is "cbs news roundup."
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liz neeley: you know, you've probably heard it said that some people have to hit rock bottom before they really come to the lord and give him their life. and that's what happened. i probably had a lot of anxiety at that point about my future, but as i began to study the word and a lot of dr. stanley's
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latinoamericana debaseball, the latin american baseball league. it's a scene not too different from the reality of what migrant communities look like all over the u.s. here, more than ten teams representing countries like venezuela, nicaragua, cuba, and other latin american countries come together. [ speaking in a global language ] >> reporter: "every player wears their country's colors says team venezuela's manager and the league vice president. he emigrated here nine years ago to the dfw area but tells me most other players have been in country for less than two years, and all of their immigration status vary. >> what is it that brings everybody together? what is it that you have in common? [ speaking in a global language ] >> reporter: "it's the love of baseball," he says. "back in our countries, it begins when we're young." >> why did you think it was important to form a sense of community for these migrants through baseball? [ speaking in a global language ] >> reporter: "i do it because most of them are here alone in
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this country," he tells me, "without family, and they've just arrived. >> why >> do you miss your country? do you miss home? "of course," says cuban national bore hez. they've hoped the door for me and helping me find work. social communities and even learning the culture. while playing together brings them all a sense of community, they can't help but miss all of those they've left behind. almost all of them say it's family and it's their friends they miss most. >> what is your dream? [ speaking in a global language ] >> reporter: he says his dream is to have his entire family living together in freedom. that dream may be out of reach with so many changing laws for policies and migrants and those seeking asylum in the u.s. it's a worry that isn't lost on them. [ speaking in a global language ] >> reporter: adriano says he doesn't fear for himself much but for his friends here under complicated.
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it's a reality that is constantly looming for so many of these players. but one that at least for nine innings on a sunday can be forgotten on this field. >> this is a field of dreams, a real one, no? [ speaking in a global language ] >> reporter: "yes, it is," he says, "because we've all dreamed of coming to this country, living here, and playing baseball." ken molestina, carrollton, texas. that's thank you's "cbs news roundup." be sure to tune in later for "cbs mornings." reporting from new york city, i'm shanelle kaul. ♪
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hello and thanks so much for watching. i'm shanelle kaul in new york, and here are some of the stories we're tracking on "cbs news roundup." a seismic shift as the supreme court rules former presidents are largely immune from prosecution. a whopping category 5 storm, hurricane beryl, is bearing down on the caribbean. and america hits the road in a busy july 4th holiday travel season. president biden is lashing out at a landmark supreme court ruling delivered on monday, granting former presidents broad immunity from criminal prosecution for official acts. the ruling sets a dangerous precedent, biden says, insisting it goes against the principles of america's first president, george washington. >> he believed power was limited, not absolute, and that power always resides with the people, always. now over 200 years later, with today's supreme court decision, once again it will depend on the
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character of the men and women who hold that presidency that are going to define the limits of the power of the presidency because the law will no longer do it. >> so it's a ruling that now means donald trump can claim broad immunity in his pending federal election interference case, a case that is now unlikely to be resolved before election day. cbs's nicole sganga reports from the supreme court. >> reporter: the supreme court decision marks the first time the justices have ruled that former presidents have substantial immunity from criminal prosecution for official acts. the 6-3 decision along ideological lines does not provide immunity for unofficial acts by a president. for now, the historic ruling extends a delay in the d.c. criminal case against former president donald trump, who faces charges he plotted to overturn his 2020 election loss. >> that means the chances of a trial before the election are zero at this point.
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>> reporter: president biden spoke about the ruling monday night. >> today's decision almost certainly means that there are virtually no limits on what a president can do. this is a fundamentally new principle, and it's a dangerous precedent. >> reporter: the district court overseeing the case against trump must now examine some of the allegations within the indictment to determine whether they fall within the scope of immunity. chief justice john roberts wrote for the conservative majority that the president may not be prosecuted for exercising his core constitutional powers. justice sonia sotomayor blasted the ruling in a scathing dissent, warning that it insulates the commander in chief from criminal prosecution no matter how he uses his official powers. >> the supreme court did not accept former president trump's argument that immunity requires the prosecution to be shut down entirely. >> reporter: on trump's social media network shortly after the decision was released, he posted, "big win for our
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constitution and democray. proud to be an american." nicole sganga, cbs news, the supreme court. >> and after that supreme court verdict, donald trump asked the new york judge in his hush money trial to set aside his guilty verdict. the former president's lawyers requested a delay in sentencing scheduled for later this month while the judge weighs the likelihood of trump's immunity. turning now to the weather, hurricane beryl is a powerful category 5 hurricane says the national hurricane center. packing winds of up to 160 miles per hour, storm trackers warn of catastrophic damage to the caribbean and mexico. earlier it made landfall in grenada as a category 4. cbs's tom hanson reported from montego bay. >> reporter: the caribbean is on high alert. hurricane beryl made landfall on grenada's care akkuyu island, packing catastrophic winds of 1 50 miles per hour and a
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life-threatening 6 to 9-foot storm surge. >> we have reports of extensive storm surge. we have reports of extensive loss of roof and damage to buildings. >> reporter: in nearby barbados, the storm surge caused flooding and destroyed about 20 boats in this bay. the storm is the first category 4 hurricane ever recorded in june, when it strengthened over the weekend. and it's the first to increase from a tropical storm to an intense category 4 storm in just 48 hours before september. hurricane beryl is on a mpath t jamaica and officials there are asking residents to prepare. >> we keep an eye on the forecast, and the forecast is saying that it is not supposed to be much. so we're just going to batten down and ride it out and see what happens. >> to give you an idea of how precedented this storm is, the average date of the first major hurricane is september 1st. experts say the power of beryl this early is driven by warm waters due to climate change
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that are fueling the storm. tom hanson, montego bay, jamaica. now to the new fallout from those two deadly 737 max crashes in 2018 and 2019. kris van cleave reports the justice department will soon criminally charge the aerospace manufacturer. >> reporter: boeing has to make a choice, take a plea deal or face the potential of a very public criminal trial. under the deal, boeing would plead guilty to a conspiracy charge stemming from the two deadly 737 max crashes, pay a fine, and spend three years on probation. lawyers for some of the victims' families called it another sweetheart deal for boeing and pledged to fight it. boeing announced plans to acquire the troubled maker of 737 fuselages spirit aerosystems in a deal worth more than $8 billion in stock and debt. kris van cleave, cbs news. well, if you're going away this holiday week, you're not alone. aaa is predicting more americans will be away from home this july 4th than ever before.
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cbs's jarred hill looked at how people are coping with all the crowds. >> reporter: daniela and william miramontes are heading to maine for the fourth, and this trip is extra special because they're also celebrating their son's birthday. he was born a year ago, prem premature. >> weighing a pound and a half. he was very small. he fit in the palm of our hands. we're very excited to be able to celebrate this big milestone. >> reporter: airports are expecting a crush of travelers in the coming days. one reason why, ticket prices are down 18% from last year according to the travel site hopper. >> we got a pretty good deal. we booked somewhat last minute, but it wasn't too bad. >> reporter: from thursday to sunday, the tsa screened more than 11.3 million people. that's a 5.3% increase from last year. >> as an agency nationwide, we are going to be extremely busy for the summer. okay. we are seeing record numbers since the pandemic. >> reporter: there could be a record number of drivers on the road as well. aaa predicts more than 60
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million people will drive 50 miles or more for the holiday. >> what we're seeing is that people are going to go on their trips no matter what, and especially this summer, we're seeing the numbers even bigger than last summer, which was also a record-setting summer. >> reporter: aaa says the worst traffic in metro areas will be on wednesday, july 3rd and sunday, july 7th as travelers head home. jarred hill, cbs news, new york. and when "cbs news roundup" returns, we'll take a closer look at the immigration crisis from the point of view of the migrants and the smugglers.
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immigration is taking a central role in this year's presidential campaign. and although illegal border crossings are down more than 40% recently, the business of human smuggling persists. dana jacobson spoke to one man who documented the treacherous journey to america from the point of view of the migrants and the smugglers. >> these are items that were collected over the years that migrants had left behind. >> reporter: anthropologist jason de leon spent five years combing the sonoran desert in arizona for his research on migration. >> this literally looks like a lost and found in front of me. >> yeah. this person was out there in kind of cheap knockoff nikes, and the soles have come -- you know, it gets so hot, the glue in your shoes will come apart. she's taken a bra strap and tried to reattach it to keep going. >> just to keep the sole of her shoe. >> yeah. >> reporter: de leon is the director of the coatson institute of ark ol ji at ucla. he's also the executive director
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of the undocumented migration project. >> you know, in the beginning people were very dismissive of this stuff. they called it trash, garbage. >> reporter: a nonprofit that raises awareness about issues faced by migrants around the world. like the federal u.s. border policy known as prevention through deterrence, which created more restrictions at urban border crossings. >> thousands of people have died in the arizona desert, in the south texas backwoods, since 1994 because of this policy that's funneling them to these places in hopes that if you have to walk seven days across a desert, you'll be deterred, possibly by death, which is why the role of smuggling becomes so important to get you through this gauntlet. >> reporter: de león first became interested at migration as an undergrad at ucla majoring in anthropology. >> one of the questions that we're asking and what perspectives can we use to understand? >> reporter: he's spent the last 16 years teaching while still finding time to keep learning about migration issues. his latest endeavor, a
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seven-year journey following human smugglers, also known as coyotes. first meeting them along the train tracks in southern mexico. part of the migrant path some take via freight train. >> almost everybody confuses human trafficking and human smuggling. and they're two very different things, right? someone who is trafficked has it happen against their will. someone who is smuggled is paying someone to move them across a geopolitical boundary. >> reporter: de león shares the stories of some of those smugglers in his latest book, soldiers and kings. >> these guys early on said oh, you had writte this book about migrants. why don't you talk to us? nobody ever asks us these questions. nobody ever wants to hear our stories. so i said, i'm here. >> do you think you had their trust right away? >> after a few days, yes. the thing that always creates that trust for me is when you come back. so i spent months with these
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guys, and then i said i'm going to come back again. when i ended up coming back again, they said, oh, you weren't lying. suddenly a million doors opened up for me. [ speaking in a global language ] >> reporter: one smuggler featured in the book is roberto, a young man from honduras attempting to get out of the business, who allowed de león to interview him on camera. >> and he'd come from this long story of just violence in his life and, you know, everything was sort of stacked against him. and yet he was so hopeful and really was trying to find a better way forward and get away from this whole thing of -- this whole business of smuggling. and in his attempts to do that, he gets murdered by someone else who i had been working with. it was such a heartbreaking thing. [ speaking in a global language ] >> and so i wanted people to know that he was important and that, you know, he was involved in smuggling, but he was so much
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more than that. >> hearing the empathy that you have for someone i think most people would say how do you have empathy for someone who is a human smuggler? >> part of my goal as an anthropologist is to create empathy and to have people understand that the world is a difficult place for most people, and we had these very simplistic understandings about these things. and i really wanted to complicate that. >> reporter: the business of human smuggling, according to the department of homeland security, is a multi-billion dollar industry run by criminal organizations intent on taking advantage of vulnerable people. the story de león tells is more complex. >> i can write a story about how they're the bad guys in this whole scenario and all they do is brutalize migrants. but if you think about the realities of it, if smugglers only brutalized migrants, the system wouldn't function. s i went into it telling myself that, you know, what can i find that's relatable? it's not trying to humanize smugglers. it's working from the assumption that they are human first and
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that they just happen to be in this brutal occupation. >> reporter: the low-level smugglers de león met said issues like poverty and gang violence had driven them out of honduras. the same issues many migrants also face. >> you talk about smuggling and i think what you write, it's violent. it exploits people, but that it's also a symptom of a larger problem. what is that larger problem? >> we need to think about why are people migrating in the first place? and, you know, why does the united states have an insatiable appetite for cheap, undocumented labor that we rarely acknowledge? and as long as you need the labor, and as long as climate is changing and making places unlivable, those smugglers are going to stay in business and make more money off this whole process. >> reporter: it's an industry that continues to grow as mierl encounters at the u.s.-mexico border hit record highs with people coming from as far away as africa, the middle east, and asia. >> people are coming from around the globe. they're coming up from south america through the darien gap.
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it's a window into the future as all those places become unliveable for different reasons, we're going to continue to see that mix of people coming up from the south to our doorstep. >> reporter: a future de león hopes can be made easier by considering different perspectives and the humanity of everyone involved. >> the approaches that we've been using to deal with these problems have clearly been ineffective for decades, and yet we just don't seem to want to get smarter about this stuff. i hope with this book that it's a way to undermine the simplistic framings of what the problem actually is. you can build whatever border wall you want. there are desperate people on the other side who are willing to die to save themselves, to save their family, and then there are smugglers who are willing to make a buck on that in all kinds of different ways. so that will just keep the system going forever. >> that was dana jacobson reporting. you're watching "cbs news roundup."
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emmanuel macron's centrist power base. that after her national rally party took a third of the vote in sunday's first round of parliamentary elections. president macron called these snap elections, hoping to rally voters against the far right. >> president macron made a colossal error of judgment. >> reporter: professor douglas weber says macron may have to share power with the national rally party. it is anti-immigration, wants to roll back the power of the european union, and has threatened to pull france out of nato. party president jordan bardella wants to pull back support for ukraine if he becomes prime minister. >> this would be a very good result for vladimir putin. it would be a very bad result for ukraine. >> reporter: thousands of left-wing supporters gathered in central paris to voice their concern at the far-right performance. the far right has been surging across europe. should it win in france, a warning. >> there will be a vacuum at the heart of europe, and no one or
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no other group of countries could conceivably fill the role that's historically been played by france and germany. and that's, of course, the main reason why so many people, so many observers, are extremely worried. >> reporter: the decisive final round is next sunday. macron has called on voters from macron has called on voters from across the political spectrum to this delectable knorr ramen noodle recipe will put an end to your drive-thru dinner rituals. throw that knorr bouillon in that tasty combo of delightful carrots and the rich touch of bok choy. make your own knorr taste combo. it's not fast food, but it's so good.
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day shopping online for things they have no intention of buying. it's called dream scrolling. bradley blackburn has more on this. >> reporter: for more than a century, new york's fifth avenue has been home to luxury stores with windows where shoppers eye expensive, glittery goods that remain just out of reach. >> you thoughtfully put these on your wish list. >> seeing what catches your eye and just really, like, dreaming. >> reporter: but today the glass that separates most hopeful buyers from their desires is on a smartphone, and window shopping has a new name -- dream scrolling. even if you've never heard of it, you've probably done it. looking online for things you might want to own. >> we're planning out our dream lives. if you can dream it, you can search it, and that's what people are doing. >> reporter: rebecca rick et is with power research. a new survey from her firm found americans dream scroll an average of 2 1/2 hours every day. that adds up to more than a full month of the year.
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some search for fashion. >> handbags and shoes, all day. >> reporter: for others, it's a new gadget. >> a lot of technology stuff. >> reporter: and plenty of people look at vacation spots. >> random resorts in mexico that -- and places i've never heard before. >> reporter: but many say it's time well spent. 7 in 10 believe dreamscrolling is an investment in themselves. >> what's interesting is that people say that it motivates them to be smart with their money because it helps them define their money goals, make smart decisions, and look forward to purchasing the things that bring them the most joy. >> reporter: scrolling for dreams with the hope they
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