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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  March 25, 2021 3:42am-4:00am PDT

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is working on legislation to expand broadband or create more science and technology opportunities for girls. that is probably better than with our husbands. i think we get the 51% on the husband side. let's take the 49% where we agree and that is where we need to put our work at. i would say avoid the high intensity disagreements we always have and don't have to be disagreeable when we agree. that is why people send us here and what they expect from their leadership. >> you all make it sound so easy in terms of a bipartisanship. what are you doing that some of your colleagues aren't? >> i think if you are asking where i think some of our other
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colleagues, unnamed, could improve i think the way that we disagree, sometimes it is disrespectful. >> bipartisan effort. >> reporter: years ago this retired senator started organizing bipartisan dinners just for women. >> i would love to see the whole senate do some dinners where you had to sit at tables with people you didn't talk to. that is the way that you build bridges to getting things done. >> reporter: the pandemic has taken the dinners off the table. covid is not the only challenge that had a profound impact. so did january 6. >> we saw the rioters climbing up the capitol wall and barricaded in our offices. >> i was on the floor. >> the moment to me is that they
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are taking the vice president out of here. that is when everything fell apart. i thought about 9/11. because i was here on 9/11. >> why don't you think that congress can rally around this. when you draw comparisons to 9/11, you look back at how the country rallied then. and on an issue of the magnitude, why the divide? >> on 9/11, we had an external force coming in on us. i would argue that we should go in a closed-door session and each person maybe share how they felt that day and it could give us a way to bring us together emotionally. >> both are clear-eyed about the challenges that are facing congress but believe there are
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areas where democrats and republicans can work together, even on big items like infrastructure and immigration which could be the overspending on a retinol cream? just one jar of olay retinol24 hydrates better than the $100 retinol cream. for smooth, bright skin or your money back. olay. face anything. and try new retinol24 max. do you have a life insurance policy you no longer need? now you can sell your policy, even a term policy, for an immediate
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so much back hair, should i get lazer? ♪ should he get lazer? ♪ ♪ do i wear too much cologne? ♪ ♪ should i shave my thinning dome? ♪ ♪ i've become my dad i'm like his clone ♪ ♪ you got questions, we got answers ♪ ♪ you got questions, we got answers ♪ ♪ we got you ♪ ♪ now at a store near you ♪ ordinary tissues burn when theo blows. so dad bought puffs plus lotion, and rescued his nose. with up to 50% more lotion puffs bring soothing softness and relief. a nose in need deserves puffs indeed. >> anyone remember mp3 players? these days you can store thousands of songs on your phone or computer or stream them in
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real time. a growing number of musicians complain that t3 versions of their songs do not do them justice. here is the story of one producer that is looking to change that. >> this is the most sensual fun that you will have that will not end you up in a 12-step program. >> reporter: what might be the best record player in the world in brooklyn, new york, began in an old clothing factory in rural pennsylvania. >> fleetwood p.a. is different than brooklyn. after international relations at princeton, he pursued a career as a documentary film maker, until he recognized his true passion was sound.
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he set off in a quest to build the finest sound amp-- >> the slates and woods from here the welding shop is right there. you are sitting on a treasure trove of materials and human know how and abilities. >> the quality of his work is almost as impressive as the sound that it produces. why is it needed? he says over the past several decades the quality of recorded music around the world entered a dark place. >> the problem is in technology things get better, cheaper, smaller, that works with things like computers but it does not
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work with sound. sound waves, they are our size. most of us hear mp3s. they took off with napster. why are mp3s so bad? >> 95% of the sound is gone. can you imagine watching a television set where 95% of the pixels are dark? but your brain and your ears are so much more sophisticated with sound. >> reporter: you say missing 95% of the sound. >> the reason you can have 10,000 songs on an ipod is because 95% of the information in the music is gone. it is compressed away. it does not come >> reporter: that is where the
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giant cone-shaped horns come in. it requires a way to amplify sound without electricity. many argue vinyl records are the purest way to listen to recorded music. people seem to be getting the message. last time for the first time since 1986, sales of vinyl out sold cds. turn tables can cost hundreds of dollars to $300,000. hit it.
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that is michael jackson's billie jean and the quality is like nothing you ever heard. >> we are making stuff a throw back to when sound really mattered and when it was the best that it ever was. >> for most people, music is background music. >> that is tragic. none of these artists made those to be background music. >> reporter: you hate talking about the prices. >> i do. >> we are in a culture where price is the product. people go it is hundreds of thousands thing. i don't want that. i want people to look at it and say that is cool looking. i wonder what it sounds like. >> reporter: does it bug you the vast number of people will never be able to afford that. >> i am working on that. >> reporter: thousands of
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dollars for equipment instead of hundreds of thousands. for weisselbe, music is a spiri experience. everyone listens to music and makes music everyone. what we have done because of our culture is reduced music to something that is just a shadow of what it was. >> reporter: what do you want your musical legacy to be? >> i just want people to realize what is possible.
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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freedom. it's at the core of who we are. the freedom to live without fear. to jog where we please. to wear a hoodie. the freedom to breathe. before we celebrate the freedom most americans have, we must fight for the freedom all americans deserve. because all lives can't matter, until black lives matter.
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>> a growing number of states allow any residents to sign up and get a coronavirus vaccination. >> have you had anymore thoughts of medications? >> reporter: helping the most vulnerable on the see >> why do you think the others are not wearing masks? >> they donre. it became so clear to me that something about it.ulatio >> reporter: they call themselves the sister circle.
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six african-american doctors chipping away at the vaccine inequities. >> we watched people in the community suffer and die needlessly. would you say that there are more people within african-american communities that want the shot and do not have access to it than those that are afraid of getting it? >> absolutely. >> people like 77-year-old mary johnson who tried for a month to schedule an appointment before connecting with the sister circle. so, she lost her brother to covid. >> i could not believe it when i happened. i wished he was still here.
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so far the sister circle has ut 9,200 doses at 17 churches. >> it is not just about vaccines anymore but looking at health care disparities and my hope is that it does not stop with the vaccine that we keep working until we have more equity when it comes to health care outcomes. >> reporter: it is about redeeming the soul of america. >> it is a galvanizing force like tke this is indeed what wee in to medicine for. this is why we are here. >> reporter: sisters who care, encircling those in need. >> that is the overnight news for this thursday. for some the news continues and
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others check back for cbs this morning later. it's thursday, march 25th, 2021. this is the "cbs morning news." facing the media. president biden will hold his first press conference today. the challenging issues and tough questions. breaking developments on astrazeneca's covid vaccine. revised data shows the dosage is not as effective as first reported. inside the shelter. reporters get a first look at a migrant facility that's holding more than 700 unaccompanied more than 700 unaccompanied teenagers. captioning funded by cbs good morning. good to be with you. i'm anne-marie green. for the

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