tv CBS News Roundup CBS November 27, 2024 2:42am-3:30am PST
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americans have reported using them. >> in january when i took my first shot, my official weight was 236.6. >> reporter: and you lost how much? >> i am down to 170.2. so a total of over 27% of my body weight lost. >> reporter: west virginia has america's highest obesity rate. more than 40%. and its second highest rate are prescriptions for these obesity drugs. but without insurance or subsidies, the shots can be wildly unaffordable, especially here in america's third poorest state. in 2020, west virginia launched a pilot program to subsidize the drugs for public employees. teachers, city workers, law enforcement officers all eligible. swisher qualified for the program through her husband. her copay, $25 a month. and it worked. >> these medicines are absolutely a game changer. >> reporter: dr. laura davison directs the weight management
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programs at the west virginia university health system. it oversees care for hundreds of patients in this pilot program. >> they never really realized how much their body was fighting them with weight loss until they had a tool that helped that. >> reporter: this class of medications called glp-1s can cost more than $1,000 a month out of pocket. in march, the state insurance agency funding the west virginia program announced it was over. not enough supply and too expensive, a painful pause for people like laurie osborne. experts say it's a mistake. all states pay eventually for obesity's complications. >> had i known then what i know now, i don't think i would have done it. >> reporter: because it was false hope? >> because it's false hope. and it's so hard on you emotionally. >> reporter: osborne has lost 70 pounds and six sizes in her clothes. >> even with the coupon, i think wegovy is $650 a month.
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that would feed my family for almost a month. >> reporter: how does that make you feel? >> mostly, i am just mad. >> reporter: and the thought of going back to where you were? >> it is so depressing. it is just demoralizing. >> reporter: osborne has now turned to a non-fda approved discounted version of the drug from out of state. >> this is all of the medication i have left. >> reporter: swisher started rationing her remaining medication. she takes a shot every two weeks instead of one. >> every time i take a shot, i calculate in my head how much i have left. >> reporter: this supply will eventually run out. >> oh, absolutely. >> reporter: and that? >> that terrifies me. i don't know what's going to happen. >> reporter: swisher says it feels cruel. she suddenly craving hope. for "eye on america," mark strassmann in morgantown, america.
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sounds like you need to vaporize that cold. nyquil vapocool? it's nyquil plus a rush of vicks vapors. ♪ vapocooooool ♪ nyquil vapocool. the vaporizing night time, sniffling, sneezing, coughing, best sleep with a cold, medicine. for a lot of travelers, waiting to board the plane can be a frustrating experience, especially when some passengers try to jump the line to get to their seats. well, one airline is now using artificial intelligence to crack down. kris van cleave explains. >> you're good to go, sir. >> thank you so much. >> reporter: as american airlines rolls out a new boarding system to 100 airports
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ahead of thanksgiving -- >> anyone able to assist in case of emergency. >> reporter: it's making a lot of noise. >> oh, there, we have a new system. >> reporter: this subtle one -- [ tone ] >> reporter: causing all the buzz. it alerts the gate agent a flyer is trying to board before their group is called. >> oh, you're in group 6. we haven't called group 6 yet. thank you so much. >> reporter: the crowd bum rushing the gate door when lines start has been dubbed gate lies though some airlines simply call it gate crowding. . >> we had heard for a while from customers this is something really important to them. >> reporter: american airlines vp sarah rath. >> you tested this in several cities. have you noticed did it speed up boarding? >> we're seeing an improvement in the boarding flow. and they're better able to manage the flow of customer boarding overall. it's improved customer service for all of our customers. >> reporter: the audible cues
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roll out nationwide with a new set of announcements. >> please know our scanners will not permanent boarding if your group has not been called. >> reporter: reminding flyers to wait their turn. and flyer shanna braim likes it. >> hopefully it won't be so crowded so you can get in when it is your lane. >> reporter: so does analyst henry harteveldt. >> i believe this can make the boarding faster and more fish efficient, and as a result, better for everybody. >> reporter: priority boarding is a coveted perk of frequent flyers, and something airlines can sell. i know there are some exceptions to the new policy. active duty military and groups that are traveling together can still board together. american plans to further expand this to additional airports in the coming months. kris van cleave, cbs news, newark, new jersey. well, if your holiday travel plans include a trip to hawaii, you might want to think twice about a side trip to maui. the island is still picking up the pieces after last year's devastating fire that destroyed the town of lahaina and killed more than 100 people.
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tracy smith paid a visit to maui to visit one of the island's most famous bar owners who vows to bring his place back to life. ♪ >> reporter: the island of maui is a mere dot in the enormity of the vast pacific ocean. but it's not hard to see why millions visit every year and why there are some who never want to leave. ♪ fleetwood mac founder mick fleetwood fell in love with maui decades ago and put down deep roots. >> long story, a long love affair. >> reporter: but it really is your heart and your home? >> uh-huh. people often think oh, how often are you on maui, you know. this is my home, no other place. >> reporter: as a young man, he dreamed of a place, a club where he could get his friends
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together and 12 years ago, he made it happen in the west maui city of lahaina. fleetwood's on front street. the menu was eclectic. they served everything from biddy's chicken, just like fleetwood's mom biddy made it, to dough desserts dreamed up by his children. ♪ it was also a place where mick and friends could play. >> we created, i created a band of people under a roof. >> reporter: at fleetwood's. >> instead of a traveling circus, it was a resident circus that at fleetwood's on front street. >> reporter: and then in august of 2023, the music stopped. >> we begin tonight with wildfires in hawaii that have people fleeing for their lives. >> reporter: a wind-driven fire tore through western maui, killing more than 100 people and consuming more than two thousand buildings.
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fleetwood was in los angeles when the fire started, and he hurried back to a scene of utter devastation. and his beloved restaurant? this charred sign was about all that was left. thinking was fleetwood's on front street. amen. >> reporter: amen. i understand you're not wanting to be me, me, me, and especially in light of the lives that were lost, the homes that were lost. you don't want the make too big of a deal out of a restaurant. >> no. >> reporter: but at the same time, this was your family. this was your home. >> correct. >> reporter: that it must have been a huge loss. >> it was a huge loss. and in the reminding of it, that wave comes back. today, knowing we're doing this, okay, this is going to be a day. >> reporter: we talk a walk with mick down the street where his place once stood. the last time he was here, the
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place was still smoldering. >> literally, parts of it were still hot. >> reporter: oh, gosh. >> and dust -- >> reporter: like smoking still? >> yeah. >> reporter: more than a year later, the lahaina waterfront is still very much a disaster zone. the decision what to do with the land is still up in the air, and the priority is housing for the displaced residents. but mick fleetwood says he's determined to rebuild. just maybe not in the same place. when you picture the new fleetwood's in your mind, what do you picture? >> for me it has to encompass being able to handle and play music. >> reporter: there has to be music? >> there has to be music. we had it every day. that's a selfish request. >> reporter: but before anything is rebuilt, there is still a massive cleanup that needs to be completed here. >> we will see. you have a blank scope to paint
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on. and there is a lot of painting to do. you have to be careful even in this conversation of going how sad that was when really it's about yes, but now we need this. in the end, you go like it happened. and what's really important is absorbing maybe how all these things happened and can they be circumnavigated to be more safe in the future and be more aware? of course that's part of it. but the real, real essences is the future. ♪ >> reporter: his ukulele is one of the few things that survived the fire, and mick fleetwood is hoping his dream survives as well.
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while very few will try their hand at one historic after-dinner treat. luke burbank got a lesson. >> we're going to make baked alaska. >> we're going to be making a baked alaska. >> reporter: it seems like once a generation, chefs rediscover the kind of odd old-fashioned delight that is the baked alaska. >> a majestic classic that when conquered is truly the mark of a master chef. >> reporter: and while it can be hard to find on a menu, one place you can get it is at castaway, perched high above burbank, california, all thanks to pastry chef alissa garcia. when you come in and you see that there is like 20 baked alaskas ordered, are you like this is going to be a listening long day? >> not at all. it's easy. >> reporter: garcia's version of easy, a 12-hour saga with brown sugar cake layered with frozen bananas and two different types of banana ice cream. >> it works best. >> reporter: sorry. i'm slowing you down. >> it's okay.
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>> reporter: then comes the meringue. and remember, this is ice cream, the flames. the final product, a crunchy warm exterior and frosty cold interior. >> it's a paradoxical food. you've got hot and you've got cold. and they're not supposed to co-exist. >> reporter: food historian jim chevalier says there is no shortage of tall tales about the dessert and none of them are true. >> when foods come along, people don't notice them. they make them. they eat them. a lot of the history is not done by historians. it's maintained by practitioners, by bakers and cooks. >> reporter: although chevalier says people were eating baked ice cream early in the 19th century, the first recipe for the dish that would become the baked alaska wasn't published until 1894 in a cookbook by charles ranhofer. the chef here at delmonico's in new york city thought to be america's first fine dining restaurant.
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currently owned by this guy, dennis turcinovic. >> think about the amount of labor that was put into the baked alaska to make ice cream. you had the ice trade, wood metal churns. it was pretty complicated to make the dish. >> reporter: more than 100 years later, it's still challenging chefs. proof positive maybe that everything old can new again. >> it looks delicious. i'm hungry now. luke burbank reporting, thank you so much. and that's today's "cbs news roundup." reporting from the cbs broadcast center in new york city, i'm shanelle kaul. ♪
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hello, and thank you so much for staying up with us. i'm shanelle kaul in new york, and here are the top stories on "cbs news roundup." israel agrees to a ceasefire deal with lebanon's hezbollah militia after nearly 14 months of fighting. president-elect donald t trumps tariffs coming from mexico, canada and china. and a cbs poll asks the question will political disagreements ruin this year's thanksgiving? we begin with major diplomatic breakthrough to stop the cross-border fighting between israel and hezbollah in lebanon. however, just a few hours before the deal was reached, israel hit lebanon's capital city beirut with a wave of air strikes and said hezbollah has launched at least 60 rockets into israel on tuesday. cbs' natalie brand reports from the white house on new details
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of that ceasefire agreement. >> reporter: in a 10-1 vote, israel's security cabinet approved a ceasefire deal with hezbollah and lebanon in a deal the u.s. helped broker. >> lasting security for the people of israel and lebanon cannot be achieved only on the battlefield. and that's why i directed my team to work with the governments of israel and lebanon to forge a ceasefire to bring a conflict between israel and hezbollah to a close. >> reporter: under the deal, over the next 60 days the army and state security forces will take control and israel will gradually withdraw its remaining forces from lebanon. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu said he will enforce the agreement, but also warned the jewish state maintains its right to act against any threat to its security, a message reiterated by the u.s. >> if hezbollah or anyone else breaks the deal and poses a direct threat to israel, then israel retains the right to
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self-defense consistent with international law. just like any country when facing a terrorist group pledged to that country's destruction. >> president biden also said in coming days the u.s. will make another push with partners in the region to try and reach a ceasefire deal in gaza, hoping the agreement between hezbollah and israel provides new momentum. >> hamas has a choice to make. their only way out is to release the hostages, including american citizens, which they hold. >> reporter: the biden administration says it's in communication with the incoming trump administration. a spokesman says president-elect donald trump has been crystal clear that his support for israel and commitment to peace in the middle east is steadfast. natalie brand, cbs news, the white house. a trade war could be brewing between the u.s. and its three largest trading partners. president-elect donald trump is threatening to hit all goods from mexico and canada with a
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25% tariff and an additional 10% on imports from china. trump sites immigration and the fentanyl crisis, but americans could end up paying the price. here is cbs' kelly o'grady. >> reporter: from avocados to automobiles to everyday tools, you could end up having sticker shock. >> our prices would go up. we would be paying more for every object that came from china, mexico, canada. therefore we'd have to put that on to the customer. >> reporter: debbie owns new york city-based columbus hardware, which has been around for decades. almost everything in her store is imported. >> this is our hardware section. 95% of this comes from china. >> reporter: and what about canada and mexico? what about some of those? >> some of these bulbs come from mexico. but a lot of them come from china. but a lot of the cleaning supplies come from mexico. that would affect your everyday customer. >> reporter: the three countries targeted are mesh's three largest trading partners.
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last year all together, they accounted for $1.3 trillion in imported goods. china is key for items like electronics and furniture. mexico for produce and plastics. canadian exports include aluminum and lumber. for example, analysts predict the average price of a car coming from canada or mexico could increase as much as $3,000 with a 25% tariff. debbie also warned retailers like amazon can keep prices lower because of their size. as a small business, she could lose those buyers forever. >> if they look at the prices here, and if we're not pretty even with those competitors, they won't buy. >> reporter: one argument for tariffs is leverage. there is a key trade deal with mexico and canada up for review in 2026. leaders of these nations warn a trade war could hurt everyone, but both the canadian prime minister and the mexican government have indicated a willingness to talk. kelly o'grady, cbs news. in america's super charged
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political climate, spending thanksgiving with friends and family could be a social minefield. a brand-new cbs news poll looks at how americans plan to approach this holiday's tabletop discussions. cbs' anthony salvanto has more. >> so this thanksgiving, what do americans say they're most thankful for? we asked in our cbs news poll, and the top answer was family and friends. also, for many, their health, freedom, faith. but you will notice that politics, even in this big election year, is way down the list. and that relates when we ask people what are you going to talk about at thanksgiving? are you going to talk about politics or try to avoid politics? seven in ten say they're going to try to avoid it. now look at what happens if we break that down between folks who voted for kamala harris and folks who voted for donald trump. majorities of each say they're going to try to avoid it, though trump voters are a little more
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likely to say that they'll talk about it. maybe they feel like, well, they won, and they feel like they have something good to talk about. but it also matters who they're gathering at thanksgiving with. so let me show you this. there is a lot of folks on either side that are gathering with people who mostly voted the same way that they did. almost half of harris voters say they're going to be eating dinner with mostly harris voters. trump voters mostly with trump voters. but i will tell you that for the folks who are going to gather where they think people voted for a mix of either candidate or they're just not sure, they're less likely to talk about it. so when i show you this, you've got more people who say that they're going talk about politics when they're with people who voted they think the same way they did, otherwise they're going to try to avoid it. having said all that, what is it that people are grateful for? well, look at the similarities
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here. very even numbers among both harris and trump voters who are especially grateful for their family and friends. a little something that they share even in what many people think is a polarized country after this election. a little bit of commonality there. happy thanksgiving. >> and to you too, anthony salvanto. thank you. australia could be ready to ban young children from social media. australian lawmakers approved a bill that would fine social media platforms unless they delete accounts held by children under 16. it's now up to the australian senate to pass that bill into law. straight ahead on "cbs news roundup," we'll take you on a cross-country trek for first hand look at a
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35 singles, and is one of the most streamed artists ever. what the world didn't know, was the depth of his struggle with addiction and mental health. at the height of his fame we lost him... ...to an accidental drug overdose. ♪[music plays]♪♪ i'm carmela wallace. i started live free 999 to remove the stigma and normalize conversations around mental health and substance abuse. i want to ensure that no other parent or loved one faces what i've faced. go to livefree999.org to find resources and learn more. if you, or someone you know, need urgent support, text lf999 to 741741. ♪
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this is "cbs news roundup." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. the thanksgiving holiday rush is in full swing. aaa expects nearly 80 million people will travel at least 50 miles over the next six days. that would set a new thanksgiving record. another record about to be broken, the number of passengers traveling by air. keeping all these planes on schedule takes an incredible amount of coordination and planning. kris van cleave traveled across the country with southwest airlines to show us just one day in the life of a commercial airliner. >> good morning in the gate area. >> hours before we met maura mcguinness on her flight home to california -- >> do you give any thought to all of the other places this plane goes in a day? >> not until i sat next to you. >> reporter: captain ed evans woke up southwest plane 8921 at bwi, well before dawn. over the next nearly 19 hours,
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this year-old 737 max 8 will take us nearly 4,000 miles from baltimore to denver to long beach, then on to reno, las vegas, sacramento, and back to sin city. >> the planes start in 118 airports in which we operate every day and could end up somewhere different. >> do you feel extra pressure this time of year? >> we'red to go and looking forward to the holiday travel season. >> reporter: southwest has more than 4,000 flights a day as the airline expects to fly 7 million people to or from thanksgiving. >> the best thing about going away is coming home. >> reporter: each stop takes on the feel of a sprint inside and out to get the next flight ready to leaf on time. >> have a good trip, okay? >> try to beat every time. we have a 45-minute turn. it becomes very important to be prompt. >> reporter: above us it's about getting the passengers on and off the plane. down here it's about loading all
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the bags so they can get this plane back out on the runway and in the air. >> reporter: as we cross the continent, our crew changes. the flight attendants swap out twice. our pilots once in reno. and in denver, husband and wife team andrew witmer and george had just minutes to restock the plane with snacks and drinks. >> we're very competitive. >> we try to race each other. >> reporter: all while deplaning and boarding passengers and bags across the six different flights. among the flyers, katie jones taking 3-year-old clark to disneyland for his birthday. what you most excited about seeing at disneyland? >> what do you want to go see? >> mickey. >> mickey. you want to do the toy story ride? >> reporter: it's a delicate dance full of variables that all have to come together to get a flight out on time. southwest's ceo bob jordan. >> running an airline is very complex. everything wants to stay in motion all the time. the minute you stop or slow down, things are out of place.
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>> the flight is en route from reno to las vegas. >> reporter: from inside southwest's network operation center in dallas, sarah hugal is working to keep things in place during ow cross-country journey, watching for areas of turbulence, bad weather or airport backups that could delay us. >> we can see pretty much anything they're going to encounter and anticipate things that happen. >> reporter: as day turns to night, plane 8921 stays right on schedule, right through its last stop of the day. >> view is off. battery. >> reporter: the plane's night off is pretty short, about seven hours. any maintenance that needs to happen will occur then before it starts loading up passengers and moving about the country all over again. team work makes the plane work. >> kris van cleave at new york's la guardia airport. stay with us. "cbs news roundup" will be right back. wanna know a secret? more than just my armpits stink. that's why i use secret whole body deodorant. everywhere. 4 out of 5 gynecologists
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would recommend whole body deodorant which gives you 72 hour odor protection. from your pits to your... [spray noise] secret whole body deodorant. giving tuesday. giving tuesday. giving tuesday. giving tuesday is a global effort that encourages people to do good. this year, please support shriners children's™ because when you do, you're not just giving to a hospital. you're helping change the life of a kid like me and me and me. so today, i'm asking you to join with us in focusing on what is truly important. helping kids in need right now and into the future. please call or go to loveshriners.org. thanks to a generous donor, your gift will have three times the impact in the lives of kids like me. i love it here. they understand what it's like to be me. it makes me feel like i'm not really alone. they love what they do here. and i can tell.
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it's love, it really is. the amazing work the doctors and nurses do is only possible because of people like you. because the amazing people who support them. they bring love to so many kids in need every single day. will you send your love to the rescue® today? when you say yes to giving just $19 a month, only $0.63 a day, we'll send you this adorable love to the rescue® blanket as a reminder of all the kids you're helping every day. and for giving tuesday, your gift the very first month will be tripled. without your donations there'd just be so many kids that aren't able to walk, run, ride bikes, and live their dreams. this is my home, a place where you can get the best care anywhere. please call or go to loveshriners.org. thanks to a generous donor, every dollar
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you give for giving tuesday will go three times as far, to help more kids. thank you. strong enamel is your best defense against acid erosion and cavities. that's why i recommend the pronamel active shield because it will strengthen your enamel and create that shield around it. i'm excited for this product. i think patients are really going to like it. interest in women's sports is soaring, and it's not just the wnba. worldwide revenue from major women's sports is now on track to top $1 billion this year for the first time ever. adriana diaz reports on what's driving this momentum. >> let's get on. >> reporter: growing up in michigan, olympian abbie rock. >> you're better than i
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expected. >> reporter: always played on boys' teams. >> i just wanted to grow up and play in the nhl. and then you get a little older and obviously that's not very realistic. >> reporter: but that reality has changed. >> abbie rock makes no mistake. >> reporter: rock is a forward for the new york sirens in the newly formed women's professional hockey league. >> ooh, right on the take. >> thank you. >> reporter: how important is it as a young hockey player as a kid to see people doing this professionally? >> i think it's huge. hockey is a predominantly white sport and always has, and me being indigenous. that's one of the main things a player like me wants to push is hockey really is for everybody. >> reporter: the pwhl is one of five women pro leagues to launch in just the last five years. >> clark -- >> reporter: some call this excitement the caitlin clark effect. others call it long overdue. it's been a quarter century since this world cup victory catapulted women sports. >> seeing brandi chastain take her shirt off and slide on her
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niece and everyone was like wow. they sort of disappeared until the next women's world cup or perhaps the olympics. >> reporter: jessica berman is the commissioner of the national women's soccer league, where fan attendance is up more than 30% since she started in 2022. >> three years ago, we sold an expansion team for $5 million. and most recently, angel city was sold for $250 million. we've debunked any notion that investing in women sports is a charity. >> it's nice, and she's done it again! >> reporter: fans are interested in this content. they're prepared to buy tickets, to watch on tv. >> reporter: but not all the numbers add up. >> she shoots, she scores. >> reporter: the average women pro soccer salary is slightly above $50,000 a year. the men's average is nearly 600,000. in the nba, the average salary is $9.6 million a year. the wnba average about 100,000. one reason, no pro women's
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league is profitable. but jeanie buss, the controlling owner of the lakers says give it time. >> i think there is a lot of investors that will invest in women's sports hoping that it will get to that point. i am an investor in what's called wow, women of wrestling. we're close to break even, but we haven't posted a profit yet. >> get low. come up like this and hope i can send you flying. >> reporter: what would little abbie say if she saw you right now? >> i think so she would think it was really cool seeing i can still do what i love at this age, and this is my job, she would be thrilled. >>
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try new robitussin soft chews. packed with the power of robitussin... in every bite. easy to take cough relief, anywhere. chew on relief, chew on a ♪ robitussin ♪ well, it's thanksgiving weekend. the holiday meal would not be complete without some tasty bread and butter. you can get fresh bread from your favorite local bakery. but if ■you wantthe finest butner the nation, you'll have to travel to vermont just to get a taste. faith saley took a trip. ♪ >> reporter: these cows might not seem particularly unique -- >> this is laura. >> hi, laura. >> that's lilly there looking at the camera. >> reporter: until you learn what they're churning out. do you have any idea what amazing butter you make? the butter made here at animal farm creamery in shoreham, vermont can't be found in a grocery store. it's sold almost exclusively to
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fine dining restaurants around the country. from per se in new york to the inn at little washington in virginia, it's widely considered the cream of the crop. >> i actually have heard from people who have eaten it, and they say it's changed them. and it's great to hear that. i'm not quite sure how. >> don't give away our secret. >> reporter: for hillary hague and her husband ben, making butter is a family affair. they're the second owners of the business founded in or well, vermont. the creamery's name "animal farm" winks at the 1945 george orwell fable. how would you describe this butter to someone who has never tasted it before? >> well, it has this very light mouth feel, and then it has a very sweet taste to it too. it's an experience that involves aroma and texture and flavor. >> reporter: so this is where it
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all happens, in this little room? >> yeah. well, this is where all the butter is made. but, of course, it starts with the cows. >> reporter: here the cultured cream from the cow milk is churned into golden pacific northwest. paste. once those spheres roll into restaurants, they're reshaped, salted, and served. >> with the winter firmness, comes a higher butter fat, reaching into the high 80s. >> reporter: here at san francisco's acyeuerello, they love the butter so much they even gobble up updates from the farm and knows the cows by name. >> rutebaga, she is my favorite. >> reporter: chefs pay a pretty penny at more than $20 per pound. one store even resales it for $60 a pound. >> it's costing me like $17 a
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pound to make the butter. and at the end of the day, i'm making on a good year like $7 an hour. >> reporter: oh, my gosh. >> so every piece of the farm that goes into this, it costs a lot to make the butter this way. >> reporter: but hillary hague says she's happy with the final product any way you slice it. >> we love this lifestyle, and it works for us to spend all of our time working to make this butter. >> reporter: do you think people taste the love? >> i think so. yeah. i mean, i hope so. >> that was faith saley in vermont. stay with us. you're watching "cbs news roundup."
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