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tv   CBS News Roundup  CBS  November 28, 2024 2:42am-3:30am PST

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americans statewide and ravaging the red woods for lumber. what happened to the land as a result? >> everything was extracted that, you know, was marketable. we've always had this really intricate relationship with the landscape, and we've hunted. we've fished. we've gathered, and those are all management tools. >> reporter: now generations later, 125 acres bordering redwood national and state park will be handed back to the you're rocks. where we're sitting right now just a few years ago was covered in asphalt? >> yes. >> reporter: they paved paradise. >> they paved paradise. >> reporter: paul is with the nonprofit save the red woods. it purchased the land from an old timber mill with the idea of giving it to the national parks service. >> we began to realize perhaps a better alternative would be to transfer the land back to the yurok tribe. no one knows this land better. they have been stewarding this land since time immemorial.
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>> reporter: that stewardship includes cleared burns to control vegetation. a practice once outlawed but now recognized as essential in preventing catastrophic fires. >> native populations have been using fire as a management tool. we'd like to see that practice return. >> reporter: these red woods are some of the most effective carbon storers on the planet. a single tree can remove up to 250 tons in its lifetime. that's the equivalent of removing nearly 200 cars from the road an entire year. another jewel of the ecosystem, sa salmon. the tribe is rebuilding the creek to restore its population. >> you have salmon who provide for humans, but they also provide for other animals. when they spawn and die, they put nutrients back in the ground. everything has this balance and this reciprocal way. >> reporter: a balance that will come through the yurok's partnership with save the red woods league and the national park service.
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>> we understand some of the mistakes we made as the federal government. it's a chance to begin the healing. >> reporter: for national parks director chuck sams, this partnership is personal. >> we've been writing our histories simply. there is the native american history and the american history. this is a chance to write history together. >> reporter: of the 431 parks managed by the national park service, 109 of them now have formal costeward agreements with indigenous tribes, 43 more on the way. >> i really hope it symbol ozone as coming home of yurok people and really connecting with our landscape. >> reporter: returning home and restoring balance in this land of giants. of giants. fo 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.
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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. it's love, it really is. the amazing work the doctors and nurses do is only possible because of people like you.
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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 you give for giving tuesday will go three times as far, to help more kids. thank you.
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oh... stuffed up again? so congested! you need sinex saline from vicks. just sinex, breathe, ahhhh! what is — wow! sinex. breathe. ahhhhhh! the surviving members of the grateful dead will take center stage next month as they become kennedy center honorees. one of the band's original members, bassist phil lesh died last month. he was 84. just five days later the rest of the living original members sat down for a chat with cbs' anthony mason. >> reporter: phil was originally supposed to be here today. >> yeah. i was hoping to play with him one more time.
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that was my sadness on that. i know he wanted to play with us again too. >> reporter: was that in the plans? >> yeah. >> we were kicking it around. in fact, we were going to get together and kick some songs around tomorrow. >> reporter: we sat down with bobby weir, bill kreutzmann, and mickey hart at the great american music hall in san francisco. the city where the grateful dead got its start. ♪ cooking like a doodah man once told me got to play your hand ♪ >> reporter: phil in his autobiography described the music that you all made together as some kind of genre-busting rainbow polka dot hybrid mute turner. >> that was close. >> that about sums it up. >> yeah. ♪ >> reporter: a charter member of the group, lesh had studied classical violin and jazz trumpet when jerry garcia brought him into the band in
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1965. when jerry invited him to join the band, he didn't actually play bass. >> no, he didn't. >> he didn't. >> we tested him. we gave him a gibson four-string, a little hard body gibson four string. he mastered that thing in a day. >> phil was a classical musician. he read music. ♪ ♪ just a box of rain, water, believe it if you needed it, if you don't just pass it aon ♪ >> reporter: each of you said in the statements you put out that he changed your life. >> you know, i owe so much to the stuff that phil taught me or turned me on to. >> phil turned me on to indian classical music. that was a major thing in my life. >> but we developed this language that only we spoke really. >> yeah, he taught us basically how to be free. >> reporter: he taught you how
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to be free? >> how to play free and not have to play in any set, fixed way. because he was a very unique bass player. it would help us be more improvisational. >> i think it's phil's line is when it's all working, you open a valve. >> you can look at that metaphor, because it justs for out. ♪ the only to say ♪ >> reporter: the grateful dead breck up after jerry garcia died in 1995. ♪ i will get by ♪ >> reporter: but in 2015, lesh joined the three at fare thee well at a series of concerts celebrating the band's 50th anniversary. there had been hopes all four might reunite again on the 60th anniversary next year. >> we just don't have enough to put a band together right now. >> well, not the three of us. i mean, we have to have other musicians join us. and we have some favorite
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musicians, you know. >> were you planning to do this next year for the anniversary? >> yeah, i was. i was hoping that we could do it for the 60th would be fun. >> reporter: we were going to see where it goes. but we were just going to play the four of us. and now there is only three of us. >> right. now it's different. >> yeah. that's different. ♪ >> that was anthony mason with the grateful dead. turning now to thanksgiving. the holiday feast would not be complete without some freshly baked bread. and as martha teichner reports, some of the tastiest bread in the world has been centuries in the making. ♪ >> reporter: nashville calls itself music city. no secret that it's the capital of country. but who knew that not ten minutes from the city's night
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life, in this nondescript shopping center, you'll find the capital of little kurdistan, where you'll also find an ancient marvel, their bread. where you can buy at the market. how important is bread? >> they cannot live without bread. >> reporter: bread nearly identical to some of the oldest bread in the world as it was made more than 4,000 years ago. in what was once mesopotamia. it's where the kurds are from. they're spread mostly across modern iraq, iran, syria, and turkey. the late iraqi dictator saddam hussein spent more than 20 years trying to obliterate iraq's kurds, killing thousands.
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millions were displaced. >> i just took chance. i said i will live. i don't care. >> reporter: eventually, he ended up in nashville, where more than 20,000 kurds now live. they began arriving in the 1970s. where do we start? >> we start with making dough. >> reporter: and brought their ancient bread with them. traditionally, hand-made by women. >> well, this is i bread one guy, he goes i can make bread. after one week, i have to tell him sorry, nobody would buy it. people came to that window. they look at it. nah. >> reporter: so they saw that it was man making it? >> exactly. >> reporter: the most popular kurdish bread is called naan. same name, but thinner, with different ingredients than indian naan. so she takes a bowl.
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>> a bowl, yeah. >> reporter: and then throws it around like a pizza dough. >> yeah, yeah. >> reporter: a man can bake the bread as long as he doesn't touch it. the basic recipe, flour, salt, water, yeast hasn't changed in millennia, and neither has bread making. in nashville, kurdish women are still doing it the old way. yes, even directly under the flight path from the airport, next to the backyard swing set on a grill made from an old satellite dish. jamilla hadi learned when she was 11, watching her mother and grandmother in iraq. so how often do you make the bread? >> maybe one month, one time or
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something two months one time. >> reporter: it's kind of like a party? >> yes. >> yes. >> reporter: so it's fun? >> yes, it's fun. >> reporter: family members share the bread. it keeps for months. do you love doing this? >> yes, i love it. i love it. >> reporter: you're smiling. >> yes. >> reporter: you love it a lot. >> yeah. >> you know, we feel we are in kurdistan when we do this. >> reporter: where just surviving wasn't easy, and having bread meant having life. this is really good. >> that was martha teichner on bread patrol. "cbs news roundup" will be right back.
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this year, a lot of people won't be cooking their thanksgiving dinner. they'll be going out for the holiday. in seattle, the teriyaki joints are expected to be jam-packed. luke burbank was invited into the kitchen of the king of seattle teriyaki. ♪ >> reporter: seattle loves its teriyaki. in fact, it has more shops per capita than anywhere else in america. and good writer kenji lopez alt is trying to eat at every one of them. >> we might have hit gold here. >> where some places have pizza, some have burger joints. teriyaki is the seattle food. this is the food of the people. >> reporter: and if you grew up in seattle in the 1980s like i did, you probably ate a lot of what's called seattle-style teriyaki because there was so much of it around. hundreds of small family-run shops in strip malls and gas stations grilling up chicken
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over rice topped with a signature sweet glaze. and it's all thanks to this guy. >> toshi kasahara. why do you think it's become so popular here in the northwest? >> it was something tasty and inexpensive. >> reporter: way back in 1976, kasahara was a young japanese immigrant with an idea, a restaurant dedicated to teriyaki. fast, affordable, and delicious. >> most japanese restaurant had teriyaki, but i was the one specialized teriyaki. >> reporter: a lot of the restaurants were owned by japanese folks at the beginning. but now it's like some are chinese american, vietnamese american. all these asian immigrant communities have found a teriyaki joint. >> seattle is known as the teriyaki capital of america because of you. how does that make you feel? >> i don't like attention. >> reporter: but all humility
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aside, kenji lopez alt says it's time to give seattle teriyaki its due. >> i feel like seattle should claim it. i would love to see someone open up a teriyaki joint in new york and call it seattle-style teriyaki, you know. >> looks like a solid meal there. and that's today's "cbs news roundup." for some of you, the news continues. for others, tune in later for "cbs mornings," and follow us online any time at cbsnews.com. reporting from the cbs broadcast center in new york city, i'm shanelle kaul. and happy thanksgiving. ♪
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hello and thanks so much for staying up with us. i'm shanelle kaul in new york, an here are the top stories on "cbs news roundup." investigators are searching for whoever is targeting president-elect donald trump's cabinet appointees with bomb threats and swatting attacks. millions of americans are traveling this thanksgiving, but could bad weather mess up the journey home? and three american citizens imprisoned for years in china are now free. it was a frightening day for many of president-elect donald trump's picks for top jobs in his administration, targeted by a wave of bomb threats and hoax emergency calls. the fbi is now investigating. we get details now from cbs' weijia jiang. >> reporter: among the victims of bomb threats and swatting incidents targeting the incoming
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administration, president-elect trump's choice for attorney general, his chief of staff, and his picks to lead the commerce department and environmental protection agency. matt gaetz, who was the nominee for attorney general before he withdrew from consideration was also targeted. the trump transition team says with president trump as our example, dangerous acts of intimidation and violence will not deter us. the threats unfolded as trump announced other high-profile position, including dr. jay bhatt bhattacharya. >> the government was the number one source of misinformation during the pandemic. >> reporter: bhattacharya was highly critical of the doctors who led the u.s. response to covid-19, including dr. anthony fauci. he blasted the use of masks and lockdowns. trump's pick for health and human services robert f. kennedy
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jr. is also a vaccine skeptic. what do trump's picks to lead health agencies tell you so far about the future of these agencies? >> many of these selections imply a skepticism of science. >> reporter: cbs news medical contributor dr. selene grounder is an infectious disease specialist. >> politics and partisanship don't necessarily make for good science, for good biomedical research. so we can anticipate that this will harm research at the nih, could interfere with the best public health policies coming out of the cdc. >> reporter: trump has also selected a secretary of the navy, feellund, a trump campaign mega donor and leads a investment firm. trump says he will put the business of the navy above all else. weijia jiang, cbs news, west palm beach.
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millions of americans were on the move wednesday heading to thanksgiving destinations by cars, planes, and trains. this traffic jam developed just outside dulles international airport in montana on wednesday evening as thousands of passengers arrived for flights. our senior transportation correspondent kris van cleave met plenty of people on the roads from new york city to washington, d.c. >> reporter: the great holiday getaway looked more like a crawl outside new york city. roughly nearly two million americans are expected to take to the loads. >> we're going back on friday and cutting our trip two or three days short. but we think it's better than drive in the middle of the storm sunday. >> reporter: that same system dumped snow in colorado before racing across the country, threatening to make thanksgiving a washout in the northeast. leaving new york, libby frank opted for train. >> i love the train. it's so much easier.
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you can just get on, get off. >> reporter: and at the nation's airports, the tsa planned to screen around 2.9 million flyers, making the busiest day before thanksgiving. the snow in denver delayed hundreds of flights, while air traffic control staffing issues again caused delays at newark liberty airport. but the airlines have managed to keep cancellations low. >> i was expecting chaos. this is the first time i ever flew the day before thanksgiving. i always said i would never do that. >> reporter: outside atlanta, drivers at this buc-ee's are finding gas about 18 cents cheaper than last year. but for laurie flowers, it's not the gas prices or traffic, it's the joy of time together on the road. >> having experiences, we won't forget this. >> no. i take the love that we have, the four of us. i have ooh beautiful son-in-law and a wonderful husband, a beautiful daughter. getting choked up. >> aww. >> it means everything. >> reporter: kris van cleave,
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cbs news. the families of three american citizens imprisoned in china have much to be thankful for this holiday season. on wednesday, the white house announced their release as part of a prisoner swap. u.s. officials say the men were wrongfully detained for years on espionage and drug charges. cbs' scott macfarlane has more. >> reporter: after 12 years of what the state department calls wrongful detention in china, texas businessman mark swidan is finally returning home. he was on death row in china in what his congressional supporters say were bogus charges. swidan suffered brutal abuse and neglect according to john cam, a human rights leader who advocated for swidan's release. >> he is really a shadow of his former set. >> he has been mistreated, malnourished and physically damaged? >> absolutely. he has been shackled hand and foot. he is he has suffered a great
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deal. >> reporter: two months ago, swidan's mother told congress her son's absence has left a gaping hole in our hearts. also released by china, american john leung accused of espionage and held since 2021, and kai li, accused of espionage. li's son has pressed for his father's release. >> it's been so long that the absence of my dad, it just feels like a permanent void. >> reporter: no announcement of what america gave china in return, or any statement from china about why it agreed. >> i think they want to say a fond farewell to president biden. it's a message to mr. donald trump. that's very important. >> reporter: scott macfarlane, cbs news. a u.s.-backed ceasefire between israel and hezbollah in lebanon appears to be holding. some residents of southern lebanon and northern israel returned home on wednesday. the fighting between israel forces and the iran-backed
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militant group forced more than a million people to flee. white house national security adviser jake sullivan says he believes the ceasefire will last. >> we believe that we have learned from the past and we have designed this deal to be long-standing and to stay in effect, to continue to sustain the peace and also to ensure the security of the state of israel. >> in gaza, where palestinian civilians are suffering after more than a year of warfare, the hope is this diplomatic breakthrough will propel israel and hamas back to the bargaining table. straight ahead on "cbs news roundup," with many of america's school districts facing a future with fewer students, we'll tell you about new efforts to repurpose some of those repurpose some of those abandoned school buildings. over the last hundred years we've safeguarded the american homeland, at and beyond our borders. we work tirelessly, night and day from land, sky
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and sea. and while much has changed over the past century our commitment, determination and mission has not, and it never will. because we are the united states border patrol. join our mission and write your own history. when i first had jayden, i'd get comments all the time about how happy i must be. i remember thinking, there must be something wrong with me. because i don't feel all this joy i'm supposed to be feeling. it was hard to admit that, even to my doctor, but she told me it was postpartum depression and that it's very treatable. these days, things are feeling right. even if they don't always go that way. [female narrator[ mental health care works when you make the call. since 1944, heifer international has been ending hunger and poverty around the world. the basic purpose of heifer project is to provide people with a source of their own food production, so they can provide for themselves without
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having to feel like they're continually on charity. at heifer international, we believe in what's possible. a family can have food on their table, a child can go to school, and a farmer gets the tools and training they need to succeed. learn more at heifer.org. i'm not here to fire you up. if you're not already fired up, you shouldn't be in this room. right now is your chance to be a part of a victory the world will remember forever. victory over cancer®. today's cancer research is tomorrow's victory. a victory that is there for the taking. grab it. now that was a great halftime speech. let's go win. [jim valvano] don't give up. don't ever give up® ♪
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this is "cbs news roundup." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. school districts nationwide are facing a daunting problem, too few students to fill their classrooms. more than 5,000 public schools have closed in recent years, often due to low enrollment. and that has left a lot of abandoned buildings. in detroit, they found a way there to repurpose their shuttered schools, and it could serve as a model for other parts of the country. cbs' meg oliver has the story. >> i got matching energy. >> reporter: every day after school in detroit, this is where you can find 12-year-old kavon thomas, sinking threes and dreaming of playing for the pistons. what does this gym mean to you? >> it means a lot because this is really where i learned how to play basketball. >> reporter: yet just a few years ago this former elementary school on the city's west side sat empty. nationwide, urban schools have lost around 850,000 students
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since 2019. school closures often hit underserved communities the hardest. here in detroit, they've closed around 200 schools in the last few decades. what was the reaction like when the elementary school closed? >> the reaction was not good, as you would expect. we're in detroit, and a lot of people were upset. >> reporter: detroit native brandy hagans works for the nonprofit life remodeled. in 2017, when low enrollment forced the elementary school to merge with the high school, her team moved in to renovate the abandoned building. >> it's not just community history. it's personal history for a lot of people. and it's hurtful. so what better way to work with the community than to reopen their school building into something that still belongs to them. >> reporter: the renovation process began with the neighborhood. for a week, thousands of volunteers pitched in, picking up trash, mowing lawns, and boarding up vacant homes. >> when i drive into this area
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now, it's actually a lot cleaner. it's a lot happier. it's a lot brighter. >> reporter: then they refurbished the building, calling it the durfee innovation society, and filling it with free resources from job placement for adults to youth programs for students like kavon. >> now that everybody started going to the dis, it's more kind of like calm after school. >> reporter: his grandma calls the dis a godsend for the neighborhood. >> my grandson has excelled in school. he's in every kind of program they have. he knows how to play chess. he can play golf. he can play tennis. he is a robotics person. >> reporter: knowing that this has worked here, could this be a nationwide model for other schools that have closed across the country? >> this should be a nationwide model for other schools that have closed across the country. i think taking a school building or any historical building that means something to a community and repurposing it into something that's for the
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community, that's huge and necessary. >> reporter: life remodeled is now renovating another former school in detroit, and it's designing a playbook to help other organizations across the country do the same. what do you want to tell the people who created the dis? >> i just want to thank them. because a lot of this stuff that i'm doing now wouldn't be possible without going the dis. >> reporter: how does your future look now? >> my future looks [♪♪] did you know, how you feel
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it's been two months now since hurricane helene tore through the mountains of the south, killing more than 100 people and destroying thousands of homes. many communities in western north carolina remain crippled by the storm with bridges and roads washed out by raging rivers and massive landslides. and after the news cameras left, the scientists moved in to see what can be done to save lives in the future. cbs' dave malkoff has the story from the blue ridge mountains. >> it happened so fast that i didn't know what was going on. >> reporter: katelyn was sit manage the kitchen with her dad when all of the sudden -- >> there was the loudest sound behind us, and then it was like we were getting thrown and pulled at the same time. >> reporter: a landslide tore through their home. they were buried in the mud for
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three hours. >> the dishwasher hit me in the face. the refrigerator would have killed me, but it's up against the tree right now. >> reporter: katelyn's dad bill was critically injured. broken neck, fractured back, life-threatening cuts. >> and he is a liver transplant patient. so he didn't have his medicine for three days. >> reporter: a black hawk helicopter lifted bill to safety after three days. >> because i thought i'd either die of liver failure or gangrene. >> our house was up there. >> reporter: this is where their home stood for 30 years. solve. >> so it's weird to be here and like the house is not where it's supposed to be. >> that little creek did all this damage. >> reporter: we drove the recently reopened roads with independent geologist jennifer bauer. >> the road is getting tighter and tighter. >> reporter: deep into appalachia, she is looking for evidence of landslides like the ones that devastated the
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midkiffs to determine if it's still safe to live here. >> the debris flows will travel down the slope like this one did. >> reporter: geologists are using cutting edge computer scans to identify lands prone to future landslides. stronger storms driven by climate change are increasing the severity and frequency of landslides. >> we have these purple areas that are where this type of vast-moving landslide, where they might start. >> some of it is really soft and loose. >> reporter: sees more than 1300 square miles in western north carolina that should never be built on again. an area almost as big as rhode island. the state counted more than 11 thousand damaged homes with more than a thousand marked as destroyed. the midkiffs are losing more than a house. >> they said this is probably going to be all condemned by the county. >> reporter: they just learned their land is no longer stable enough to build on.
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they have no choice but to move. they're hoping fema will assist in buying them out, but it's too early to know if and how many homeowners will get that financial help. >> when i married my wife, i told her to pick out a house. we bought that house. we've raised all in it. that's our life. that's all my grandson known. but life goes on. >> reporter: the only life he's ever known changed when the ground disappeared from under his feet.
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try this robitussin honey. the real honey you love, plus the powerful cough relief you need. mind if i root through your trash? robitussin, with real honey & elderberry. on thanksgiving, most of the work in the kitchen is traditionally done by women. and it's not only here in the u.s., worldwide women tend to do the majority of cooking in every nation but one, italy. chris livesay has the story. >> reporter: it's a scene that plays out for millions of americans at dinnertime. but this is italy, where deciding what to eat rarely comes from a drive-through or from a box. tonight, it's fresh turbot.
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>> and marinated tuna with fennel. >> reporter: and is this a family recipe? is this something your grandparents or parents would have made? >> the one in the oven, yes. it's a family recipe. >> and finally, to mix the olive oil into the crisp green salad. >> reporter: and the cook? well, it isn't mama wielding a rolling pin. it's papa, elar owe tito, electrical engineer. >> i like cooking because it's part of my culture. i start cooking when i was a kid. i learn from my grandmother, from my grandfather to cook. also to shop good food. and i like to eat. >> reporter: he's hardly an outlier. throughout the world, women cook much more than men, even in the u.s. but in italy, it's the only country on the planet where men outcook women. here food is never just food. >> it's a religion. >> reporter: sociologist em
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emileiana, it's tradition, it's culture, it's love. it's also the potential to create a group and family. and so probably also men want to hold this power. >> reporter: but cooking is cool now? >> cooking is cool. >> reporter: to learn more, we came to italy, a high-end food emporium in rome that offers cooking classes. it just so happens that tonight most of the students are men, like roberto. why not just good to mcdonald's? >> no, no, no, no. mcdonald's? no. we don't like mcdonald's because we prefer to cooking. in italy we have culture, the culture for cooking. we love food. >> reporter: so why did you want to take this class? >> not me. it was a present from my wife. >> reporter: so what is she trying to tell you? >> just to say why don't you cook or something tonight. >> reporter: so this is a present for you, but really it was for her. >> maybe, yeah. >> reporter: chiara and ricardo
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are getting married in july. congratulations. she works late so he cooks. she walks in the door super stressed out and finds a beautiful meal waiting for her. >> and i like to cook, so i enjoy that moment. i'm very happy to do for her. >> reporter: i can see why you're getting married to this guy. with more and more women in the workforce, and with italy's fundamentalist zeal for good home-cooked meals, men are putting down their briefcases and putting on their aprons, says professor de blasio. so male identity is -- >> is changing. i think it's changing. just usually the men don't clean the kitchen. but this is an issue on
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wait, wait - i've been in first class before, but alaska airlines first class... there's way more space. like, i can reach for my stuff without knocking my head on the seat in front of me. and i could scootch by this guy to get out
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without touching him. at. all. i wonder what else i could do... no, no, no. self control. self control. ( ♪♪ ) it is inevitable. chloe! hey dad. they will grow up. [cheering] silly face, ready? discover who they are. [playing music] what they want from this world. and how they will make it better. and while parenting has changed, how much you care has not. that's why instagram is introducing teen accounts. automatic protections for who can contact them and the content they can see. ♪♪
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catherine depalma: in my lifetime, i did not come to know the lord until i was 43 years old, so i had an entire childhood and adulthood apart from the lord, knowing of god, but not knowing christ, not having ay can see. relationship with jesus. there's a lesson that i learned from dr. charles stanley. we think something's too small to bother asking god about, but every little detail of your life you should be checking with him on. so, don't only pray in the dark times, but pray when things are going good. pray to think him, pray to worship him. it's thursday, november 28th, 2024. this is "cbs news mornings." pumped for thanksgiving, millions of people are set t

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