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tv   CBS News Roundup  CBS  December 26, 2024 2:42am-3:30am PST

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>> reporter: for days, wncc mark star ling and spencer helped coordinate wellness checks and connect the stranded with nearby resource. >> i want to put you back on hold so tank can get your phone number. >> we didn't have any connection to the outside world except our radio stations, and we were the only two here. we had a mission, okay, we've got walk these people through the storm. >> reporter: you all must have been inundated with phone calls. >> we were. and the phone calls got progressively scarier and scarier. >> reporter: which meant dealing with the widest range of emotions you could possibly imagine. >> we got the call from a guy that was on the second floor of his house. >> our first floor is flooded up to about 4 feet and we're upstairs. we're safe, but my ram truck is underwater. >> listen, do us a favor and keep our phone number handy, okay? >> and when we hung up, everything is going to be fine. it's going to be fine. everything wasn't fine. >> reporter: the caller, his wife and their 7-year-old grandson were all swept away.
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>> that was a hard one. it's still a hard one. i can hear his phone call in my head. >> reporter: and then, well, at the other end of the spectrum, there was this reunion for starling. >> brandee? >> yes. >> you okay? >> yeah, i'm okay. >> this is my wife, for anybody that is listening. >> we just left -- >> all right. >> it's so good to hear your voice. >> reporter: these guys have been a guiding light on top of the radio tower for so many in the mountains of north carolina. >> one of the memorable phone calls that we had is when a guy called in. he said, you know, today is the first day that i've gone and checked on all my neighbors and i didn't even ask who they voted for first. >> this is the realest radio has ever been. and we're connecting with people in a way that most people don't ever get to connect with their audience, because this is our family. >> reporter: our good buddy
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colley from the chainsaw brothers. what's going on? >> reporter: and like many families knit tighter through trauma. for "eye on america," skyler henry in asheville, north henry in asheville, north carolina. the holidays are a time for making lists. but the most special list of all is the list of children with critical illnesses who are waiting for you to grant their wishes. 5-year-old brantley knows what it's like to wait for hope. he has spent his holidays in the hospital listening to beeping monitors instead of jingle bells. any time he's in a room, he'll make you smile. a lot of people can't tell from the outside that he has a heart condition. brantley's wish was to see snow for the very first time. so make-a-wish brought him and his family to their own winter wonderland. snowmans are my favorite. but for every wish we grant, three more children like brantley are waiting
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for someone just like you. call or go online right now. for $20 a month, just 67 cents a day, you can grant wishes for waiting kids. brantley went from imagining a snowman to building one. his wish snowballed into a life changing holiday experience. this is so cool. call or go online right now. the wishes you grant today can replace sadness with joy and be a turning point in a child's recovery. every 20 minutes, another child is diagnosed with a critical illness. for as little as 67 cents a day, you can grant wishes and give waiting children hope and strength. and when you use your credit card to make your monthly gift of $20, we'll send you this free make-a-wish t-shirt to show you are transforming lives one wish at a time™. any time you can help a child out
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that has an illness, they deserve it. please add waiting wish kids to your holiday list. call or go online to grantwishes.org to grant wishes and give joy today. ♪ actress nicole kidman is steaming up the screen this week with the release of her new
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movie "babygirl." kidman discussed this busy stage of her career with tracy smith. >> reporter: how long is it since we've spoken? >> 2018. not much happened, right? >> right. wow. okay. >> reporter: you could say nicole kidman is having a moment right now, but it's really more like a golden era. ♪ to name just two of her recent projects, there was that hit tv series with liev schreiber this past summer. >> i'm far more colorful than that, aren't i? >> it was a turn of phrase. >> no it was a threat, tagg. that was a threat. >> reporter: there is also that one with zoe saldana. >> i can't wage war against the culture. children are cash crops to these people. >> stopping a human smuggling ring was not the mission. >> reporter: do you think part of why you are so prolific, that you work so much now is that
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sense that time is fleeting? >> probably, yeah. probably. >> reporter: and of course she's still the better half of country great keith urban. >> hey. >> hey. we need to have a conversation. you're very young. i don't want to hurt you. >> reporter: but the thing nicole kidman is getting the most attention for these days is a film coming out on christmas, and what a film it is. >> no, what? >> is that what you want? >> reporter: in "babygirl," kidman is a happily married successful ceo who is in some ways unfulfilled. so she takes up with a handsome intern who knows just how to scratch her particular itch. >> i have to go. unacceptable. >> unacceptable? >> yes. >> reporter: was there any point
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where you thought i don't know if i can do this? >> yeah. yeah, yeah. a lot of it is stamina, because i'm in every film of the frame. >> reporter: nicole kidman is committed to working a lot with female directors. and in halina reijn's hands, this film is intense and relentless. >> how did you get that dog to calm down? >> i gave it a cookie. >> you always have cookies on you? >> why, do you want one? >> reporter: do you think part of what makes you do your job well. >> weird. >> reporter: yeah, weird, that's where i was going with that. >> you can say it. >> reporter: do you think part of what makes you a good actor is that ability to feel intensely. >> probably the thing that i have is the ability to feel like really feel. i go into hospitals. keith and i will work where we go. and he'll bring his guitar, and, you know, in the oncology units,
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and i have to not absorb someone else's emotions. >> reporter: because that's your tendency? that's what you learned to do? >> yeah. keith said that you're like a raw egg that i have to be the shell for. >> reporter: nicole kidman certainly doesn't look all that vulnerable. but when she is not out being a global superstar, she is a complete home body. in fact, the daily routine at her nashville home with keith and their two daughters might sound a lot like yours. >> we have breakfast together every morning. so even if i'm working, i'm up. >> reporter: you have breakfast together every morning? >> yeah, yeah. and dinners. i also like putting on my jammies and coming home. >> reporter: do you? are you a home body? >> putting on my bed socks. but we do have a rule. you can't put your pajamas on before 5:00 p.m.
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>> reporter: why do you have that rule? >> because otherwise you can get into them a lot earlier. not a good thing. >> reporter: but there have been moments, kidman says, when she seriously thought about being a full-time stay-at-home mom. was there a particular time you thought maybe i'll give up on this whole acting thing? >> yeah, yeah, yeah, of course. >> reporter: when? >> when i get to sunday, i think well, i'm pretty much done now. we moved to nashville. we were living on a farm. and that's when my mom actually said i wouldn't give up completely. keep a finger sort of in the -- in it. i said no, no, i'm done now, i'm done. she said listen to me. keep moving forward. not saying you to do it to the level you've been doing it, but i wouldn't give it up completely. >> reporter: after that, she went on to do some of the best work of her career. and this past april, she received the lifetime achievement award from the american film institute. >> hi, nick. >> reporter: her pal meryl streep did the honors that night.
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>> the hardest part is when you come up against or you're acting with another person who is also really, really, really, really, really, really great. that's difficult for me. >> it was strange because at first i thought i'm not sure i want this right now. >> reporter: why? >> does that mean it's over? right? >> nicole kidman. come up, baby. >> reporter: but for kidman, whose already picked up a golden globe nomination for "babygirl," the year's stratospheric highs have been tempered a bit by devastating loss. her mother janelle died in september at age 84 as nicole was en route to the venice film festival for a screening of "babygirl." did you share with her what it was about? >> yeah, she knew. she knew everything. that's probably the biggest loss
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is you lose the person that knows everything, that loves you any way, yeah. so there's that. i love when people say there's no limit to your grief. you don't have to have a time limit on it. you don't have to be all better by this time. so you're allowed to constantly let it pass through in waves. and it's people go oh, well, whatever. but it's my mama, my life, and i'm allowed to process it and grieve in the way i want to. >> yeah, there is no time limit. and it does come in waves and you never know when it's going to hit. >> yeah, it's like a different road. when my papa passed, i suppose it's good to talk it all because so many people in the world are going through it. but it's just it's a whole other thing, both parents going, whoa, okay. wow.
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>> was that's okay. and i appreciate you sharing it because like you said -- >> move on, quick. >> okay, we're moving on. people go through this. >> i want to be what you like. i want to be the woman you like. >> this is all very confusing. >> reporter: nicole kidman may keep her emotions within easy reach, but that's not a bad thing. in the same face that you might see torrents of rage and grief, you can just as easily see happiness and hope. do you feel like this now is a moment? all of these awards, the festivals, several hit television series, do you feel like you're in this moment right now? >> no. no, i think because i've had so many years of so many different things happening. i'm fully cognizant of where i am. i'm wide awake.
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i'm in this world. i'm curious, grateful and amazed. i love the word "wonder" because i still have a lot of wonder and a lot of excitement about what's to come. >> tracy smith with nicole kidman. "cbs news roundup" will be right back. 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 a relationship with jesus.
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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. [ding] [upbeat music] ♪ yeah, baby, i like it like that ♪ ♪ i like it like that, i like it like that ♪ ♪ si a ti te quiero mi amor, i like it like that ♪ ♪ eeeeeh, baby, i said i like it like that ♪ ♪ stomp your feet if you think i'm neat ♪ ♪ clap your hands if you want some more ♪
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♪ i said i like it like that ♪
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chicago is famous for its deep dish pizza, but this year the hottest pie in town is a thin crust variety baked in a garage and sold from a back alley. charlie de mar got a taste. >> reporter: by day it's just an ordinary alley. but one night a month, its drive-through for chicago's most exclusive pizzeria. >> appreciate it man. >> yeah, man. >> happy holidays. >> enjoy. >> the cheese, the crust, just absolute perfection. >> i am so excited for this. i've been wanting to get this since summer. >> reporter: hani pay lucked in to one of this month's thin trust pizzas, donating $160 in exchange for one of only 12 thin
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crust pies. >> 8:00, i'm going to be looking for an alley somewhere and we'll have an adventure. >> reporter: the alley is behind john caruther's garage, and his creations usually sell out minutes after he opens online reservations. >> pizza, grab some beer. >> reporter: the recipe is rooted in love and kindness. >> i don't take any money for these pizzas. what you do is make a donation to the charity of the month we designate, and you get a pizza, and i get to know this place that means a lot to me is seeing more money this month. >> reporter: his pizza passion started in 2020 as a weekly pandemic relief ritual for his family. >> we talked about it. and i figured if if the only thing i could do is make pizza, the only thing i could do is make pizza out there making a difference. >> reporter: since then his thin crusts have raised over $80,000, a lot of dough for charities around chicago. the $832 this month helped yanni demulis for kids spending the holidays in the hospital. >> it took zero convincing. i sent him one message about it and he was immediately in. >> reporter: what do you get ultimately from all of this? >> i get to make pizza that i'm really proud of.
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and i think that if chicago gets the tiniest little lift from what we're doing here, then it's worth it. >> charlie de mar, cbs news. >> well, that looks tasty. 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 newscast broadcast center in new york city i'm courtney kealy. ♪ hello and happy holidays. i'm courtney kealy in new york, and here are the top stories on
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"cbs news roundup." dozens of people are killed when a passenger jet goes down in a fiery wreck in kazakhstan on its way to russia. as the end of his administration nears, president biden signs 50 bills into law during the holiday season. and pope francis delivers a christmas message urging all people of all nations to end warfare and to embrace peace. a passenger plane with 67 people on board crashed and burst into flames in kazakhstan during a flight to the russian city of grozny. at least 38 were killed. russia's aviation authority says a bird strike possibly led to the crash. cbs' cristian benavides reports. >> reporter: social media footage shows the azerbaijan plane losing altitude near the city of aktau in kazakhstan wednesday. moments later, it crashes into the ground and explodes, sending flames and black smoke into the air. emergency workers race to the wreckage to help survivors.
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the airline said the plane was on its way from azerbaijan to the russian city of grozny when it was diverted and tried to make an emergency landing. flight tracking data showed the aircraft making what appeared to be a figure eight as it neared the airplane. social media footage taken on board the plane before the crash showed damage to the wing and oxygen masks in use. the president of azerbaijan said in a news conference that it was too soon to speculate on the cause of the crash, but that weather had forced the plane to change course. russia's aviation authority said preliminary information showed a bird strike led to an emergency on board. russian president vladimir putin expressed his condolences and moscow sent a plane with medical equipment and personnel to assist with the aftermath. authorities in kazakhstan, azerbaijan, and russia all said they are investigating. cristian benavides, cbs news.
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president joe biden had a busy christmas, signing 50 new bills into law as he wraps up his time in office. cbs' katrina kaufman reports from the white house. >> reporter: the bald eagle has captivated americans from the birth of the united states, adourning everything from the presidential seal to the $1 bill. yet it was not the nation's official bill until now. >> should it have been done many years ago. >> reporter: preston cook, a volunteer at the national eagle center could not find any designation formally designating the bald eagle status. he urged his congressman to do something about it. congress passed the bill unanimously, and president biden signed it into law tuesday. >> i'm so grateful to announce the introduction of the bipartisan stop institutional child abuse act. >> reporter: reality tv star and hotel heiress paris hilton has
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lobbied for reform of programs for troubled teens, saying she was abused in such a facility, was on the hill last thursday to see congress pass the measure with overwhelming bipartisan support. >> i just had tears flooding down my face. i was just so excited. >> reporter: and now lawmakers convicted of some crimes will no longer be able to receive their congressional pension. the legislation was introduced the same day corruption charges were announced against then democratic senator bob menendez. the president signed a total of 50 bills into law christmas eve as his time in the white house comes to a close with president-elect trump set to be sworn into office next month. trump spent christmas morning posting about a range of topics on social media, from urging the senate to confirm his cabinet picks to amplifying a column critical of biden's time in office. he also wished everyone a merry christmas. katrina kaufman, cbs news, the white house.
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a holiday season can be make or break for independent toy shops. they risk getting caught in the trade war if president-elect donald trump makes good on his promise to slap big tariffs on china. money watch's kelly oh great reports on the potential impact. >> yeah, this is made in china. this is made in china. this is made in china. one of my favorites. >> reporter: jennifer bergman is the owner of westside kids, an independent new york city toy store founded by her mother over 40 years ago. >> people that used to shop here as children are now shopping for their children. >> reporter: large retailers like amazon already dominate the u.s. toy market. with that size, they could likely absorb some of the tariff on china. small businesses like west side kids can't. where do most of the products in your store come from? >> china. >> reporter: and some kind of what percentage? >> 90%, i would say. >> so if there is a tariff, would prices go up for consumers? >> absolutely. >> how quickly? >> probably instantly. >> reporter: bergman admitted
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she would have to pass the cost of the import taxes on to shoppers. >> i love this store. >> reporter: if prices were to go up, would that force you to shop somewhere else? >> yeah, it would be hard. >> reporter: as more customer turn to cheaper online outlets, small toy stores are a vanishing business, along with the in-store experience. >> we're a toy store. it's a magical place to bring a child. >> reporter: so henry, what are you looking for today in the toy store? >> i might get that. >> reporter: with higher costs and slowing sales, jennifer bergman worries a potential tariff on toys made in china could put her out of business. >> if you were to close, what would that mean? >> well, it would be heartbreaking. it would be a real loss for the community. i can't really imagine not being here. >> thanks to kelly o'grady for that report. now we journey across the globe to see how this holiday of peace and joy was celebrated. cbs' wendy gillette has more. ♪
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>> reporter: the british royal family is celebrating the holiday with a mix of giving back and tradition. ♪ including the king's christmas message. >> on this christmas day, we cannot help but think of those for whom the devastating effects of conflict in the middle east, in central europe, in africa and elsewhere pose a daily threat to so many people's lives and livelihoods. >> reporter: pope francis also referenced those conflicts in his christmas day message, calling for silencing the sounds of arms around the world, from ukraine to the middle east. but the war continues this christmas in kyiv, where air raid sirens blared. syrians still attended mass in damascus, despite concerns about security there. ♪
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>> reporter: and a morning christmas service was held at the church of nativity in bethlehem as israeli tanks patrolled the streets of the west bank. ♪ christmas mass returned to notre dame cathedral in paris for the first time since the 2019 fire. in berlin, holiday tradition calls for a chilly lake dip. >> merry christmas! >> reporter: versus a more seasonable swim in sydney, where summer is und
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♪ this is "cbs news roundup." i'm courtney kealy in new york. the story of christmas is told in different ways, in different churches. in today's "eye on america," jason allen met four preachers
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marking the holiday by sharing their views and their pulpits. >> reporter: anyone walking into this mexican restaurant in midland, texas, probably wouldn't give a second glance to the four guys at a corner table laughing over their enchiladas. but this lunch meet-up wouldn't be found on everyone's menu around here. >> my great grandfather was pastor for a long time. and he would be horrified at this partnership. he would be horrified. >> reporter: darin wood is a baptist pastor, and steve brooks, allan stanglin, and steve shore are pastors too, but not baptists. leading to some eternal differences of opinion. >> the only ones going to heaven. >> now, wait, i heard that about the baptists. >> i've heard that all my life. >> we've all claimed that at one point in time, right? >> reporter: 65% of people here in midland county regularly go to church, but not the same church. in fact, there are as many as 45 different religious traditions represented here from protestant to catholic to hindu to muslim.
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a few years ago, the newest leader of one of the west texas churches was stanglin at the church of christ. he was curious about finding ways his church community could do more for the midland community. so he put in a call to a presbyterian. >> is it okay if our whole church comes to your church? >> reporter: wait, you went right away from lunch to let's have our whole church come over to the presbyterian church? >> you might ask steve, but yeah, kind of. that's how it happened. >> reporter: in those post pandemic years, the friendship grew to four. and then this fall, during an election season where they saw a divide in their city and the country, an idea developed to reach across their own major denominational lines. who made that suggestion to switch pulpits? and did anybody hesitate? >> i think we all hesitated. >> i don't know. [ laughter ] >> i don't know who. >> we believe that the word -- >> reporter: denominations have
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built their foundations over centuries with leaders taking great care not to undermine a church's beliefs. >> i was a little worried, maybe, not because i didn't trust allan, but because we never tried this before. this was a grand and beautiful experiment. >> reporter: on a sunday morning in november -- >> would you all please help me give pastor darin a warm welcome. >> reporter: a baptist preached to presbyterians. the church of christ pastor gave his first sermon to the first baptists. >> i have spent all of my preaching life trying to make sure we get out on time to bet beat the baptists. and now i'm with the baptists. >> we've got a cross in our church too. >> reporter: and if there was grumbling or griping from the pews, not a single pastor said they heard a word of it. >> what came to me is people are sick and tired of division. unity takes relationship. it takes mexican food. >> right. it does. >> sitting down and talking to each other, people are willing
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to do that, it will happen. >> this is an opportunity -- >> reporter: maybe then a baptist, methodist, presbyterian and a church of christ pastor can go into a restaurant together and it won't be a joke anymore. >> wonderful, thank you. >> reporter: for "eye on america," ja
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between drought and fire,
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many western forests need a little help coming back the life. jonathan vigliotti spent the day with environmentalists dedicated to seeing the next generation of trees make it to adulthood. >> reporter: in the heart of oregon's fremont national forest, crews are going to rare hights. using lift operators and climbers, brian kittler with nonprofit american forests showed us how his team hunts for pinecones. >> the more we lose forest, we're losing our clean air, our clean water. >> reporter: the threat, the west's unprecedented breed of mega fires which fueled by climate change have destroyed more than 33 million acres since 2020, around the size of the state of arkansas. >> if nothing is done to restore these forests after a fire, what happens to them? >> so we're looking over here at the berry point fire which was
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2012. there is basically no live trees and there is no natural regeneration happening. >> reporter: it's a vicious cycle. fewer surviving trees means fewer pinecones for humans to pick and plant. once those pinecones are collected, they're brought to a network of nurseries like this. the seeds are extracted and then grown into these seedlings. there are about a million here. which represents about 4500 acres of new forest. this is the future towering tree in the forest. >> yes, that's correct. >> reporter: brian is a geneticist with the u.s. forest service. >> reporter: is this enough to restore the forest? >> unfortunately, it is not. >> reporter: retin i says they're short in this part of oregon. the warming environment also means fewer seedlings will likely grow to maturity, which
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takes about 20 years. >> it's become much more arid, hotter and dryer. one of the consequences of that, it can push trees toward the edge of what they can physiologically tolerate. >> reporter: but with that problem comes an opportunity. >> we are sourcing more drought-tolerant populations of that species to be planted in these areas that are currently experiencing more drought-prone conditions. >> reporter: the demand in stock now requires all hands on deck. >> unfortfortunately we've gott pretty good. >> reporter: logging companies are helping the forest service source cones and source lands for replanting. why is it so important to have that relationship? >> fire and insects and disease doesn't care about a property line. if we're able to replant our little block of land, but we're surrounded by untreated burned forest land, eventually, that's just going to become a brush field and it will burn again and threaten our land again. >> reporter: neighbors helping
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neighbors in a program thes for service hopes to expand to other impacted states. >> when you look at all of these seedlings, what could you see? >> i see the forests that will be walked through by our children and our children's children. >> reporter: a new generation of trees that will take root in the american west. american west. for "eye o i love that my daughter still needs me. but sometimes i can't help due to burning and stabbing pain in my hands, so i use nervive. nervive's clinical dose of ala reduces nerve discomfort in as little as seven days. now i can help again feel the difference with nervive.
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new york city attracts millions of visitors every holiday season, and a highlight for many are the extravagant windows on all the luxury stores. here is michelle miller. >> reporter: full of glitz and glamour, bergdorf goodman's windows displays aren't just a staple of the season, they make a statement. >> the theme this year is "toast of the town." >> reporter: and in celebrating the bicentennial for fifth avenue's retail strip, the store's five large windows nod to the icons of the street itself. its parks, libraries, flagship stores. >> we like to exploit the height. we like to make people look up. >> wow. >> reporter: and the very transport that gets us there. >> this is a window about taxi cabs. these are actual taxi parts, auto parts. >> reporter: wow. >> hoods and doors, grills and taxi signs. >> reporter: for nearly 125 of fifth avenue's 200 years,
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bergdorf has been an institution, offering shoppers and looky loos a chance to be awed. so you're the mastermind of window coordination? >> somebody has to do that, yeah. >> reporter: david hoey is a senior director of visual presentation, on the job for more than 20 years. how did you get into it? >> there is no window displayskool. >> reporter: i don't think so. >> nobody in window display it kind of seems set out to do that on purpose. we just kind of happened into it. and we wouldn't want to do anything else because we're doing a little of everything. we're doing a little theater, a little storytelling, a little advertising, a little fashion. >> if we use this king kong reference, we're going to be very discreet where you can barely see it, like a little surprise. >> reporter: as we watched him direct this year's setup, we noticed his attention to every detail. >> we're going straighten that
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eye and see make sure it doesn't hide anything over here. >> reporter: planning starts in february. craftsmen work in warehouses for months creating these meticulous pieces, like this 100,000 rhinestone-laced preying mantis, or this typewriter. they're installed in two weeks, just before the big reveal. >> two, one! [ cheering ] >> it is creating almost holiday delirium for the customers. >> reporter: bergdorf goodman president darcy penick and i walked around the store feeling that holiday spirit. what do the bergdorf windows bring to new york city? >> we really believe that our role in new york is one of inspiration. we talk a lot about to hold and think of ourselves as sort of being at the pinnacle of luxury fashion. how do we translate that into moments that can create joy for anyone that comes and wants to participate in that.
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and some participate inside the store. some participate just by experiencing the windows. and we love all of that. ♪ >> it's wonderful. we really enjoyed it. >> it's more beautiful. >> reporter: does it really blow you away? conceptually speaking on paper someone thing. but when you see it in the window? >> there is a question of every year did we achieve what we set out to achieve what we achieve? i would say this year we d . >> that wa
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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 a 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.
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pray to think him, pray to worship him.
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it is it is thursday, december 26th, 2024. this is ""cbs news mornings"." bracing for more travel trouble. powerful storms in the south and northwest could make a mess of your post-christmas trip home. christmas miracle. a man races to save his brother, caught in an

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