tv CBS News Roundup CBS December 27, 2024 2:42am-3:30am PST
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for what's called glp-1 weight loss medications is skyrocketing. for more than 8,000 a month in 2020 to more than 60,000 a month in 2023. their fda approved for adolescents 12 and over. more than 20% of adolescents are considered obese. there is no offramp for these drugs that we know of yet. so putting an adolescent on them sort of means a lifetime of being on them. >> maybe, maybe not. i'm hoping over time we learn how the offramp works. >> reporter: dr. stephanie sisley, who doesn't treat jimenez, is a pediatric endocrinologist who says while the medication's long-term effects are unknown, the health risks associated with obesity are undeniable. the biggest problem sees are insurance rejections. >> 70% of our patients are not able to get the medication. >> reporter: jeremiah's prescription was $1100 a month until his deductible was met. it has since dropped to 25. >> big breath. chest out. >> reporter: jimenez now works
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out every day and says he feels great. >> i finally have something that works for me. i don't have to drastically change my diet. i just eat in moderation. >> i think for me, it's been the best decision that i have made for him, because i've seen him struggle. >> reporter: alongside behavior changes, it can be a winning combination. >> that's good work today. >> reporter: for young people with a lot to lose. janet shamlian, cbs news. >> last one. [♪♪] did you know, serums are concentrated with powerful ingredients to visibly improve your skin?
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superstar alicia keys has already won 16 grammy awards. now the original cast of her broadway musical "hell's kitchen" is nominated too. gayle king caught up with at her alma mater, the professional performing arts school in new york city. >> i walked in here and i remember if alicia remembers this room. does alicia remember this room? >> yes. look at this school. this is my school, guys. ♪ >> were you a social butterfly? were you a wallflower? were you a quiet kid? were you athletic? what were you like? >> i've always been pretty social. i'm definitely a troublemaker. >> no! >> like in the sense i test people and i challenge people. i was definitely challenging the teachers for sure. ♪ when i walked in those doors, i walked in kind of the same doors i have a picture of my mother and i in front of after i
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graduated at 16 from this school. ♪ >> class valedictorian, alicia keys was a student here at the professional performing arts school when she signed her first record deal. ♪ i keep on falling in ♪ >> she released her debut album when she was 20 years old. it won five grammys, including song of the year for "falling." ♪ alicia's musical journey began in a manhattan neighborhood named hell's kitchen. and she says her experiences inspired the broadway show. ♪ new york ♪ >> i love one of the tag lines is "remember where dreams begin." >> yes. >> as we're sitting here, do you remember, what were your dreams sitting throughout in the seats? remember where dreams begin. >> remember where dreams begin is so important, because we all have them. we all have those moments, those
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times throughout our lives. for me sitting in these seats, my little bad self, and just being against the grain and wanting to challenge every single thing, for sure in these rooms on this stage, being able to perform, cultivating my practice, my craft, my gift with one of my most incredible teachers, ms. aziza, who -- >> yes. >> is a part of this big hell's kitchen story as well as my journey in this school, i remember like everything was possible. everything was going happen. >> yeah, okay. you mentioned ms. aziza. let's bring out ms. aziza. linda aziza miller was her music teacher here, and she has spent 50 years as a performer herself. you're the only one this the room who can tell what's she was like at a student at this school. >> i'd like to know that. you can be honest. >> okay.
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very intelligent. very energetic, very talented, very driven. >> did you think this girl's going places or you thought she is very talented. we'll see where she ends up? what did you think? >> no, i thought she was going places. >> you did? >> yeah. good places. successful places. >> she taught me so much about how to arrange music, how to arrange a song. we would learn these clusters and these harmonies that were so incredible. they perked my ear. i wanted that. and as i went forward in my life, those are the things that i took and i put into the music. >> so you go from alicia in the class, learning from ms. aziza, to alicia now on broadway saying you know who would be good on stage? ms. aziza. how does that come about, alicia? >> you know, it's fascinating. one of the most dynamic characters is named miss liza jane. miss liza jane is a mixture between my grandmother and miss aziza, believe it or not. >> okay.
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>> and as i was creating the piece, we're starting to think about how do we play the piano on stage. but we want to have a musician that can be visually seen that reflects miss liza jane. so this is a woman. this is a beautiful black woman who is powerful. she is incredible. she plays everything. >> and you said i know somebody? >> and i was like wait a second, guys. and i don't even know if she will want to do it, by the way, but what if, if it was miss aziza, could that be? >> miss aziza has been an orchestra pianist at the theater since march. >> it's a moment. it's really a moment that i never saw coming between a former student and a teacher, you know. >> goose bumps. so what does it mean to you? what does this mean to you? it's a moment in your life. >> okay. what it means to me is another opportunity to level up, another opportunity to grow because i believe you learn until you die.
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>> yes. >> so i'm very grateful, very happy. thank you, alicia. >> thank you, miss aziza. ♪ >> yes! all right. bravo. next, this former student turned global superstar played for us too. ♪ new york, concrete jungle where dreams are made up ♪ ♪ nothing you can't do ♪ ♪ new york, new york ♪ >> and the fun was just beginning. upstairs, we had a surprise for a classroom full of theater students. >> all right. who wants to go next? >> hi, you guys. >> hi! >> i'm from cbs, your favorite morning show. [ applause ] >> earlier this year, a gofundme
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page to save the school's theater program from budget cuts caught the attention of actor and alumni jeremy allen white and alicia keys. >> jeremy posted on his story promoting the gofundme. and he donated. and then we got a big response from alicia keys and rock nation who donated 60,000 to our fundraiser. >> wow. is she tied to this school? >> she came to this school. >> she went here. >> the students filmed the thank you video for alicia keys, putting a spin on one of her biggest hits. ♪ these kids are on fire, these kids are on fire ♪ ♪ these kids are on fire, these kids are on fire ♪ ♪ whoa, whoa, whoa ♪ ♪ whoa, whoa, whoa ♪
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♪ >> alicia keys! [ cheering ] >> oh, my gosh. you sound so beautiful! i'm so happy to see you guys. i'm really honored to be here to talk to you and get a second to tell you that i'm proud of you and that i really recognize you and i see that you're unique, that you're different, that you're you. i want you to always be yourself. i want you to always be different from everybody else. that is the -- that's your super power, actually. i want you to never forget that the more unique you are, the more you stand out. and you guys are all extremely unique and extremely beautiful and incredible, talented, gifted, hopefully kind, because kind is the most important thing. >> alicia, look what she has on. stand up there. >> i see this.
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>> she's been to hell's kitchen. >> i'm seeing the show tonight. >> good to see you. so happy to see you. [ applause ] >> guys, alicia said she'll play "this girl is on fire." you want to gather around? we'll all sing with her. [ cheering ] ♪ whoa, got her head in a cloud and she's not backing down ♪ >> ready? ♪ this girl is on fire ♪ ♪ this girl is on fire ♪ ♪ whoa, whoa, whoa ♪ ♪ whoa, whoa, whoa ♪ ♪ whoa, whoa, whoa ♪
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this time of year, we find out how much little kids love their toys, at least at first. then a lot of toys end up gathering dust in the corner. one solution, borrow your toys from a toy library. natalie brand tells us how it works. >> reporter: it's any child's dream come true. shelves with endless toys for all ages, interests, and activities. but it isn't to buy. it's to borrow. >> this toy keeps talking, doesn't it? >> reporter: mom lisa bourven founded the toy nest in falls church, virginia after a family trip left her desperate. >> we needed toys to play with for a two-week stretch. we ended up going to a thrift store where we found a few things.
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but we got them back home and they didn't work. i was so frustrated. i just wished we could find things to borrow from other people. >> reporter: that led to an epiphany and research. >> the concept goes back to the great depression. >> they were funded by the u.s. government under the new deal to offer the opportunity for play to kids who would otherwise have nothing. >> reporter: bourven's toy library operates as a business with memberships. the moms buying in say it allows them to cut down on waste, save money while adding variety. >> they change so fast, their babies, every two, three months they're into something different. >> reporter: it's also become a place to build community. >> it's a nice place for us to gather and connect, a nice place to just switch and swap and be sustainable. >> reporter: bourven says there is growing interest in the concept and a need. >> i think toy libraries solve many, many problems at once, not just for the planet, but for families and for kids. >> reporter: she hopes her location helps inspire a toy-sharing revolution
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nationwide. natalie brand, cbs news, falls church, virginia. >> what a great idea. 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 wendy gillette. ♪ hello and thanks for staying up with us. i'm wendy gillette in new york, and here are the top stories on
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"cbs news roundup." aviation experts say russian air defense fire was likely responsible for a plane crash in kazakhstan that killed at least 38 people. the leader of panama is ruling out any talks with president-elect donald trump over control of the panama canal. and the post holiday crush begins as millions of americans start heading home again. we're learning new information about what may have caused a passenger plane to crash and burst into flames in kazakhstan on christmas day. a u.s. official tells cbs news there are preliminary indications that a russian anti-aircraft system may have hit the plane, which was carrying 67 people. 38 of them died. kazakhstan neighbors russia and is not far from ukraine. the flight took off from azerbaijan, headed for grozny in southwestern russia. cbs' chris livesay reports.
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>> reporter: new footage shows holes in an azerbaijan airline fuselage, suggesting shrapnel and not a flock of birds brought down the passenger jet. >> the most likely hypothesis we see is it was struck by an air defense missile that was certainly russian. >> reporter: azerbaijan flight 4283 left baku for grozny, russia. due to dense fog, the passenger jet was diverted toward the caspian sea before eventually crashing in kazakhstan some 250 miles east. along the way, its gps was reportedly jammed, leading to significant deviations. some survivors say they heard an explosion. cell phone footage shows oxygen masks down and visible damage. it's an area known for clashes in russia's war on ukraine. as recently as the same morning of the crash -- >> ukrainian drones were active at the time. and that is commensurate with
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everything we've seen with pilots' communication with air traffic control. currently it's the only thing that fully fits the facts that we know. >> reporter: haunting clues that recall malaysia airlines flight 17 when russian-backed forces shot down that passenger jet over eastern ukraine in 2014, killing all 298 people on board. the kremlin is warning not to jump to conclusions. russia, azerbaijan and kazakhstan have all opened investigations into what caused the crash about two miles shy of the runway. this survivor looking for answers. "the plane crashed. my wife was sitting next to me," he said. "i haven't seen my wife since." investigators have already recovered both black boxes from the crash site. experts are on their way from brazil, the country where this jet was made, to help examine that crash data. chris livesay, cbs news, italy.
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panama's president says he will not negotiate with president-elect donald trump over the future of the panama canal. trump has been addressing issues he plans to tackle once in office, including his threat to take control of the crucial central american waterway. cbs' katrina kaufman reports from washington. >> reporter: on a social media site thursday, president-elect donald trump called attention to a news article saying russian president vladimir putin said he is ready for potential talks with trump. as he prepares to return to the oval office, the president-elect has been talking about trade and foreign policy, with his recent focus turning to the panama canal. trump says u.s. ships are being unfairly charged for access to the canal which the u.s. built and ran for decades before turning it over to panama in 1999. >> they haven't treated us fairly. if the principles both moral and legal of this magnanimous
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gesture of giving are not followed, then we will demand that the panama canal be returned to the united states of america. >> reporter: on christas day, trump posted a message on social media saying "to the wonderful soldiers of china, who are lovingly but illegally operating the panama canal, panama's president responded saying if you can find a single chinese soldier in the canal, i personally will give president-elect trump the right. but what he said on that subject is nonsense. china does not control the panama canal, but a subsidiary of a hong kong contract has have a contract to run two ports at the entrance. trump's ambassador to panama kevin marino cabrera could be tasked with negotiating a new deal. even the notion that the u.s. could take control of the canal sparked protests outside of the u.s. embassy in panama city of on christmas eve. katrina kaufman, cbs news,
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washington. now we turn to the post christmas holiday travel rush to get home. airports see some of their busiest days of the year just after christmas. and as cbs' bradley blackburn report, travelers are also contending with challenging weather in parts of the country that's affecting the entire system. >> reporter: in this most wonderful time of the year, sometimes all you need to pack is a good attitude. >> delays make great adventures. you never know who you're going to meet. >> reporter: the day after christmas travel crowds are heading out, which means some long lines at airports around the country. >> it's a little bit crowded, but i'll get through it. >> get there early and stay updated. check your apps and stuff. >> reporter: nationwide the tsa expects to screen nearly 40 million passengers, a 6% increase from a year ago. complicating things thursday, punishing weather in certain parts of the country, including storms in the south. >> some of these potentially
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severe packing damaging winds, hail, and even an isolated tornado can't be ruled out. >> reporter: airports in dallas and houston are seeing delays and cancellations as the rain comes down. >> i am nervous about that storming in houston. so we'll see. >> reporter: the skies are here in new york's la guardia airport, but parts of the west coast are facing their own weather challenges. utility crews worked to restore power after heavy wind damage in the northwest. from coastal rain to mountain snow, it's all charged by an atmospheric river. winter weather alerts in place for as much as a foot to three feet of snow from the cascades to the sierra as well as the upper rockies through the weekend. >> reporter: for those hitting the road, aaa forecasted the busiest time thursday would be between noon and 5:00 p.m. bradley blackburn, cbs news, new york. a solemn remember brenes in thailand on thursday marked 20 years since the devastating tsunami hit the region. one of modern history's worst
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natural disasters, it claimed the lives of around 230,000 people across a dozen countries. people lit candles in the place that bore the brunt of the devastating wave. a powerful earthquake near indonesia is what triggered that tsunami. straight ahead on "cbs news roundup," it's the time for many happy returns. millions of unwanted gifts will now be heading back to retailers. we'll take you inside the retail hubs to see how it all works. we're with bridget, whose husband won't be home for months and whose daughter is due any day. we're with mike, who's leaving home to protect his family, and yours. we're with all service-members and their families who need community, connection, and maybe a bit of magic.
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are you with them? learn more at uso.org today. [people talking] ♪♪ when i was diagnosed, i was shocked but i also knew that i had options. a lot of men are dealing with it but don't want to talk about it. it's a blood test. get it done! ♪♪ dad felt it was important for people to gain knowledge about the disease. ♪♪ it's clear in my heart that he would want us to be here to serve as advocates for the resources and testing and research that is now available. ♪♪ this disease when caught early is very treatable. the cancer is under control and it does not affect my life. were it not for the prostate cancer foundation, i would not be here today. it's your health. it's your life. the prostate cancer foundation funds lifesaving research. to learn more about the prostate cancer foundation,
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go to pcf.org today. remember, it's your life. [vo]: fear. i love you. [vo]: confusion. i'll just take your arm. [vo]: pain. worry. and bravery. you got this. [vo]: all in the life... i love you. okay? [vo]: of a child. this is why starlight exists. to bring happiness to hospitalized children when they need it most. because happiness matters. ♪ this is "cbs news roundup." i'm wendy gillette in new york. the days after christmas are a time for giving back, sort of. these interest biggest days of the year for returning unwanted
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gifts. that's got shippers working around the clock. cbs' kris van cleave visited a busy fedex center in alaska. >> reporter: just as latanya rasko is getting the last christmas gifts ready to ship out in anchorage, alaska, there is another wave coming. >> have a good one. >> reporter: there is another wave coming. >> we even work christmas day here at the front counter, we take in your returns. >> reporter: you're getting returns starting christmas day? >> yeah. because we in alaska. you got realize we start shipping prior, yes. we see it early. >> reporter: call it the return rush. the national retail federation expects about 17% of purchases to be returned this year, and that eaks right after christmas. last year, e-commerce items were the most likely to be returned, which means the holiday shipping season lasts a lot longer than you might think inside the fedex shipping hub in anchorage, sorting up to 80,000 packages a day and running around the clock. how long is your holiday rush? >> our holiday rush goes from
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about the beginning of thanksgiving, right before thanksgiving until about three weeks after christmas. >> reporter: fedex senior manager tracy watkins. >> the return rush is a period of time where people still have some anxiety that they want packages sent back, and they need our help in getting those back to the stores. >> reporter: but before you send back those unwanted gifts, do your homework. return policies vary by retailer. >> the biggest mistake people make is just forgetting about the returns. they set a box aside and they just never get to it. and that's just money that you're leaving on the table. >> reporter: and that's a gift no one wants. kris van cleave, cbs news,
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i'll be home for christmas. you can count on me. please have snow and mistletoe and presents under the tree. right now all over the country, kids at shriners hospitals for children™ are able to go home and be with their families for the holidays. and it's only possible because of the monthly support of people just like you. thanks to a generous donor, every dollar you give,
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will go three times as far to help more kids. with your gift of just $19 a month, only $0.63 a day. we'll send you this adorable love to the rescue® blanket as a thank you and a reminder of the care you'll be providing so kids can be with their families. christmas eve will find me where the love light gleams. it only takes a moment to call the number on your screen. or you can visit loveshriners.org right now on your phone or computer. your gift of $19 a month will have three times the impact in the lives of kids like me. because every child just wants to be home for the holidays, and your gift makes that possible. your call is the best gift of all. your gift will be my favorite christmas present this year. please call the number on your screen or go online right now with your monthly gift.
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and when you become a monthly donor, your first gift will be tripled. thank you for giving. just north of new york city is an extraordinary trove of popular music, possibly the biggest collection in the world. to music enthusiasts, it's known as the arc, or archive of contemporary music. there are millions of recordings and tens of millions of individual song, all cataloged and being digitized. the trouble is arc needs to sail. >> the archive is in here? >> yes, this is the biggerry on the asterisk date. >> reporter: just over an old railroad bridge in statsburg, new york --
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>> they used to keep pigs in here. >> that's what all the little doors are for. >> reporter: is perhaps the largest collection of popular music in the world. how many recordings do you have in the collection? >> we think it's a little over three million. >> reporter: b. george is the co-founder and director of the arc, the archive of contemporary music. a nonprofit library and research center. >> the top small 45s, those are the first five elvis recordigs on sun. >> reporter: you can find early recordings from the legendary memphis label here. ♪ i heard the news ♪ >> they're quite beautiful. and as i mentioned, johnny cash had come through and signed about 40 of his records for us. ♪ >> so this is one of the earliest appearances by the hendrix band. so then we have this signed by the entire band, which is pretty neat. >> reporter: that is pretty neat. ♪ i'm going to tell you how it's going to be ♪ >> this is an early english pressing of the first rolling
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stones record. and it's signed by the whole band. ♪ stir it up ♪ >> this is a pressing of bob marley's "catch a fire." but as a marketing thing, they did -- >> oh, look at that. >> they did a zippo lighter. they're hard to find without this broken. >> reporter: arc found songs for ken burns' documentary baseball. and martin scorsese's film "goodfellas." david berg was a board member. so this is all the keith richards collection? >> yeah, this is something that keith has endowed for us now 33 years, which is pretty remarkable. >> reporter: among the more than 17,000 blues recordings, a rare copy of robert johnson's "me and the devil blues". >> and this is one of only ten admitted known copies. >> reporter: this is a sign from the original place? thinking was on white street in manhattan. >> reporter: george launched the archive in new york in 1985 with
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his own library of 47,000 discs. this is from your collection? >> yes. i kept the tag. look. >> reporter: rising rents drove him out of the city, but the collection has continued to grow. >> this is -- a hefty box of 78s. whoa. >> reporter: some early 78 rpm recordings date to the 1920s. >> the artists aren't familiar, but the labels are. capitol, deka. >> that's where we get the term album from. this is a bone recording. >> reporter: what is a bone recording? ♪ >> it's a bootleg record of how howlin' wolf, pressed on to an x-ray and smuggled into the soviet union in the 1960s. >> there is lots of them, but it's hard to find one with a really nice bone. this is really interesting. look. we tried to save every version
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of every sound recordings. like these by muddy waters and the jimi hendrix recordings. why do you want to keep all the different versions of the same record? >> we're nuts? no. there is a very strong reason. because the song quality will be different. >> reporter: and sometimes the artwork is different. >> definitely because of t artwork. >> reporter: because it tells you something about the time? >> exactly. >> reporter: at heart, what is this collection all about? >> what happened. it's about what happened in american and world popular music. >> reporter: these are all recordings too? >> yeah. this is basically the collection. this is one of the rooms. there are five rooms. >>reporter: so there is more above this too? >> yeah. and there is a cow barn across the railroad tracks. >> reporter: but unbeknownst to the archive when it moved here four years ago, this land is zoned agricultural. now george must move it again. >> so it's quite urgent.
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>> reporter: so what's it going to take for you to be able to move? >> money. all we need is money. we need an angel. ♪ >> reporter: but b. george has a dream. >> to make that transition from an archive to a real center for popular music. that's our goal. >> reporter: and in the streaming era, he says, preservation is even more important. >> because will the internet be the internet as we know it in 10 or 20 years? >> reporter: yeah. >> all that stuff could disappear, like it disappeared with early ipods. you just lost your stuff. we have an impossible task. >> yeah. >> it may never be finished. it doesn't matter. we do our best. >> that was anthony mason at the arc. "cbs news roundu
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emergen-c crystals pop and fizz when you throw them back. and who doesn't love a good throwback? ♪♪ now with vitamin d for the dark days of winter. a lot of people are proud that they can do more than one thing at a time. it's called multitasking. but new research shows multitasking can lead to mental exhaustion. dr. jon lapook has advice on keeping yourself focused. ♪ >> reporter: even though this may look like a perfect example of multitasking, it turns out -- > there isn't any real multitasking. >> reporter: linda stone coined the phrase for what it really is, continuous partial attention. >> we don't ever do anything simultaneously. we're rapidly task switching. >> reporter: and how are human beings at doing that? >> we're not great at doing it. >> reporter: she spent her
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career at apple and microsoft, watching how humans interact with tech, which led her to focus on the myth of multitasking. so what is walking and chewing gum at the same time? >> i would call that simple multitasking. >> reporter: but for more complicated things, research suggests the human brain is simply not wired to multitask efficiently, and people overestimate their ability to do it. a study of doctors found multitasking almost doubled mistakes writing prescriptions. if multitasking is what we do and it leads to more mistakes, maybe when we're doing something especially important, we should remind ourselves to keep one ball in the air at a time. stone says our splintered attention causes more damage than we realize. where does the smartphone come in? >> the smartphone is amazing. tere are so many things we can do. and yet, what hatches to the body? we hold it.
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our neck goes down. our posture, we lose it. we lose our ability to breathe properly. >> go step. >> reporter: her approach to the mental and physical stress caused by multitasking. >> one, two -- >> reporter: dancing lessons at a boston studio with teacher bjorn ansel. >> we want to make feel as comfortable as when we're walking around. >> reporter: and i brought along my two left feet. >> one, two, three. >> reporter: how does this help me not to multitask? >> you can feel that you are working with me. it's not just you, your phone, and earbuds. you're both connected to me. and you're fully present. your whole body is engaged in this. >> reporter: stone says our brains and bodies need to relax with things like walks outside, humming, or singing, an antidote to our constantly divided attention. >> i can do this with my heels on the floor. >> reporter: you won't hear any argument from busy working moms erica robinson and evandisa cabral.
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do you think we live in a world there where there is simply too much multitasking? >> yes. it's like we have to. it's like being a parent, think about what we got to do for ourselves, what we got to do for our children, cook, get the clothes ready, make sure they do their homework. >> i feel like everyone's brains are always on go. and most times we don't stop. >> right. >> to talk a breath, even just to breathe for a second. >> reporter: living in the moment, a single-tasking prescription for navigating a multitasking world.
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