tv CBS News Roundup CBS January 3, 2025 2:42am-3:30am PST
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likes to say, he woke up one night, and he said i want to create a place where i can bring people together to have a conflict reconciliation moment, much like he did in the white house. >> reporter: one of carter's first initiatives, eradicating guinea worm, a parasitic tropical disease contracted from drinking stagnant water. while it's not often deadly, removing the worm can be incredibly painful. symptoms include swelling and blisters can last months. >> one of his greatest legacies was to name this disease and help people understand it. >> reporter: adam weiss overseas the center's guinea worm program which has seen cases drop from more than 3.5 million to just 14 in 2023 after carter helped develop a filter to prevent the parasite from being ingested. >> when he really accepted the challenge to take on the global eradication of guinea worm, he owned it. >> reporter: from guyana to indonesia to the west bank in a push to promote democracy,
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carter traveled on more than three dozen missions around the world to monitor elections. >> do you have the voter id cards here? >> reporter: yes. >> reporter: avery davis roberts accompanied him on several trips working her way up from intern to associate director of the social democracy program. >> he soon came to see election observation as a really powerful tool for ensuring that processes are equitable, that elections really fulfill human rights, and that they are the basis for the legitimacy of the government that follows. >> reporter: carter's decades of dedication has the carter center and its employees around the world still focused on the future. what is president carter's legacy? >> his legacy is being a giant among men. i mean, he is somebody that people want to follow, they want to emulate, and we're all just very fortunate to have been a part of that. >> reporter: nikole killion, cbs news, atlanta.
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the price of tesla stock took a nosedive on wall street after elon musk's electric car company reported a drop in sales for 2024. much of it due to increased competition from ev makers in china and europe. meanwhile, the company also playing catch-up in autonomous driving technology. kris van cleave reports on a leader in the field, waymo. >> so we're getting on the freeway. >> reporter: you're along for a self-driving first. we are the first true passengers invited for a ride on a freeway in one of waymo's fully autonomous electric jaguars, meaning there is no one behind the wheel. >> the car stays under the speed limit, which is 65. >> reporter: riding with us is waymo's principle software engineer pierre krietman. how important is it for waymo to be able to operate on the freeway? >> freeways are pretty cool for waymo. that's one of the number one requests we get from riders >> reporter: waymo, the nation's
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first holy self-driving service is owned by google's parent company alphabet. it already has 150,000 rides a week in arizona and california with plans to expand to austin, miami and atlanta. but so far not on freeways. but that's about to change after months of autonomous testing in the phoenix area, gathering data from tens of thousands of miles driven with the goal of adding passenger service in 2025. freeways are so important because it's all about time. they're a lot faster to get from point a to point b. my ride from the airport is about 15 minutes, unless you take only surface streets, and then it's 30. and competition is coming. amazon-backed zooks aims to launch in vegas next year. i elon musk rolled out robotaxi concept in october. >> one very important thing on the freeway is that stopping is not the right thing to do. so the car needs to find the right lane to maneuver into. >> reporter: what's the biggest
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challenge to getting the car to work well on the freeway? >> part of it is the speed, because the speeds are so high and the mistakes are so costly. so it's really about never making a mistake, driving defensively, and predicting things that can go wrong. >> reporter: is that the bar, never making a mistake? >> the bar is to make as few mistakes as possible and be safer than a human driver would be. >> reporter: waymo sites its data showing in over 25 million miles driven, its cars saw 72% fewer injury-causing collisions compared to human drivers. but they're not perfect. >> waymo ran through the parade. >> reporter: as seen in viral videos like this one, a waymo accidentally driving into a parade route before safely pulling over. the vehicles are equipped with cameras, radar, and other sensors, allowing them to see a full 360 degrees. the work now is focused on fine-tuning how the cars handle freeway driving, like dodging debris in the road. if you were going to give the waymo today a grade on this drive, how has it done? >> i would say 6 out of 10.
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>> reporter: inside this humble bedroom in raleigh, north carolina is one of the most trusted weather resources in the region. >> if you're just joining us, we want you to get into your safe shelter. >> reporter: north carolina's weather authority. >> this kid right here is an absolute treasure. >> reporter: meet ethan clark, a 22-year-old self-taught forecaster who runs this facebook page, which has more than 600,000 followers. he posts weather updates regularly. and streams live during severe weather. >> we've had flash flooding already across good portion of the mountains. >> reporter: his round-the-clock updates during major weather events like hurricane helene back in september earned him admiration and a reputation as a trusted voice in a crisis. his love for weather started in middle school. at age 10 for halloween, ethan dressed like the weather channel's jim cantore, who is
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one of his biggest influences, and that was all around the time he started doing his own forecasts on facebook in the seventh grade. >> dear david -- >> reporter: leslie dean wrote us to about ethan, who she calls the wonder kid. >> ethan is an amazing young man who has made such an impact for those of us who follow his page. and i thought david needs to know about this young man. i am eternally grateful to him. >> reporter: emily brewer credits his forecasting hurricane helene with helping to save her parents' lives by evacuating them. >> we hear mr. rogers in his neighborhood, right? ♪ it's a beautiful day in this neighborhood ♪ >> mr. rogers said in a crisis, look to the helpers. and in this crisis, the helper was college student. >> i'm going do everything in my power to continue providing updates. >> in his dorm room, sitting at his desk, making these updates and sharing them with all of us. it's just incredible. >> reporter: north carolina's then attorney general and now governor-elect josh stein
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awarded ethan one of the state's highest civilian honors. we wanted to help him with the help of his biggest fans. >> hi. nice to meet you. >> reporter: so we met him at the mecca restaurant, raleigh's oldest dining establishment, and took him upstairs to a room that we filled with 13 locals who trust him. >> i love hurricanes. i don't love when it does destruction. i love the science of how it goes from a thunderstorm. to a hurricane. i love the process of snow. it's something i do every day. >> reporter: what's very important about doing this work? >> the biggest importance is giving people the best information they can give in easy to understand weather forecasting. i really want to help people. >> reporter: do people recognize you in town? >> they did. >> reporter: do you mind if i try something? do you think somebody will recognize you? >> maybe. >> reporter: you're turning red. >> i don't know. >> reporter: excuse me, i apologize. i hate to do this. we're just doing an interview.
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my name is david. i'm with cbs news. have any of you heard of the north carolina weather authority? it's a facebook page? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> reporter: all of you? how many of you love it? [ cheering ] [ applause ] >> thank you. >> here's the deal. this is a room of some of your biggest fans. everybody in here. >> wow, okay. awesome. >> reporter: everybody in here. >> that's awesome. >> i am so proud of the work that you've done, and just, you know, the lives that you've affected. >> the attention ewe always played to the really, really local deals is why i think it all came together for helene. >> people live in these counties and they're all talking about it. so i don't want them. >> i think that's why everybody feels like you're their weather guy. you're not the charlotte or raleigh.
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you're their weather guy because you reported on all the places. >> have i seat. >> can i? >> yes! >> i'm emily brewer. i grew up in asheville, and no one associates that with destruction. and somehow you with your clear communication and your level headedness, you communicated that in a way that i feel so fortunate i saw and was able to act. and i thank you for my parents' lives. >> reporter: to get the word out -- >> everybody got a chance to thank ethan. >> no matter who comes calling, stay in north carolina. >> reporter: and we had one more surprise. >> we are sending you to the weather channel to meet your hero, jim cantore. >> really? >> oh, my gosh! [ applause ] ♪ >> reporter: you are ready to jump on the air, aren't you? you have the same outfit on, sport coat, looking sharp. fantastic. >> reporter: from his bedroom to the bright lights of the weather channel, jim gave ethan a chance to shine.
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it was a horrifying start to the new year foretwo of america's friendliest cities. jim axelrod has a closer look at the deadly first day of 2025. >> reporter: historically, not a whole lot happens on january 1st. maybe some cleanup from the night before. >> look at that. >> reporter: it's always been a day for parades and bowl games. new year's day news over the
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years hasn't exactly been stop the presses. 1934, alcatraz becomes a federal prison. >> this is marlboro country. >> reporter: 1971, president nixon outlaws cigarette ads on tv. one of the biggest new year's day stories ever is what didn't happen. y2k. none of the feared tech disruptions materialized. but not this year. america didn't even make to it breakfast before confronting the grim reality that greeted 2025. >> it seems almost like a funeral out here. >> reporter: at least 14 innocent people were murdered early new year's day in the attack in new orleans. the deadliest act of mass murder in the u.s. in more than a year. >> shock was my initial reaction. especially like knowing that we were so close. >> reporter: before the horrifying images from new
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orleans could even be processed around the country, another disturbing set joined them from las vegas. maybe it will turn out the truck made by elon musk's company exploding at trump tower wasn't connected or even terrorism at all, but given the world we now live in, would it be a bigger surprise if it was? >> we're absolutely investigating any connectivity to what happened in new orleans. >> reporter: we know that no place and no time of year is safe. less than two weeks ago, a similar attack at a christmas market in germany left five dead and 200 injured. three years ago, it was a man plowing through a christmas parade in wisconsin, killing six. we know it can happen, but we hope it won't. >> we can't live in fear, because fear will paralyze us. >> reporter: and maybe that explains the add dimension to torment to this latest act of terror.
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the first few days of january are maybe the most hopeful days of the year. no resolutions yet broken. no goals unmet. but not this year. and while they're already talking about resilience in new orleans -- >> we're always going to remember this, but we'll be able to get through it and come back to where we belong. >> reporter: hope has already been shattered. for "eye on america," i'm jim axelrod in new york. ♪ hello and thanks so much for staying up with us. i'm shanelle kaul in new york, and here are the top stories on "cbs news roundup." the fbi says the driver
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responsible for a deadly rampage in new orleans was acting alone, inspired by isis. we're learning more about the 14 people who lost their lives in that horrific attack. we'll have some of their stories. and las vegas police say the man inside a truck that exploded at a trump hotel was a highly decorated american soldier. the fbi says investigators have found no definitive link between the new year's day attack in new orleans and the deadly explosion of a tesla cybertruck outside a trump hotel in las vegas. the fbi says the bourbon street attacker acted alone and that new evidence, including social media video shows army veteran shamsud-din jabbar was inspired by isis. cbs' omar villafranca with more. >> we have dozens of people got hit by this car. >> reporter: less than 48 hours after the deadly attack on bourbon street, a clear picture
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of the man behind the mayhem. fbi officials say they now believe 42-year-old shamsud-din jabbar acted alone in carrying out the new year's day attack that left at least 14 people dead. >> this was an act of terrorism. it was premeditated and an evil act. >> reporter: this video shows people dodging jabbar's truck as he accelerated down bourbon street early wednesday morning. crashed shortly afterwards and opened fire. jabbar was killed onscene in a gunfight with police. >> he originally planned to harm his family and friends, but was concerned the news headlines would not focus on the, quote, war between the believers and the disbelievers. >> reporter: jabbar, a decorated u.s. army veteran who served in afghanistan pledged his allegiance to isis before last summer, according to investigators. the fbi says he rented an electric truck on monday in houston, texas, where he lived and drove to new orleans on
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tuesday evening. after midnight, on the morning of the attack, he placed two improvised explosive devices in coolers in the french quarter. he posted a final online video proclaiming his support for isis just minutes before he plowed into the crowd on bourbon street. from the white house, president biden revealed jabbar also had a remote detonator. records show jabbar had worked in real estate in recent years and was a former employee of the consulting firm deloitte. he had been married and divorced three times, and one of his previous wives had a temporary restraining order against him. authorities are still trying to piece together how and when he became radicalized. three phones and two laptops linked to jabbar have been recovered. bourbon street has reopened, a turn from tragedy to normalcy. >> but we will restore, we will return to normalcy, and we can do that and still show respect and honor. >> our thanks to cbs' omar
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villafranca. now before bourbon street reopened to the public, a small ceremony honoring the 14 people who died in the attack took place with a single yellow rose representing each victim. we're now learning more about who they were as individuals and what their lives meant to others. cbs' tony dokoupil has their stories. >> reporter: for many of the families, there is no making sense of it, how a new year's celebration on bourbon street could turn into a lifetime now of mourning. >> we still haven't really wrapped our minds around that. like a terrorist attack took our matthew. >> reporter: zack colgan's cousin, matthew tenedorio was 25, a goofball, he remembers. he lived here and like so many others was ringing in the new year with friends. reggie hunter, meanwhile, was 37, a father two of from baton rouge, his youngest son just a toddler. nikyra cheyenne dedeaux was 18,
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a recent high school grad from mississippi whose dream was becoming a nurse like her mother. and hubert gauthreaux, 21 and class of '21 at the catholic school that confirmed his death and has asked the entire archbishop shaw community for their prayers. nicole perez was 27, the manager of kimmy's deli just outside new orleans, a dedicated worker, according to her boss, and a loving mom. she leaves behind a 4-year-old son. >> my heart's broke. >> reporter: here is nicole's mother, martha. >> she works hard. she had a lot of dreams. she have a lot of dreams. >> reporter: kareem badawi was a freshman at the university of alabama, a lovely boy, his father remembered on social media. what he loved was football. and so did martin bech, a star
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player at his louisiana high school where he was nicknamed tiger. he went on to play at princeton university before moving to new york city. he still loved to hunt and fish, though, his mother said, adding he went out at the top of the world. just some there of the 14 people who came here to bourbon street for celebration and never made it home that night. stranger says even as the party once again begins this evening. tony dokoupil, cbs news, new orleans. and now to las vegas, where authorities there say a decorated army green beret apparently took his own life before his rented tesla cybertruck blew up outside the trump hotel. cbs' andres gutierrez has more. >> reporter: investigators say the blast happened in less than 20 seconds. inside the charred cybertruck, forensic teams uncovered a military id, a passport, two semiautomatic guns bought legally on monday and credit cards, leading police to believe
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the driver was 37-year-old matthew livelsberger, a highly decorated green beret who was on leave from his base in germany. >> i'm comfortable calling it a suicide with a bombing that occurred immediately thereafer. i'm not giving it any other labels. >> reporter: newly released images and video show him on the las vegas strip approximately an hour before the explosion. at one point here he can be seen driving through the valley drop-off at the trump international hotel. later, the suspect comes back around and parks in the valet drop-off. police say then he shot himself in the head before the truck exploded. the atf says some of the materials found at the scene were fuel enhancers that can be purchased at sporting goods stores. >> the level of sophistication is not what we would expect from an individual with this type of military experience. >> reporter: livelsberger's family said his wife hadn't heard from him in dates and he had no signs of extremist views
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or mental health issues. >> that was cbs' andres gutierrez. police in southern california say two people were killed and 18 injured when a small plane crashed. you can see right here the plane slammed through the roof of a fullerton warehouse in orange county. the fire prompted authorities to evacuate the area. straight ahead on "cbs news roundup," we'll show you how some struggling farmers are making ends meet by harvesting the wind. ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪
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♪♪ together, we are all healthier when everyone is vaccinated. let's get together. let's thrive together. ♪♪ talk with your pediatrician today about childhood immunizations. ♪♪ this message is brought to you by the american academy of pediatrics. is credit card or other debt, making it difficult to pay your rent or mortgage. home and security is often the unintended consequence of an inability to pay mounting credit card debt, student loans or medical debt. but by working with a nonprofit credit counselor, you can avoid or reduce the risk of eviction or foreclosure while tackling debt for good. for more information about how nonprofit credit counseling can help, visit nfcc.org/homesweethome made possible in part by the nonprofit wells fargo foundation.
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only one in five people with disabilities, including those with autism, are employed. why? outdated stigmas and beliefs. so, let us make it easy ... this is a job for someone with autism. so is this. that job? also perfect. introducing win by autism speaks. we help businesses lead the way in inclusive hiring. yes ... these are all jobs for someone with autism. to learn more, go to autismspeaks.org/win ♪ this is "cbs news roundup." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. for many of america's farmer, 2025 is expected to be a third straight year of lower crop prices. that's got many farmers scrambling to make ends meet,
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and some have now turned to harvesting the wind. janet shamlian reports. >> reporter: for evie 00, this is a window of opportunity. >> i have my own machine out there. >> reporter: in fact she has three wind turbines on her 360-acre farm in central iowa. as farmers ready their fields, there is a new cash crop working the land year round, wind turbines. how much money do the turbines bring in each year? >> my payment is $35,000 this year. and it keeps going up with inflation. >> reporter: that's made the difference between keeping the family farm and losing it for struggling farmers, as agricultural becomes more unstable due to climate change. >> how many days of wind out here? >> practically every day i would say. >> reporter: when her husband wallace died a decade ago, farm debts lived on. how much debt did you have? >> i had $350,000. >> reporter: and now you have? >> 67. >> reporter: how did you get that paid off? >> with my wind turbine money.
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>> reporter: each turbine takes up less than an acre, leaving plenty of farmable land. two decades ago there were only a few hundred wind turbines in iowa. now there are more than 6,000 in this state, and they turn on about 60% of the state's energy. u.s. wind energy, clean and renewable avoids carbon emissions equivalent to taking 73 million cars off the road. nationwide turbines power about 10% of the u.s. electric grid. you might call attorney kathy law the conduit for wind. the daughter and wife of farmers, she has placed almost half of the state's turbines. >> from my farm background, i can talk the talk. >> reporter: both women have fielded complains from critics who say the turbines are a threat to wildlife, ruin the view, and that this is too noisy. what do you say to the naysayers? >> nobody is requiring them to put that on their farms or on their land. we want to be able to put
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turbines on our land and receive those benefits. >> they need to be perfect. >> reporter: ebbie is still old fashioned in some ways. but on power, the 75-year-old is progressive. >> i look at it as progress. i think we can't stand in the way of progress. >> reporter: the vista has changed from decades ago. a view she says suits her. >> i need to give up one or two acres of my land so i can generate a commodity that we all use every day, and we all want to use more of it every day. so i'm happy to be able to be a part of that generation. >> reporter: perspective focused on the future.
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president-elect donald trump has found to kick off the largest deportation in u.s. history on his first day in office. that's got millions of migrants, many of them here legally, on edge. his incoming border czars already detailed how this would play out, including what may happen to some of the children of undocumented migrants, including the ones who were born here and are american citizens. lilia luciano has more. >> reporter: in the new jersey city of inglewood, mayor michael j. wildes who is also an immigration attorney says members of his community are on edge. >> people are very concerned. even people who already achieved
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the golden grail, the greencard or citizenship are worried that there is somebody in their home. >> reporter: somebody who is undocumented and subject to a mass deportation campaign. tom homan, president-elect trump's so-called border czar told "the washington post" the administration will build tent structures capable of holding thousands of migrants at any given time. >> we need at least 100,000 beds. i'm not going to put a limit on it. at a minimum 100,000 beds because we have a big population to look for. >> reporter: it would give undocumented parents the choice of leaving children born in the united states behind or being deported with them. >> we're dealing here with american citizens who can't speak for themselves. >> reporter: is it constitutional? >> i don't think so. the administration is going to say we're not going to separate mom and dads. mom and dad, it's their privilege if they want to leave with their child. it's a cute way of saying we don't care. >> reporter: there would be workplace raids, which will upset employers, homan says, and
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the mass deportation plan will cost roughly ten times ice's annual budget. >> $86 billion is a start. we need at least that to do this operation. we've got to buy beds. we have to have air, we move flights, do ground transportation and medical care. >> reporter: homan, who oversaw the policy that separated some 3,000 children from their parents during trump's first term in office said that mass deportation campaign of undocumented immigrants will begin on day one of the new trump administration. >> that was cbs' lilia luciano
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easy to take cough relief, anywhere. chew on relief, chew on a ♪ robitussin ♪ in the philippines, the owner of the restaurant voted best in the nation five years in a row is also tackling manila's most pressing environmental problem. ramy inocencio stopped in for a bite and a lesson. ♪ >> reporter: vegetables inspire the lyrics to one of the philippines' most famous children songs. and cooks and wait staff at the country's most famous restaurant sing it proud. >> it's like a folk song. we all learned growing up. >> we have a, b, c, d, and twinkle, twinkle. >> the filipino version is singing about vegetables. >> reporter: it inspires the signature creation of chef jordy navarro, bahai kubo.
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made of 18 filipino vegetables, including eggplant, winter mellon and tomato and several kinds of beans, this is that song in salad form. >> it took me two years. >> two years? >> to get everything together with a specific idea. >> reporter: i love it. garden in a little bowl. oh, wow. i would eat my vegetables every day. >> reporter: toyo has been recognized as asia's beth philippine restaurant five years in a row. >> the best restaurant in the philippines 2024 is toyo eatery. >> reporter: and asia's most sustainable restaurant. fine dining experience celebrating the country's tropical bounty of vegetables, sourcing freshly caught seafood and responsibly reared meats, and motivating on little known recipes from its more than 7,000 islands that in navarro's kitchen can have surprising beginnings. >> you can actually grow
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vegetables for free. everything you need to start a garden is in your waste, really. >> reporter: and there is a lot of waste in manila, from an estimated 15 million people with landfills overflowing, the capital's waste management system has been a generational problem, something he and his wife mai felt moved to doing so about. >> i don't think it has a proper system yet. and being nice here, they just take it all and they just dump it in the landfill. >> reporter: navarro's light bulb moment was working in manila's biggest slum, tondo feeding hundreds of children lunch several years ago. >> i think i feel frustrated. you prepare food for that moment and what about tomorrow? what about next week. >> reporter: it's just a band-aid for that meal. >> exactly. >> there has to be a better way. for us, it's trying to avoid the landfll, and then maybe we use it also as a source of
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creativity. >> reporter: that creativity meant reducing the restaurant's waste going to landfills from around 200 pounds a day to less than 20 pounds a day. then redirecting what's compostable to one of the philippines' biggest certified organic farms about three hours north. raffy de conas is chief farming officer of toyo farms. >> ever since i was a kid. >> reporter: he says organic farming is in its infancy here but people want to be more aware of their food. >> i'm excited. >> reporter: we get our hands dirty too with his recipe to turn toyo's waste into compost. with rice husks, cow manure and molasses, and then it's put to bed. >> it's like tucking in a baby. >> all right. see you in two weeks. >> reporter: then it's spread across the soil, boosting growth for the produce that goes right back to toyo.
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>> jordy, this looks delicious and romantic. for starters, a broth of vegetables, not wasting anything in the kitchen. how many types of vegetables are in here? >> it varies day to day. at any given moment, there is at least 10 to 15. >> reporter: and sweet potatoes, lightly grilled in local lemon grass oil. for the mains, there is filipino 7 is reach. his famous pork barbecue, layered with three different cuts of fatty belly, shoulder, and leg. together it's called? okay. and another fun thing to do would be maybe have this piece. >> that's like a whirlwind of taste that just happened. i've got the fish on one side and the pork on the other. it's amazing. >> reporter: and no filipino meal is complete without rice. this dish garlic rice fired in a
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clay pot. and toyo's customers keep coming. each night a full house for the past eight years, eating, smiling, and appreciating, but jordy and mai say they aren't finished yet. if you had a motto for toyo, what is that? [ speaking in a global language ] >> dream high. >> but let's stay grounded. let's remember where we are and let's celebrate the moment. >> reporter: with the spirit of the land of the philippines at the root of this award-winning garden.
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it's friday, january 3rd, 2025. this is "cbs news mornings." act of terror. new details about the extremist motivations of the army veteran who plowed a pickup into a crowd of new year's eve revelers in new orleans. >> nothing prepares you for anything like this, losing your child. honoring the victims. family and friendsng
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