tv CBS News Roundup CBS January 7, 2025 2:42am-3:30am PST
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david. if they say here is a recycle bin. you put a plastic cup in it, instead, that plastic cup gets picked up by a trash truck and goes to a landfill? they're not telling the truth. >> reporter: to expand on jan's work, our cbs journalists across the country dropped cold drink cups with trackers attached inside into recycling bins at starbucks locations. some never generated a signal. but 36 did, and we tracked the cups until they stopped. here is what we found. 14 trackers last pinged at landfills. another 13 went to waste transfer stations, places that don't recycle plastic. they compact trash before sending to it a landfill. five ended up at incinerators that burned trash, and only four pinged at locations that accept recycling. what's your reaction to that? >> that is unacceptable. it's disappointing. >> reporter: amelia landers is
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vice president of product innovation at starbucks. i think you're making a promise to the customer that this is going to get recycled. are you being honest with the customer? >> what we're focused on is what we can control, which is the education for our customers. >> reporter: like clearly labeling recycling bins with what goes inside them, even though some customers will contaminate bins with trash. ultimately, she says the company can only control what happens inside its stores. >> once it leaves our store, there are a number of elements that can -- that can come into play that don't guarantee that it lands up in the right place. >> reporter: we met landers at starbucks headquarters in seattle. this innovation lab inside a warehouse space includes a full working store. >> this is where we at starbucks builds, tests, design, iterate and innovate. >> reporter: starbucks has committed to cutting its waste in half by 2030. as part of that, it will put your drink into your own reusable cup. and at the lab, the company developed this, a new single-use
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cup made with up to 20% less plastic. >> it's taking over 13 million pounds of plastic out of the landfill every year. >> reporter: we asked jan dell about that. >> i feel like if you see it, you own it, you know better. >> reporter: she is also a chemical engineer, and she is concerned that starbucks' new and improved cup is still made of number 5 polypropylene plastic, a material that is difficult and expensive to recycle. >> show me the factory in america where there is a whole bunch of cups going through and getting recycled, and they can't show you. >> reporter: can that cup actually be recycled? >> yes. our cups are designed to be recycled. >> reporter: where? where do you recycle a number 5 plastic cup? >> there are recycling facilities that do recycle number 5 polypropylene. >> reporter: but not very much of it. the latest epa report on plastics recycling found the u.s. generated 320 million pounds of number 5 plastic cups
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and plates, but recycled less than 1% of it. and as we've learned, most of the cups we tracked simply ended up as waste. >> that was david schechter on te case. "cbs news roundup" will be right back. (man) it's a little something i've done every night since i was a kid: empty my pocket change into this old jar. it's never much. just what's left after i break a dollar. and i never thought that i could get quality life insurance with my spare change. (woman) neither did i until i saw a commercial for colonial penn. imagine people our age getting life insurance with our loose change. (chuckling) it's true. if you're 50 to 85, you can get guaranteed acceptance life insurance from colonial penn with options starting less than 35 cents a day, just $9.95 a month. there's no medical exam and no health questions. you know, the average cost of a funeral is over $9,400. now that's a big burden to leave your loved ones. as long as you're 50 to 85,
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actor in a drama for adrien brody. he plays a holocaust survivor and architect who emigrates to the united states after world war ii to chase the american dream. brody sat down for a chat. with cbs' tracy smith. >> hi. >> hell l hello. >> how are you? >> thank you. >> i'm adrien. >> very nice to meet you too. >> a pleasure. >> reporter: last month on a boat called the manhattan, adrien brody and i sailed into the new york harbor, destination the statue of liberty. look at this! >> look at this. >> oh my goodness, wow. you've been out here before? >> i have been out here. it's been some time. i spent time with my mom, who is an amazing photographer. >> reporter: his mom is also an immigrant who came to america in 1958. >> my mother and my grandparents fled hungary during the revolution. there was so much unknown and a lot of loss. and all of those sacrifices have
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kind of laid the foundation for my own existence and what has been accessible to me. >> reporter: adrien brody's immigrant roots make his latest film, "the brutalist," a deeply personal one. it's a sweeping decades' long tale of love and ambition and a complicated american dream, all centered around one man, laszlo toth. >> i'd like to draw something and then present it to you. >> he is a jewish hungarian architect who survives the horrors of world war ii and is forced to toil through poverty and rebuild. >> these are yours, yes? >> yes. >> tell me, why is an accomplished foreign architect shoveling coal here in philadelphia? >> reporter: he's hired by a wealthy industrialist to build a massive community center in his brutalist style, a form of
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architecture that is light on decoration and heavy on concrete. >> concrete, it's not very attractive. >> unfortunately, the building's aesthetic is not yours to resolve, mr. woodrow. >> reporter: to get toth just right, brody drew on his memories of his hungarian grandfather. >> i remember my grandfather's accent was very, very heavy. >> reporter: do you hear your grand father's voice a little bit in this character laszlo? >> definitely. i conjure it up. i also knew every bad word in hungarian as a kid. so i infused some of that in it that's not in the script. >> reporter: the film's received seven golden globe nominations and oscar buzz is high. but at 3 1/2 hours, it requires a commitment. were you at all worried about the duration of the film? >> this is an event. generations before us, you could expect to see something like this in the theater. but that's becoming much more rare today.
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and we all need to be fed nourishing meals, and this is one of them. ♪ >> reporter: at 51, brody's portrayal of a man rebuilding his life after a war makes for a fascinating counterpoint to a role he played more than two decades ago, his oscar-winning performance of a man enduring the horrors of war in "the pianist." >> i'm sorry. i did my best. a certificate would save us. >> reporter: to play the real life pianist who survived the nazi occupation of poland. ♪ brody virtually starved himself, losing 30 pounds, all while learning to play the piano. >> i learned to play chopin. the focus on that quelled the
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pangs of hunger. >> reporter: the music quelled the hunger pangs? >> absolutely. because it was a kind of meditative intensely focused activity where i was memorizing and i became quite proficient of playing minutes of chopin's nocturn and i don't even read music. ♪ >> reporter: at 29, he was the youngest man to ever win the oscar for best actor. the child of an immigrant was living his own american dream. do you remember running up and down these streets as a little guy? >> yeah. i used to -- i lived on these streets. i used to get in a lot of trouble here. >> reporter: adrien brody was raised in queens. his father elliott is a retired teacher. his mother, sylvia is a renowned photographer. >> as an only child and the son of a photographer, i was her favorite subject.
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and so i had a lens from a very nurturing and ever present perspective on me. and i think that also helped as a film actor. >> reporter: you were comfortable in front of a camera thanks to mom. >> yes, thanks to mom. >> reporter: he dabbled in magic, calling himself the amazing adrien, but settled on acting by middle school. at 13, he landed a leading role as a rebellious orphan in a made-for-tv movie "home at last." >> i haven't seen anything that looks like fun. all i see is rules and work. >> i remember thinking how i never wanted it to end. and that sense of joy that i get from it and that immersion, it's never gone away. >> reporter: brody aged into a mohawked punk rocker in spike lee's "summer of sam". >> you think i'm the son of sam, really? you think i'm the son of sam? come on. >> reporter: he's carried a blockbuster like "king kong" and
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shown some whimsy in his five films with director wes anderson. >> i don't get it. >> of course you don't. >> am i too old? >> of course you are. >> why is this good? >> it isn't good. no idea. >> he's given me a lot of opportunity to do comedic work, more overtly comedic stuff which at the time when we started working together, people thought i was serious actor. >> reporter: "the brutalist" is a return to his serious side. >> the people here, they do not want us here. >> reporter: it may be a reminder that as an artist, adrien brody is up for anything. >> it's a nice moment right now. it's a very nice moment. >> reporter: when you're not working, what makes you happy? >> lots of things. i need to be creatively immersed. that may be fulfilled through cooking, through painting, through making music. i'm a pretty good cook. >> reporter: what do you make? >> hot dogs -- no, i'm kidding. what do you like? you tell me, what would you like? i can whip something up.
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come over one day. come see the artwork. i'll whip up something to eat. i'll make some good cocktails. >> reporter: you're a mixologist as well? >> oh, i can mix it up. >> reporter: what can you not do? >> keep my mouth shut. i need the learn that one. >> reporter: and on that note. >> and that was our tracy smith with adrien brody. stay with us. "cbs news roundup" will be right back.
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the nation's farewell to the late president jimmy carter resumes on tuesday. his remains will be flown to washington in preparation for thursday's state funeral. much of mr. carter's life was captured in photos, including many from a neighbor. cbs' nicole valdes has more. >> i have them. >> reporter: flipping through the page, deborah hakes can't
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help but smile at the photos of the pictures she's captured over nearly 20 years. >> i print an 8 by 10 of one of my favorite photos each trip. >> reporter: photos of jimmy carter, his family and their work to make the world a better place. >> this is nepal, our first trip to nepal in 2008. and they count ballots by hand there. >> reporter: like the time the carters traveled to nepal to observe a historic election. and their trip to south sudan, when it became the world's newest country. >> i have this photo of them. they're so sweet. >> reporter: her journey with the carters started in 2005 when she landed an internship at the carter center in atlanta. >> this one got me the job. >> reporter: her work behind the lens and her ability to capture a full story in a single photo earned her the carters' trust and an invitation to document his humanitarian work across the globe. >> this is one of my very favorite photos that i took of
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president carter. i would look for the little moments. i thought those were so special because they showed his humanity. >> reporter: many joyous moments. others more private, including the death of rosalynn carter in november of last year. the carter family wanted hakes and her camera there. >> president carter, he signed it for me. >> reporter: her personal scrapbook, now a physical token of the carters' legacy. >> that's why i kept so many souvenirs and wrote so many things down, because it's something i want to be able to tell my children about. it was really special to be a part of it. >> reporter: after taking hundreds of photos capturing the glow of a man both accomplished and at peace, she'll be photographing jimmy carter one last time, as his family and the nation say their final goodbyes. what do you expect to see? >> i expect to see just so many people wait in line to pay their respects to him, to lay flowers,
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to see him, to greet the family. i think it will be a sendoff fitting for his legacy. and i'm proud to be any part of it. >> reporter: nicole valdes, atlanta. and that's today's "cbs news roundup." reporting from the cbs broadcast center in new york city, i'm shanelle kaul. ♪ hello and thanks so much for watching. i'm shanelle kaul in new york, and this is "cbs news roundup." here are today's top stories. first came the heavy snow and
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now bitter cold as an icy cold polar vortex grips much of the u.s. congress certifies donald trump's 2024 election win, this time without the mob violence of four years ago. and louisiana orders an investigation into security deficiencies following that harrowing new year's terror attack in new orleans. tens of millions of americans are digging out from the first major winter storm of the year. from indiana to washington, d.c., nearly a dozen states are now buried in snow and ice. in the hardest hit areas, it's up to a foot and a half deep. that means dangerous conditions on the roads all the way from the rocky mountains to the northeast. thousands of flights have been impacted, and hundreds of thousands of people lost power. cbs' ian lee is covering all aspects of the storm from just outside st. louis. >> reporter: some ohio residents are digging out monday -- >> this was plowed just about ten minutes ago.
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>> reporter: after a record snowfall in some areas of the state. across the midwest, to the midatlantic on up, millions of americans are on alert as a winter storm system brings snow, ice, and frigid temperatures. louisville, kentucky received its largest single day of snowfall in more than a quarter century sunday. and while the city is at the tail-end of the snow now -- >> it's going to be cold all week long. mother nature has not helped us with this. we're not getting the sunshine yet. the weather is not warming up to help on the roads. >> reporter: thousands of flights are delayed or canceled due to the storm's wide reach. >> the temperatures is making the inbound icing that we're having today a little more difficult to attack. >> reporter: crews are still clearing roads here in clayton, missouri, and tens of thousands of people remain without power in missouri and illinois. it's snowing in the big apple and at the jersey shore. >> a great place for it to snow. especially when you don't see it down here too often. >> reporter: but it's not all shoveling and strife.
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families in terre haute, indiana hit the hills. >> my daughter lost a boot and lost a hat, but she had fun. >> reporter: and the nation's capital set aside mud-slinging for snowball flinging. >> pure chaos and pure joy all in one. >> reporter: with the washington, d.c. snowball fight association's first event of the 2025 season. ian lee, cbs news, layton, missouri. >> and all that snow in washington did not stop one of the most important parts of a presidential election, the certification of results. congress formally recognized president-elect donald trump's 2024 election victory monday with vice president kamala harris at the gavel. unlike the chaos of four years ago, monday's proceedings were calm and civil. cbs' natalie brand has more on this from capitol hill. >> reporter: congress formally certified donald trump's 2024 presidential victory monday. >> this announcement of the state of the vote by the president of the senate shall be
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deemed a sufficient declaration of the persons elected president and vice president of the united states. >> reporter: the candidate he defeated, vice president kamala harris presided over the count. a process steeped in tradition as the electoral ballot boxes made their way through the capitol to the house floor. >> today america's democracy stood. >> reporter: the peaceful proceedings with no objections stand in stark contrast to what happened here four years ago when a mob of trump supporters stormed the capitol to try and stop the certification of joe biden's 2020 presidential win. >> we cannot let anyone whitewash what happened here four years ago. >> reporter: nearly 1600 people have been charged for their roles in the january 6th capitol attack. of those, one thousand have plead guilty and 600 were charged with assaulting or resisting police. president-elect donald trump has promised to pardon january 6th defendants. democrats say that would be a
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dangerous endorsement of political violence. republican lawmakers, meanwhile, are promising to advance president-elect trump's priorities as quickly as possible. >> we'll be focused on getting president trump's cabinet up and running quickly by ensuring that his nominees are speedily confirmed. >> reporter: new cbs news polling shows four years later, the january 6th capitol attack continues to be met with disapproval from a large and bipartisan majority of americans, though republicans' disapproval has softened. natalie brand, cbs news, capitol hill. president biden and first lady jill biden visited new orleans on monday, meeting with the familie of those killed in the new year's day attack on bourbon street. biden directed additional resources to help new orleans seure major upcoming events including mardi gras and the super bowl. the visit comes as we learn more chilling details about the planning of the attack. here is cbs' omar villafranca. >> reporter: president biden and
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first lady jill biden traveled to new orleans, nearly a week after the deadly new year's attack in the crescent city. >> new orleans defines strength and resilience. you define it, whether it's from this attack or hurricanes or super storms, this city's people get back up. >> reporter: 14 people were killed when the suspect, identified was killed over the weekend. the fbi video showing the army veteran riding a bicycle through the french quarter last october and recording video of the scene using his meta smart glasses. other clips captured on street cameras appear to show jabbar planning homemade bombs in coolers hours before carrying out the attack. >> he didn't use the right, the correct device to set it off.
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and that is just indicative of his inexperience and lack of understanding. >> reporter: in light of the tragedy, officials here in new orleans are beefing up security to protect mardi gras revellers as celebrations here begin. >> there will probably be more vehicles accompanying us, because everybody wants safety first. >> reporter: new orleans' mayor has also called on a tactical expert to review the city's safety plans ahead of next month's super bowl. >> an expert opinion is something that will assure us that what we're installing meets the need. but if not, we're not stopping there. >> reporter: as the city continues to grieve, family and friends said a final goodbye to tiger bech, the 27-year-old who died in last week's attack was laid to rest in lafayette, remembered as a fierce and loyal friend who impacted so many. omar villafranca, cbs news, new orleans, louisiana. well, some major news from america's neighbor to the north.
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justin trudeau announced monday he is stepping down after serving nearly a decade as prime minister. his decision was not unexpected amid rising discontent over his leadership and turmoil within his government. trudeau says he will stay on as prime minister until a new party leader is chosen. when "cbs news roundup" continues, outrage on the streets of new york city over the nation's first ever congestion pricing plan. ♪♪
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around adhd there is tremendous ignorance. most people are not aware of the positives. can't sit still, disorganized, can't focus. (montage of voices) annoying, lazy, stupid, you can't make it, you never listen, you don't clean your room... it's a super-skillset. ♪ this is "cbs news roundup." i'm shan in new york. commuting just got a lot more expensive for the thousands of people who drive into midtown manhattan for work. the state has now imposed a so-called congestion pricing charge for drivers. the $9 per car is supposed to
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clean the air, reduce traffic, and help pay for upgrades to the city's mass transit system. but opponents call it a money grab, wondering why drivers have to pay to support subways and buses. so how is all this working? here is cbs' elijah westbrook. >> reporter: how are you feeling this morning? >> it's horrible. i'm upset about it. >> reporter: new york city's first in the nation congestion pricing plan is taking effect. millions of people commuting in and out of manhattan's so-called central business district are now paying at least $9 to enter the zone. zahar, how long does it typically take you to get from here in new jersey out? >> typically on an average morning it takes about an hour and 15 minutes. >> reporter: and that's on a good day for zahara duncan who lives in bayonne, new jersey. >> i'm always trying to leave work early. >> reporter: but commuting isn't a laughing matter.
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duncan has physical limitations that make public transportation difficult. the daily $9 toll will be a financial burden. it adds up to $45 a week on top of other transportation tolls. for such a fast-paced city, getting around new york can feel surprisingly slow. >> buses are slower than walking in much of midtown. we want to see if that can be improved. >> reporter: 2003, london implemented a similar traffic plan. initially the plan had some success with traffic down 18% in the zone and congestion pricing reduced 30%. but with the increase in ride-sharing services and trucks delivers online orders, traffic has crept back in. now the new tolling program is already facing some serious roadblocks. nearby states have already filed a lawsuit, said president trump is threatening to scrap the program altogether once he is in offi i've lost 228 pounds on golo. i'm able to enjoy my life
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a few years back, the snow crab season off the coast of alaska was canceled because most of the crabs had disappeared. well, they've now started to return slowly, and not a moment too soon for the crab fishermen. cbs' jonathan vigliotti has more. >> reporter: in some parts of the alaskan wilderness, the seafood is so abundant, you can
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grab it with your claws. >> clear! >> reporter: but for commercial fishermen like gabriel prout based on kodiak island, the water is looking murky these days. >> you know, this is the wheelhouse. a lot goes up on up here. you have fights. you have arguments. you have prayers. >> reporter: those prayers are for a rebound of alaska's snow crab population. where have the snow crab gone? >> reporter: when we first met prout in 2022, the alaska department of fish and game had just imposed an indefinite pause on the snow crab season. 10 billion snow crabs, 90% of the species had mysteriously vanished. here we are two years later. a lot of uncertainty. how has it been? >> it's been extremely difficult. there is not a lot you can do. these boats are specifically designed to go go out and catch crab. so we're over $4 million in debt. >> reporter: $4 million? >> correct. on a good day you'd have at least 200 crab in here. >> reporter: biologists blame
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the rapid decline of snow crab on a 2018 climate-fueled heatwave. >> this is kind of a small one. >> reporter: now six years on, been gayley with the department of fish and game is developing monitors for sustainable harvesting. >> it helps us understand their movement patterns in response to environmental change. >> reporter: climate change isn't going away any time soon. how does a population that depends on colder water then come back from that when the water will likely continue to warm? >> the warming event during 2018 and 2019 was kind of thought of as a lightning strike. and the concern moving forward is that the predictions are suggesting higher frequency of lightning strikes in the future. >> reporter: other alaskan species have also been impacted, including pacific cod, king salmon, and pollock. according to noaa, between 2022 and 2023, alaska seafood industry suffered a nearly $2
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billion loss. that industry extends to fish markets and dinner tables thousands of miles from here. prices of alaskan seafood in some places have shot up nearly 60% in just a few years. >> the volume is definitely lower than it once was, and that is affecting availability obviously. affecting sales. >> reporter: kenny belloff owns a seafood company and restaurant in the bay area. >> what the customer has to be aware of, more of what you will be eating will be imported. more of what you will be eating will be less regulated. more of what you will be eating will be caught with destructive fishing gear. >> reporter: back in kodiak, commercial fishing pods have returned to the water this season after officials lifted that two-year ban. the moratorium helped populations be, the quota will only be about a tenth of what it was three seasons ago. has there been any discussion about plan b? >> it's hard to even consider a plan b when fishing is in my blood.
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i'm a third generation fisherman. >> reporter: for now, it's a modest lifeline for fishermen who find themselves drifting who find themselves drifting deeper into the unknown. ♪today my friend you did it, you did it♪ pursue a better you with centrum. ♪♪ it's a small win toward taking charge of your health. ♪♪ so, this year, you can say... ♪you did it!♪
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gum problems could be the start of a domino effect parodontax active gum repair breath freshener clinically proven to help reverse the 4 signs of early gum disease a toothpaste from parodontax, the gum experts. each year brings thousands of well-known works into the public domain as their copyrights expire. so that means comic strips, books, films, music, and other creative works from the year
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1929 are now available to anyone. errol barnett has more. ♪ >> reporter: if you grew up in the 20th century, chances are you've seen countless popeye the sailor cartoons, either after school or on a saturday morning. but the spimnach-loving, pipe-smoking sailor first made his debut called thimble theater created by e.c. seegar. that same year belgium cartoonest developed "the adventures of tin-tin" seen in this animated film about the young cub reporter and his dog snowy. it also started out as a comic strip. popeye, tin-tin and snowy all turn 95 years old this year, ushering them into the public domain, according to u.s. copyright law. they join the likes of other characters that have already passed over, includie ing sherl
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holmes, tarzan the apeman, winnie the pooh and most famously, mickey mouse. >> please welcome back to "the late show" mr. john oliver. ♪ >> this is steamboat mickey, which is in the public domain now. therefore he can help with promoting any nondisney-related show. and it's great to have the mouse here. >> the public domain every year is a time capsule. it's a snapshot of a moment in time in history. >> reporter: i recently had the chance to meet up with jennifer jenkins, a professor at duke university's school of law and an expert in intellectual property. what does it mean when a work comes into the public domain? >> it means that its copyright expires. in this case, after 95 years, and the work becomes freely available for anyone to use and build upon without permission or fee. what about the movie "wicked"? it's built on a couple of public domain books. "the wonderful wizard of oz" by
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frank baum. >> there is a risk to these characters turning from, you know, beloved children's characters. >> yes. >> to villains in slasher horror movies. >> the low budget slasher flick appears to be an inevitability when these beloved characters enter the public domain. it happened to winnie the pooh. it happened with mickey. and there is also announced flick called "popeye the slayer man." they're not the kind of books that we'll be talking about in five or ten years, that stand the test of time. >> a million lights. >> reporter: on the cinematic front, movies released in 1929 in what was known as the beginning of talkies, or the sound era have also entered the public domain, including mgms musical "the broadway melody" and the marx brothers' first
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feature "cocanuts." >> so we got the first sound films in 1929 by alfred hitchcock, cecil b. demille, john ford, harold lloyd, clara bow, who was the it girl and sex symbol of the time. >> reporter: famous books are also up for grabs. there are some literary masterpieces going into the public domain, a farewell to arms, the sound and the fury, v woof's and also from the hard boiled detective genre, the first appearance of the maltese falcon by dashiell hammett. ♪ i'm singing in the rain ♪ among the musical compositions anyone can record, "singing in the rain" immortalized in the gene kelly movie of the same name. ♪ singing in the rain, singing in the rain ♪ >> reporter: it originally appeared in the film "the hollywood review of 1929."
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♪ ain't miss bhaehaving ♪ >> reporter: that's the famous ain't misbehaving and tiptoe through the tulips made famous by tiny tim in the late 1960s. >> no one is losing anything because they're out of circulation. but now we all gain because we can share them. we can rescue them from obscurity. we can make them available and di
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