tv CBS News Roundup CBS January 29, 2025 2:42am-3:30am PST
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in manhattan, the ranks are enlarged by other agencies now ordered by the trump administration to gear up for immigration sweeps. >> also a secondary address? >> reporter: the plan, multiple predawn raids targeting immigrants with criminal records. the charges range from murder to theft to kidnapping. >> we are going to take every precaution when we try to apprehend these folks. >> reporter: today they're joined by newly confirmed homeland security secretary kristi noem. >> be safe out there. >> reporter: the goal, 500 arrests over a week-long operation in new york. in a bronx parking lot, a final huddle. >> target today is anderson pacheco, venezuelan national. he is wanted out of colorado on multiple felony warrants. >> reporter: a suspected gang member with warrants for kidnapping, burglary and a gun crime, authorities told us. around 5:30 a.m., heavily armed agents raid this apartment building and find the suspect and three other male associates, all handcuffed and without incident. also there in the residents, three children.
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their immigration status unknown. and now check to see if they have a caregiver or if child protective services needs to be brought in. the next stop, a residence less than two miles away. after some negotiation, the officers make their way inside, but come up empty. targets were not home, no arrest, no detentions federal law enforcement is working with limited help from new york city police because of the city's laws protecting undocumented immigrants. some might say isn't new york city a sanctuary city, but the mayor has been cooperative? >> the mayor has been fantastic. in fact, i talked to him on the phone four or five times last night. one of these individuals was so dangerous that we needed the backup of the nypd to be there in case things went south. >> reporter: today's operation required around three dozen law enforcement yielding a handful of arrests. is that a ratio you're comfortable with? >> it is, absolutely. i won't doubt what they need for support and backup. >> are you aware you're in violation of our laws? >> reporter: you want cameras at these events, don't you? and some would say you want this spectacle to be filmed.
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>> it's not a spectacle. this is our nation's law enforcement judicial process. the scales of justice are equally applied to everybody. we want transparency on this. >> reporter: vice president j.d. vance has suggested deporting a million a people a year could be possible. roughly quadruple the number under president biden last year. will you have the person power you need to carry out this initiative? >> we're working on it. >> reporter: it seems like you won't. >> well, we'll have the personnel because we're going to continue to recruit and ask people to help us. >> that was major garrett reporting. stay with us. "cbs news roundup" will be right back.
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to defend against erosion and cavities. i think that this product is a game changer for my patients. try pronamel mouthwash. the 67th annual grammy awards are this sunday. it will be a history-making night for roxanne shante, one of hip-hop's original queens of rap. she will become the first solo female rapper to achieve a lifetime achievement award. cbs' gayle king met with shante in her hometown of queens to reflect on her trailblazing journey. ♪ >> roxanne shante has been free-styling her whole life. it's not like you're writing it down. you to do this on the fly? >> it's literally a second language to me. i'm sitting here your paper is yellow, my son is mellow, he came in just said hello.
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it became a second language for me. so it was as easy as breathing. >> reporter: she taught herself how to rap when she was just 8 years old, watching actor and comedian nipsey russell on tv. >> i will not marry until the right girl comes along. but while i'm waiting, i don't mind dating girls that i know are wrong. >> i started it with just the cat, the hat, the bat, the rat. and i understood that you could just add more words to it. so for an entire day i remember saying if i can rhyme this entire day, i'll never be able to stop. i know i can do this. ♪ >> shante grew up in the birthplace of countless hip-hop legends, the queens bridge housing projects right here in new york city. >> i felt like my life was just a musical. every block had music. everywhere you went there was a dj. >> her mom borrowed money from a neighbor to enter shante into her first rap battle. she was just 10 years old at the
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time, and she was unbeatable. >> they said roxanne was a beast. she would talk about your mama, your daddy, your child, your cat. and she didn't care. she was fearless and she was ferocious. >> yes, absolutely. >> a style depicted in a 2017 netflix bio pic about her life. >> i'm the best and i don't care what the rest think. and i'm not rhyming no more because your breath stink. >> but you were a little girl taking on grown men. >> yes. and they hated it. ♪ >> when shante was 14, her neighbor, dj marley marl asked her to freestyle a response to hip-hop group utfo song "roxanne, roxanne." she picked up the mic and recorded "roxanne's revenge." >> my name is roxanne. and unknowingly made a new name for herself. she was born lolita shante, but from this point forward, she was roxanne.
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>> "roxanne's revenge blows up". >> yes, it does. everybody and their mama want to be roxanne. >> shante was one of hip-hop's earliest success stories, but she didn't get to cash in on her newfound fame. you had a record deal, a new hit song, it's making a lot of money, but you're not making money. >> no. >> you are not getting paid and making money? >> no. no. >> one way she knew she could make money was battling. in 1985, she entered herself into the mc battle for world supremacy, and it looked like she was going win. >> i remember one of the judges saying so what does it take for her to lose. so surprise me. the only way she can lose is if she got a 4 or something. there is no way she can lose. she's been getting 9s and 10s all day. even the people who didn't want the give me 9s and 10s gave me 9s and 10s. when it got down to the last two rapper, it was myself and busy bee.
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>> let me tell you, you know you're through. what you say, i'm younger than you. >> never in my mind did i think i would lose. that never crossed my mind. >> but you did lose. why did you lose? >> because i was a girl. because i was a girl. >> rapper kurtis blow gave her a score of 4. >> the winner, busy bee. >> and the crowd went crazy. everybody is yo, you know she won. and it was like everybody had to rush out of there. i was in total disbelief. >> reporter: years later, she ran into blow, who she says offered this explanation. >> he said you won that day. but hip-hop would have lost if you would have won that day. >> why? >> he said because hip-hop was just starting to being taken seriously. hip-hop was a genre of music at one time was not respected. from poverty in the projects and performing in the parks and everything else. and if the best in the world can
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be a 15-year-old black girl, then they weren't going to respect it. >> so should we forgive kurtis blow? >> absolutely. we should work around forgiveness in our hearts period. if roxanne shante, 15 years old, runaway group home teen mom, struggling, everything else, if i held on to anger, can you imagine what my life would turn out to be? >> reporter: the business side of hip-hop started to feel like a losing battle for shante. soon she would walk away from music all together. you didn't reflect on the money you could have made? >> because i was never making money. see, that was the thing. you can't miss what you don't have. >> okay. >> there was no moving out of the mansion. there was no cars being repossessed. there was just an adjustment to regular life. >> reporter: we got a glimpse of what that life looked like in her old neighborhood. >> let me tell you, one thing about queens bridge is you were always able to see what people wanted to have. >> what do you mean?
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>> i can remember being $37.50. but we've always had a million dollar view. >> looking at the bridge is a million dollar view. >> oh my goodness. >> it is gorgeous, though. you hear the sights and sounds of the traffic too here. >> yes, you do. yes, you do. so one thing about queens bridge is you always heard a way out. >> and you did get out, too, roxanne. but it's still here. >> thes that what i was getting ready to say. i did get out, but it's never going to get out of me. i'm going to be qb to the day i die. >> last october, one of qb's finest finally got her due. >> roxanne shante. >> she was honored with a hip-hop grand master award. the event was put on by ben and felicia horowitz's paid in full foundation. it celebrates hip-hop artists who have not received economic rewards proportional to their contributions. the honor came with a hefty stipend. what did that money do for you, if anything, and what did it mean to you?
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>> it changed my life. it came along at a time where i was able to just sleep. i don't know if you know, just being able to sleep. see, some people may not understand that, but i have been surviving since i was 10 years old. so when you're in survival mode, you don't sleep. you rest. you don't sleep, you nap. >> how much was it, can you say? >> can i? >> yeah. >> total like about a million dollars. yeah. >> and it changed your life? >> yeah, i can't stop smiling. >> these days, shante's using her voice to talk to 7 million listeners a day on her daily series xm radio show. >> let me tell you what we did. >> what i did. >> i talk about things that happened to me throughout the day, literally i become your friend in the car. >> shante said grape juice used to be her battle fuel. so we made sure just to have a bottle on hand. and for those wondering if she
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still has it, listen to this. >> well, of course you know i'm the best. going to talk about the mornings on cbs. now this is here and i will never fail, i'm sitting here with my girl gayle. now you know she has the other two, what's they names, who's in your crew? >> nate and tony. >> nate and tony, we won't be phony, i want a sandwich right now like baloney. >> that was gayle king reporting. and you can watch the 67th annual grammy awards this sunday at 8:00 p.m. eastern, 5:00 p.m. pacific here on cbs, and streaming on paramount plus. stay with us. "cbs news roundup" will be right back.
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well, a pizzeria in england is taking a stand against a controversial topping, pineapple. anyone who orders it will have to pay the price. cbs' tina kraus shows us why. >> reporter: customers savor their slices at lupa pizza in the english city of norwich. chefs are happy to craft a custom pie to satisfy any craving, except for one. >> we very much i would say vehemently dislike pineapple on pizza. >> reporter: owners say they have tried it and say they can't stomach it. >> we feel it doesn't suit pizza at all and we're not really sure why it's a thing. >> reporter: so they've slapped a staggering $120 price tag on their hawaiian special in a cheeky attempt to put people off it. >> pineapple on pizza is wrong.
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it should not be done. and yeah, no, 100%, i wouldn't pay for that. >> i mean, it's not awful. it's my second favorite under pepperoni. >> why would you put fruit on savory? it's just -- it's not right. >> reporter: the sizzling debate has exploded on social media with passionate pizza connoisseurs tossing in their two cents. and at last check, the pineapple poll was split, 50-50. >> this is just a joke to begin with. >> reporter: but owners are serious about the price, promoting the hawaiian pie on their app, writing, "for 100 pounds, you can have it. order the champagne too. go on, you monster!" >> well, we have a security jar which is locked away, far, far away of tender pineapple if someone does order the 100-pound pizza. >> reporter: but so far, no one has been willing to put their money where their mouth. tina kraus, cbs news, london.
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for watching. i'm shanelle kaul in new york, and this is "cbs news roundup." here are the top stories. a federal judge temporarily blocks the trump administration freeze on federal funding that's designed to root out progressive initiatives. the u.n. says more than 375,000 palestinians are returning to northern gaza, but many find their homes in ruins. and growing fatigue over the war with russia has more ukrainians willing to trade land for peace. president donald trump's plan to freeze federal grants and loans possibly totalling trillions of dollars has been temporarily blocked by a federal judge. the white house sparked confusion and panic among organizations that rely on washington for a financial lifeline. cbs' erica brown reports from the white house. >> good afternoon, everybody. >> reporter: white house press secretary karoline leavitt held her first briefing tuesday afternoon, tasked with
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explaining what the pausing of trillions of dollars in federal grants and loans would mean for americans. >> if you're receiving individual assistance from the federal government, you will still continue to receive that. >> reporter: before a judge paused the funding freeze, democratic lawmakers said that average americans could be impacted if programs depended on federal dollars run out of money. >> president trump plunged the country into chaos, a cruel, nasty, and illegal chaos without a shred of warning. >> reporter: there is also fallout overseas after president trump suspended foreign aid to country, including ukraine. ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy says his government is compiling a report on effective programs and determining which are critical. the white house press secretary also addressed tariffs in the president's hard-line immigration crackdown during her initial briefing here at the white house. >> if you are an individual, a foreign national who illegally enters the united states of america, you are by definition, a criminal.
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>> reporter: the texas army national guard and border patrol deported dozens of undocumented migrants from mcallen, texas into mexico. u.s. marines also reinforced the border wall in california. there were predawn raids in new york city. >> what's your secondary address? >> reporter: and military officials at buckley air force space will be used to process undocumented immigrants. erica brown, cbs news, the white house. a new study reveals human-driven climate change created conditions that made it possible for the wildfires to surge through southern california. scientists say a combination of super strong santa ana winds together with long periods of flooding and extreme drought were all factors. a team of american and european scientists studying global weather patterns published those findings. for the second straight day, hundreds of thousands of palestinians traveled on foot into northern gaza. israeli forces this week allowed people to begin returning to the heavily bombarded region.
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cbs' elizabeth palmer has the story of one man back in his hometown after 15 months of war which began with the deadly assault by hamas on israel. >> reporter: a river of people on the move along the shore of the mediterranean sea north, not sure what the bombing has left of their neighborhoods. "we can live in the street" says this woman. "i just want to be home." men, women, whole families set off as soon as the israeli military opened the road and withdrew. instead, hamas fighters were there on a charm offensive that also makes the point they are still in charge. monzer al serafi joins the crowd, meeting old friends along the way. they are amazed and overjoyed to find themselves alive. at last he reached his old neighborhood and couldn't
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believe his eyes. "this is where i spent my childhood," he says, "and my life." he found the spot where his apartment once stood, but there is almost nothing left. "i've lost all my memories," says al sharafi, our family photos, our home. tomorrow there will be time to face the future, but today it's just far too much. and there is news on the hostages. israel has confirmed that six more will be freed by hamas this week, three on thursday and three more on saturday. elizabeth palmer, cbs news, east jerusalem. cbs news has confirmed that the u.s. is transferring dozens of patriot missiles from israel to ukraine for its war against russia. while reporting from the front line, cbs' holly williams discovered that as the war there drags on, weary ukrainians are
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becoming desperate for an end to the fighting. >> reporter: in eastern ukraine, we met up with the artan special operations unit as they prepped for a raid. >> channel 2. >> reporter: their high-tech equipment appears to have come from the u.s. or europe. the group carries out daring acts of sabotage, often behind enemy lines. their motto is "we know, we find, we destroy." on the campaign trail, president trump claimed he could end the war in 24 hours. that hasn't happened, but it sparked fears here that he could cut off the supply of american weapons. the group's commander told us if that happens, they'll keep fighting, even if their weapons run out all together. but not everyone here is so gung-ho. for nearly three years, ukraine's people have stood up to vladimir putin's invading army.
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now just over half of ukrainian want to negotiate a ceasefire, according to a recent poll. that's more than double the figure at the start of the war, but many here told us they have conditions. yevgenia lost her husband alexander and her eldest son alexei in the fight against russia. do you support negotiations with russia to try and agree on a ceasefire? >> translator: i support it, but simply freezing the front line will not do anything because in a few years, russia will invade again. >> reporter: ukraine's government shares that fear. it says it will only agree to a ceasefire deal if its allies protect it from russia. perhaps with european peacekeeping forces or nato membership. president trump and vladimir putin have both recently signaled they'd like to meet. whether they can negotiate a ceasefire that ukraine would accept is another question.
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holly williams, cbs news, lviv, ukraine. at least seven people are dead and dozens injured after a stampede broke out during a religious festival in india. tens of thousands of devotees were in the crowd that suddenly surged forward to bathe in the river. dozens were sent to local hospitals, and authorities there are expecting up to 400 million people to take part during the six-week festival. up next here on "cbs news roundup," as temperatures drop in the wintertime, the chances of dying from an invisible killer go up. we
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if you served we want you to get the healthcare and benefits you earned. we want you to come to va. there's never been a better time to apply. under a new law called the pact act we've expanded va care and benefits to millions of people who served and their survivors. no matter where you served or how long you served check out va.gov/pact to learn more about what va can do for you and your family. come to va. ♪ [female narrator] mental health and learning disorders don't discriminate. 17 million children and adolescents in the united states live with disorders like anxiety, depression, adhd and dyslexia. less than half get the help they need to thrive.
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help the child mind institute change these children's lives. visit child mind dot org. (ominous music) (bubbles rising) (diver exhaling) (music intensifies) (diver yells) (shark roars) - whoa. (driver gasps) (car tires screech) (pedestrian gasps) (both panting) (gentle breeze) - [announcer] eyes forward. don't drive distracted. ♪ this is "cbs news roundup." i'm shanelle kaul in new york. people across the u.s. are trying to stay warm as freezing
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weather grips much of the country. the consumer product safety commission says this is the riskiest time of year for deaths from carbon monoxide poisoning. cbs' bradley blackburn has more on how to keep you and your family safe. >> reporter: many parts of the united states are dealing with freezing temperatures and wintry conditions, which can lead to power outages and other problems when trying to stay warm. in houston, leaders are warning about the risks of carbon monoxide poisoning from heaters, fireplaces, and generators. >> we did have an incident today that involved two children. fortunately, our fire department did an amazing job in taking them to a local hospital for precautionary measures, and the prognosis is good. >> reporter: every year in the u.s., about 100 people die from co poisoning from portable generators, according to the consumer product safety commission. >> carbon monoxide is an invisible killer. you cannot see it. you cannot smell it. and it can literally incapacitate you in moments and kill you.
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>> reporter: that's why prevention is critical. number one, make sure you have carbon monoxide alarms. install one on every level of your home and outside sleeping areas. check the batteries regularly. >> number two, get a professional inspection of your furnace and your other fuel burning appliances every year. and three, never use a portable generator inside your home. that's where we see the most number of deaths related to carbon monoxide. >> reporter: while everyone is at risk, the cdc says infants, older adults, and people with heart disease or breathing problems are more likely to get sick from carbon monoxide. so know the symptoms, which include headache, dizzindizzine weakness, nausea, vomiting, sleepiness, and confusion. if you suspect co poisoning, get out of the house to fresh air right away and then call 911. bradley blackburn, cbs news, new york. there's a lot more just ahead on "cbs news roundup." ahead on "cbs news roundup." stay with us.
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my name is brayden. i was five years old when i came to st. jude. i'll try and shorten down the story. so i've been having these headaches that wouldn't go away. my mom, she was just crying. what they said, your son has brain cancer. it was your worst fear coming to life. watching your child grow up is the dream of every parent. you can join the battle to save the lives of kids like brayden, by supporting st. jude children's research hospital . families never receive a bill from st. jude for treatment, travel, housing, or food, so they can focus on helping their child live .
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finding a cure for childhood cancer, it means everything. help st. jude give kids with cancer a chance. [audio logo] introducing new eroxon gel, the first fda-cleared ed treatment available without a prescription. eroxon gel is clinically proven to work within ten minutes, so you and your partner can experience the heights of intimacy. new eroxon ed treatment gel. this week marks 80 years since the liberation of auschwitz, the largest nazi concentration camp. the anniversary comes at a time of growing antisemitism. a recent poll by the anti-defamation league found nearly half of adults worldwide have significant antisemitic
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beliefs. cbs' leah mishkin reports from london on a new effort to fight extremism. >> reporter: it's a horror teresa regulla lived, taken from her home, her mother executed. and at age 16, sent to a death camp called auschwitz because she is jewish. "i repressed all such memories. i repressed them as best as i could," says the 96-year-old. "but now the terrible memories are flooding back," including the severe pain she experienced having her head shaved. holocaust survivor yanina can still remember the smell of burning bodies and small children being torn away from their mothers. she says the mothers almost ripped the hands of these children off because they did not want to let them go. more than 1.1 million people, mostly jews, were murdered at auschwitz, either in the concentration camp's gas chambers, or from starvation, disease, and the cold. now the nearby home of the nazi
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who oversaw the death camp is being transformed into the auschwitz center on hate, extremism, and radicalization. >> my dream, and those of our colleagues is that every visitor, every fellow, every academic that comes here takes action to fight extremism and antisemitism wherever they come from. >> reporter: the center will focus on research to fight extremism, working to ensure extremism, working to ensure hist “the darkness of bipolar depression made me feel like i was losing interest in the things i love. then i found a chance to let in the lyte.” discover caplyta. unlike some medicines that only treat bipolar i, caplyta is proven to deliver significant symptom relief from both bipolar i & ii depression. and in clinical trials, movement disorders and weight gain were not common. caplyta can cause serious side effects. call your doctor about sudden mood changes, behaviors, or suicidal thoughts right away. anti-depressants may increase these risks in young adults. elderly dementia patients have increased
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the super bowl between the kansas city chiefs and philadelphia eagles is now just 12 days away. while millions will be watching on tv, a new option is combining the experience of having great seats near the sidelines without actually being at the stadium. cbs' dana jacobsen shows us how. >> right behind. >> reporter: it might seem like we're just behind the sidelines of the cotton bowl, but take a closer look. we're actually 30 miles away from at&t stadium in a dallas suburb. this is -- cosmo's. part sports bar, part theater, all action. on any given night, hundreds of sports fans are immersed in live game play throughout an 87-foot
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l.e.d. screen that wraps around three levels of seating. the game action is something that can't be seen anywhere else, including television broadcasts captured by cosm's own cameras placed around stadiums and arenas. first-timer chris detton came to cosm in los angeles to catch the nba title cup game between the bucks and thunder. his friend, simon morales, had been here before. why did you tell them you must come and we need to do this way. >> it's just a cool experience. there is nothing else like it in live sport. >> reporter: did you have a sense of what it was going to be like at all? >> i saw some videos online, but i did not realize i would feel like i was at the game and close where i got to sit. >> reporter: what do you want the fan experience at cosm to be? >> we want them to come in and be blown away.
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when you watch fans come in, their faces light up. >> reporter: jeb is cosm's ceo. earlier he showed the vision. >> this is the high energy area where fans are gathered in here just experincing the moment. that's really what we're offering is that fan connection. kind of like bunker suites around the pitch. >> reporter: cosm is where the coliseum meets the cosmos, a concept on full display from expansive hospitality areas to the main attraction. literally jaw-dropping. okay, this is fricking cool. >> reporter: as we saw basketball. >> yes! >> you see them courtside and all that. >> reporter: football and soccer. hockey. >> how many cameras does this take at each? >> anywhere from four to six depends on what we do. and we can do this at scale. and that's. >> reporter: you can't get this seat. >> you always have the best seat. and that's the beauty.
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because we're switching. and you always have that seat. and this one is the best. >> reporter: even mixed martial arts presented in what terry calls shared reality. i was going to say this is like your cageside. >> it's like you're cageside. >> reporter: cosm launched its los angeles location last july, opening in dallas a month later. but it was a culmination of years of work which included buying companies that build planetariums and immersive cameras, like the one inside end zone pylons or under basketball hoops. and while the setup can showcase arts like cirque du soleil and perhaps one day even concerts, as a former nfl player, terry says he knew early on the combination of technologies would give sports fans an in-person experience they've never had access to before. >> the first time i even saw early prototyping, call it a light bulb or sucker punch, it was oh, my gosh, this is going
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to work. it is going and experiencing that was such an immediate visceral reaction, because i played on the field. i'd been in those areas. and when i started looking at this concept and how can we make it work, that's the moment i got it. and it felt very similar. and i get goose bumps talking about it now. >> reporter: the next step, convincing broadcasters and leagues to get on board. how difficult was it to convince leagues to let you do that? >> i mean, this is leveraging every bit of experience i've ever had, whether as an athlete or as an executive, it was really understand wlag the industry was like, finding white space. and that's critical. making sure we're not cannibalizing anybody. i'm not taking from anybody's efforts right now. >> reporter: the goal is to keep fans coming back, not just by providing a unique visual experience, but also by tempting another sense. >> if you're going spend time with us, we want to make sure you get value for all that time. and that's part of why the food is so important. it's all part of that experience. no matter how good the technology is, if the food's not
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good, you're going to remember food's not good. >> reporter: whether it's brisket on the rooftop or preparing a menu to a specific game, executive chef adam is task with taking cosm's food offering beyond what you might get a sporting event or sports bar. >> we really want to elevate the food and the experience, and we try to make everything in-house. so the blue corn tortillas we make from scratch. we bring in fresh salmon and cut it yourselves. you eat with your eyes. it's looks. >> reporter: what are the nachos? >> korean style nachos that really played to the flavors of los angeles. >> reporter: in dallas, is that the same idea, bring a little dallas into that as well? >> correct. all of our locations, we really want the have a local flair and really speak to the community in which every cosm location is going to have. >> have a good time, man, have a good time. >> reporter: with locations already planned for detroit and atlanta and a goal of being in every major city, cosm hopes to offer fans across the country the chance to immerse themselves
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just like chris denton and his friends. so first experience, what did you think? >> it was incredible. there were times when we were very confused about whether someone was actually here or not. how are they ten feet tall. >> how is doc rivers that big all of the sudden? >> it's a little shocking. it feels like we're at the game, but also more comfortable. we're talking if we wanted to sit courtside, it would be impossible. but this feels like the next best thing. >> that was dana jacobsen reporting. stay with us. "cbs news roundup" will be right back.
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i'm not happy with the way that pg&e handled the wildfires. yeah. yeah. i totally, totally understand. we're adding a ton of sensors. as soon as something comes in contact with the power line, it'll turn off so that there's not a risk that it's gonna fall to the ground and start a fire. okay. and i want you to be able to feel the improvements. we've been able to reduce wildfire risk from our equipment by over 90%. that's something i want to believe. [skateboard sounds]
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- man, i need some serious help with this health insurance stuff. - check out covered california. it's a free service from the state that helps you get health insurance. millions of people have used it. - wait, for real? - mmm hmm, they even offer financial help to lower the cost. - nooo... how you know about all this? - that's how i got my insurance. i got a great plan for about $10 dollars a month. - okay, i see you. - if you've got questions, covered california can help, every step of the way. enroll by january 31st. covered california. this way to health insurance. heidi covey: so, i have an eye disease that causes blindness. i have moments where i get a little bit sad because i just enroll by january 31st. covered california. can't see things that i used to. dr. stanley taught me to trust in the lord even when you don't want to. god is such a faithful father.
3:30 am
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