tv CBS News Roundup CBS January 30, 2025 2:42am-3:30am PST
2:42 am
operating costs and fewer people dining out. one survey found in 2024, nearly half of consumers say they cook at home more, and it may be a while before there is relief. according to the usda, egg prices are predicted to increase 20% this year alone as renewed bird flu outbreaks affect farms nationwide. more than 145 million birds have been killed since the start of the outbreak. roughly 8% of the country's total flock, wiped out since november alone, driving egg shortages and price surges across the country. >> there have been outbreaks of bird flu before. why does this one stand out? >> i think it stands out because it's lasted so long. we continue to have outbreaks that continues to cut into our supplies and our ability to make up for those lost chickens is just not there. >> reporter: yet texas a&m livestock economist david
2:43 am
anderson says americans continue to depend on eggs as an affordable sauers of protein. >> eggs are a staple. the demand is such that we still want to go buy eggs. and so that creates a situation of skyrocketing prices. >> reporter: a challenge for consumers at the grocery store that green keeps in mind for her customers as well. >> i'm not only considering yeah, the price that they're paying when they're eating here, i'm also considering the fact that at home they're paying considerably more for eggs. >> that was nancy chen reporting. other products could also get more expensive as president trump threatens new tariffs on imports from china. cbs' anna coren is in hong kong with a closer look. >> reporter: with the pounding of drums, evil spirits fade away, an ancient tradition practiced for centuries as the chinese welcome in the lunar new year. and this year's prosperity is of even greater importance as china braces itself for trump 2.0. >> china has a hope for the best and prepare for the worst. >> reporter: dr. henry wang, an
2:44 am
adviser to the chinese government, says officials were deeply concerned with president trump's rhetoric on the campaign trail. >> we will charge them 100 or 200%. >> reporter: but so far, the worst hasn't come to pass. instead, tariffs of 10% on all chinese goods exported to the u.s. are being considered, although trump has indicated it's just a warning shot. however, trump may be dealing with a very different china this time around. you're seeing an absolute epic boom in industry because the reality is that china today is probably more productive than any economy has ever been. >> reporter: research analyst louis gau says the world's second largest economy is now better insulated for the trade war and says the stunning news that chinese ai company deepseek has matched, if not surpassed u.s. ai models underscores the fact that china can no longer be underestimated. >> the idea that we're going to win a tech war with china over
2:45 am
let's say 10 or 20 years when all the kids being trained today in technology are chinese is madness. >> reporter: and while nobody at the offices of deepseek wanted to talk with cbs, chinese citizens are hoping for warmer relations with the u.s., but no one is under any illusion. do you think that donald trump will work with china, wants to be friends with china? >> i think donald trump will put great importance to its own interest. >> reporter: as prayers are offered for the year of the snake, many here know what's at stake. now while there are genuine concerns about what's ahead for u.s.-china relations, here in hong kong and across mainland china, there are celebrations for the chinese new year. there are tens of thousands packed this parade.
2:46 am
i have to say, i have not seen these numbers or this sort of energy in this city since before covid. so it's great news. back to you guys. >> that was anna coren reporting from hong kong. "cbs news roundup" will be right back. (peaceful music) - time to get up, sweetie! (kissing) - [child voiceover] most people might not think much about all the little things you do every day,
2:47 am
but for me, just being able to do those little things is the best part of my day. - ready, mom! - [child voiceover] it hasn't been easy, but sometimes the hardest things in life have the best rewards. (inspirational music) and it's all because of my amazing friends at the shriners hospitals for children and people like you who support them every month. when you call the number on your screen and just give $19 a month, you'll be helping other kids like me do the amazing things that make up the best part of our day. - because shriners hospital is more than just a hospital. it's... - where my back gets better! - where my legs get stronger. - where i get to be a kid. - where it's the best part of my day! - with your gift of just $19 a month, only 63 cents a day,
2:48 am
we'll send you this adorable love to the rescue blanket as a thank you. - [child voiceover] please go online to loveshriners.org right now on your phone or computer to send your love to the rescue today. - will you send your love to the rescue today? - thank you. - thank you. - thank you for giving. - because at shriners hospitals for children, going to the hospital is like going to see family! it really is the best part of my day. please call or go online right now to give. if operators are busy, please wait patiently, or go to loveshriners.org right away. your gift will help kids just like me have the best part of our day.
2:49 am
lowriders occupy a very unique space in car culture. the colorful customized vehicles have been around since the 1940s. and now a new exhibit in los angeles is celebrating lowriders as works of art. here is cbs' michelle miller. >> reporter: inside the petersen automotive museum in los angeles, there are jewels on display that have a criminal past. >> this is troqutive a loca. this is a truck that also features an intricate paint job and murals that represent the mexican revolution. >> reporter: once in trouble with the law, lowriders are now works of art. >> this is as low as you can go. >> reporter: curated here by autumn murray. >> they are intricately engraved, painted, detailed engines, undercarriages. every part of these cars are
2:50 am
touched to be really artworks and to showcase latino culture. ♪ >> reporter: that culture, still vibrant, remains true to roots planted some 80 years ago by young chicano men in the southwest. then they transformed discarded chevys and added hydraulics to raise and lower the cars. flashy paint jobs made them beacons for the police, who thought all is bad for behavior and made arrests. california passed a law banning low riding and cruising. why now? >> the exhibition actually coincides with the repeal in california of the lowrider ban on cruising. so it's sort of timely in that we're celebrating the roots of this car culture as cruising the boulevard. >> reporter: so museum through exhibits make a statement. what is the peterson museum trying to say? >> we're making the statement that these are the pinnacle of
2:51 am
car modifications, that these are artworks. they're cultural artworks, and that they be deserved to be celebrated in a museum setting. ♪ >> reporter: double trouble. this one was created primarily to win car competitions. and it was lowrider of the year three times in a row, which is the most that any car can win that title. >> reporter: and today on the streets, when the lowriders show their stuff, some of them use police sirens to mock the time when they were criminalized. ironic too the celebrity status the cars received as stars in commercials. >> detailing every detail. >> reporter: and in movies. ♪ >> low riding is all around the world. it really has become a global phenomenon. >> they've gone wild. >> they've gone definitely wild. >> reporter: now that's a lowrider. cruising through this exhibit, the cars here are pinnacles of wildness.
2:52 am
>> the lincoln continental is known as las vegas. this really plush, elaborate interior style sort of came about in the '70s, but we wanted to feature one of those truly over the top interiors. >> reporter: so craps, you have black jack, poker. >> a little bit of everything. you can have a whole game night just with this vehicle. >> reporter: slot machines! >> yes. >> reporter: it's a sea of cars with personalities. >> this is one of my favorite vehicles in the exhibition. this one is from japan. this is so special because it appears to be engraved, but what is actually happening is a thick special paint has been applied and the paint has been engraved. and our other car from japan is here. this is sphinx. and it features a really glittery paint job which has become a hallmark of a lot of japanese lowriders. >> look at that interior! velvet, plush. >> there is nothing that is not elaborate on this car. >> reporter: and then there is this car. >> yes. this is game killa, a chevy caprice.
2:53 am
this was built by tina blankenship early, known as the first lady of low riding and a great figure in the lowrider community. >> reporter: tina blankenship is certainly a star among lowriders showing too it's no longer just a men's club. this is your backyard. >> yes. the garage. >> reporter: her museum piece was built out back at her south central los angeles home. this is a hot rod. >> yes. >> reporter: how do we know this is a hot rod? >> because it has a big wheels on it. >> reporter: and that's a lowrider. >> lowrider. >> reporter: because of the little wheels? >> and the suspension. '64 impala. >> reporter: does it bounce? >> yes, it does. ♪ >> reporter: she says she first learned about car mechanics from old men in the neighborhood. >> oh! [ laughter ] >> reporter: a job she had
2:54 am
installing car radios helped her realize she could take cars apart and put them back together. >> want to drive it. >> reporter: you're going to let me drive? >> yes. >> reporter: let's do it! put it in park! take it for a spin. >> you might need a booster seat. >> reporter: i think i might. is it free-wheeling? >> yeah. >> reporter: low riding. how'd i do? what tina blankenship is also showing is that even low riding became a culture of change, personal too for autumn murray. >> she is a working girl. >> reporter: the curator at the petersen automotive museum. the lowrider wasn't always kind to women. >> i think women were objectified in a lot of ways on the paint jobs, the murals that are featured. very explicit. there were even vehicles that we
2:55 am
considered showing here that were a little too risque for some of our audiences. >> reporter: still, the lowriders speak to a global phenomenon and may hold a lesson beyond cars, cultural differences given time may not be different at all. there may be a hidden art worth celebrating. ♪ >> and that was michelle miller reporting. "cbs news roundup" will be right back.
2:58 am
the solar industry has just exploded over the past decade, and that includes putting panels on farmland and maintaining the land under those panels can be quite pricey. but now there are workers doing it on the cheap. cbs' jason allen explains. >> reporter: about an hour outside austin, texas, in the tiny town of buckholts sits the fifth largest solar project in the u.s., capable of creating up to 900 million watts of power. and the panels soaking up all that sun are getting an assist from new helpers willing to work for food. >> we want to be good stewards of the land. one of the challenges to that is the very difficult problem of how do we effectively control
2:59 am
vegetation management. >> reporter: sb energy found an answer, sheep. the animals naturally graze the land, keeping vegetation from growing too high. >> as this industry continues to grow, so will the demand for sheep. >> reporter: business is booming. you can find sheep on solar farms in about 27 states from texas to minnesota to massachusetts. companies say it's more cost-effective than bringing in mowers, and it's environmentally friendly. >> the sheep naturally eat the grass. so it benefits them. so instead of us just mechanically mowing it, we're lowering the carbon footprint. >> historically there has been a reluctance to transition from gas mowing to livestock vegetation maintenance. we're starting to see widespread adoption. >> reporter: there are currently about 60 solar grazing projects in the u.s., and that number is expected to grow. jason allen, cbs news, dallas. and that's today's "cbs news roundup." for some of you, the news
3:00 am
3:01 am
here are your top stories. a massive search-and-rescue operation under way in washington, d.c. after a passenger jet collided with an army helicopter over reagan national airport. president trump signs a new law making it easier to deport illegal aliens in the u.s. who have been accused of crimes. and the federal reserve decides to hold firm on interest rates, at least for the time being. a passenger jet with 4 people has crashed midair with an army helicopter in the skies over reagan airport in washington, d.c. you can see what happened in this incredible footage that captured this tragedy. the american airlines regional jet from wichita, kansas was carrying 60 passengers and four crew. the pentagon says the helicopter was an army uh-60, commonly called a black hawk helicopter based out of fort belvoir, virginia, with three crewmembers aboard. a major search-and-rescue operation now under way in the
3:02 am
potomac river. we turn to cbs' erica brown in washington for the very latest. >> reporter: the faa says preliminary information indicates that a regional jet collided in midair with a black hawk helicopter while on approach the reagan national airport wednesday night. video from earth cam appears to show the mid-air collision and a fiery crash. >> the accident happened in the river. both the helicopter and the plane crashed in the river. east of the approach of runway 33. >> reporter: a d.c. police official told cbs that police and fire department divers continue to search water for survivors. >> our fire department, d.c. fire and ems supported by fire departments and police departments from across the washington metropolitan region are executing a rescue operation in the potomac river. they are working diligently in
3:03 am
very dark and cold conditions, cold water to execute this rescue operation. >> we noticed the planes started having regular patterns and they all kind of dispersed from the regular landing patterns. and then we looked up in the sky before that, and we saw this white flare. we didn't think much of it, until we saw the fire trucks start going out to the tarmac and the police cars and the police boats. >> reporter: in a brief statement, american airlines said it is aware of reports of an incident and said it will provide information as it becomes available. the national transportation safety board will lead the investigation along with the faa. erica brown, cbs news, washington. >> just unthinkable. well, turning now to the white house, president donald trump has signed the laken riley act into law. it's named after a young georgia woman murdered by an undocumented immigrant. the new law says an immigrant who is in this country illegally
3:04 am
and does a violent crime or theft midwest be held until trial. he plans to uguantanamo bay. the white house reversed an order to halt federal grants and loans after confusion and's for states, schools and organizations that rely on the trillions of dollars in federal aid. cbs' danya bacchus explains. >> reporter: the president's budget office rescinded an order to freeze spending on federal grants. >> social security, medicare, medicaid have not been affected. we are merely looking at parts of the big bureaucracy where there has been tremendous waste and fraud and abuse. >> reporter: the directive would have affected states, schools, and organizations that rely on trillions of dollars from washington. a spending cut plan democrats slammed. >> this has woken up the american people about what this
3:05 am
administration is up to. >> reporter: white house press secretary karoline leavitt says removing the order is meant to clear up confusion, adding the executive order remains in full force. on tuesday, the trump administration sent a letter to the nation's nearly two million federal civilian worker, offering a buyout to those who don't want to return to the office full-time. >> we think a very substantial number of people will not show up to work, and therefore our government will get smaller and more efficient. >> reporter: president trump signed into law his first piece of legislation since retaking office. the laken riley act mandates that attention and potential deportation of people in the u.s. illegally who are charged with theft or violent crimes. >> it's a landmark law that we're doing today is going to save countless innocent american lives. >> we're out arresting numerous cases throughout the state that were all public safety cases. >> reporter: meanwhile, immigration and customs enforcement, or i.c.e., continues to carry out targeted
3:06 am
enforcement actions around the country. this one in baltimore, maryland, resulted in a series of arrests. danya bacchus, cbs news. and the federal reserve on wednesday decided to hold steady on interest rates, hoping to curb the latest inflation uptick. the fed chairman jerome powell said he wants to see if president trump's economic policies and threatened tariffs will lead to higher prices. cbs news money watch correspondent kelly o'grady explains. >> reporter: the federal reserve's latest interest rate decision is to do nothing. fed chairman jerome powell believes keeping rates at current levels will slow the economy and eventually help push inflation down from 2.9% to the fed's target of just 2%. >> the economy remains strong and inflation does not move sustainably towards 2% we can maintain policy restraint for longer. >> reporter: but those rates also make it harder for people who want to borrow money. the average credit card rate remains above 20%, and the
3:07 am
average used car loan is just under 11%. president trump addressed the issue last week. >> i'll demand that interest rates drop immediately. and likewise, they should be dropping all over the world. >> reporter: and the president continues to propose tariffs on items imported from mexico and canada. >> there are a lot of economists out there who believe that depending on the scale of tariffs and for how long they last, we could see the inflation rate drift up above 3 to maybe 3.5% on an annual basis. >> reporter: the trump administration insists tariffs will not lead to widespread inflation. powell says the board is watching and waiting before offering an opinion. >> we don't know what will happen with tariffs, with immigration, with fiscal policy, and with regulatory policy. we need to let those policies be articulated before we can even begin to make a plausible assessment of what the implications for the economy will be. >> reporter: the federal reserve meets again in march, and economists believe it is likely the board will once again leave
3:08 am
interest rates at current levels. kelly o'grady, cbs news, new york. former u.s. senator bob menendez was sentenced on wednesday to 11 years in prison for corruption and accepting bribes. menendez was found guilty of taking cash, gold bars and a mercedes-benz as bribes in exchange for acting as an agent of the egyptian government. straight ahead on "cbs news roundup," egg prices keep climbing, and there is no sign of when they're going to come back down. we're going to show you what's driving those costs up, and what you can do to adapt. they say there are no excuses. - they say to just push harder. - they say to just go faster. - but when we're on the field, they don't know what's going on inside us. - how hard is too hard? - when do we get support? - when do we raise our hand and ask for help? we need each other. - love, your mind.
3:09 am
we're with bridget, whose husband won't be home for months and whose daughter is due any day. we're with mike, who's leaving home to protect his family, and yours. we're with all service-members and their families who need community, connection, and maybe a bit of magic. are you with them? learn more at uso.org today. we're with liam, after his fourth military move. when being new is starting to get old. we're with tara, during the holidays, when she misses home the most. we're with all service members and their families who need connection, comfort and a home-away from home. are you with them? learn more at uso.org today.
3:10 am
- have you ever helped a fellow veteran? of course. yes. - have you ever asked for help yourself? that's always tough, right? i always feel like i can solve my own problems but eventually, you know, you just can't deal with it on your own. and you start to question, maybe people will be better off without me. when you realize that you're not alone, once you take that first step, there is so much support. ♪ this is "cbs news roundup." i'm chris welch in new york. some of the undocumented immigrants who enter the u.s. are doing so with the help of american citizens. cbs news spoke with a man who says he's already helped
3:11 am
hundreds of people cross into the country illegally, and he's made a lot of money do it. here is cbs' adam yamaguchi. >> reporter: we drove overnight to a safe house near the southern border in new mexico to meet a woman who just hours ago arrived on u.s. soil illegally. why are you here? you want a better life. this woman says she was desperate to escape the violence in zacatecas, mexico. she paid smugglers over $15,000 to get here. by morning, she'll be dropped off at her final destination elsewhere in the u.s. we learned her journey was facilitate bade network of americans smuggling people from across the nearly 2,000-mile-long stretch of the southern border deep into the country. >> americans are doing this. we're the ones who are taking them across. >> reporter: we got an inside look at the operation with the man who smuggled her. he agreed to speak with us only if we masked his identity. how many people have you moved? >> i would say close to 500.
3:12 am
>> reporter: 500. this man, who we're calling joe, was born and raised d right her in the southwest. first, he gets sent a location by a smuggling organization. >> i get gps sent to me, come out here, and they get in my vehicle and we head on out. >> start the truck, turn right. >> reporter: after migrants cross into the u.s. illegally with the help of cartels, joe meets them. >> we're going a motel that was used as, you know, a place to help illegal immigrants stay and live there for a few days before they would catch rides to go up north. >> there is a guy that is kind of looking around. so these hotels and motels across the region are used to stash migrants? >> oh, yeah. definitely all the time. >> reporter: these are the types of places you use? >> i've used before.
3:13 am
>> reporter: most americans who watch this with say you're part of the problem. you're getting enriched off the backs of people. you're part of this cartel-run operation. people are pissed about this. >> they are. is it wrong? yeah, a lot of people think it's wrong. i try to say i'm doing something right to help a family out, trying to get away from poverty, the violence, that danger in mexico to get to their family here in the united states. >> reporter: joe told us he lost his job during the pandemic. this is about money. he says he makes about $2,000 for every person he helps into the u.s. and sometimes moves six people a week. these are wire transfers from the illegal migrants you moved. $1500, $1500, 2500. wow. this is a lot of money. >> yeah. >> reporter: as the u.s. steps up in enforcement, the cost per migrant jumps up. >> yeah, they're getting ready
3:14 am
to spike up right away. it's going to get a lot worse than what anyone else has ever seen. >> reporter: i just talked to joe again, and he said that since the trump administration has taken office, the going rate for smuggling people across the border and through the u.s. has more than doubled, and in some cases it's even tripled. adam yamaguchi, cbs news, los angeles. and "cbs news roundup" will be right back. your best defense against erosion and cavities is strong enamel. nothing beats it. i recommend pronamel active shield because it actively shields the enamel to defend against erosion and cavities. i think that this product is a game changer for my patients. try pronamel mouthwash. 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.
3:15 am
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 . what they have done for me, my son, my family-- i'm sorry, yeah. life is a gift, especially for a child battling cancer. call or go online and help save another lives of children like brayden. now, i'm 11 years old. we were actually doing the checkup for my brain. and they saw something in my throat. it's thyroid cancer.
3:16 am
it was heartbreaking to find out that he has cancer again. but we knew who we had behind us. it just gives me hope. you can make a difference. join with your credit or debit card for only $19 a month. and we'll send you this st. jude t-shirt. without st. jude or its donors, we would have been in a bad place. these kids, they've done nothing wrong in the world. finding a cure for childhood cancer, it means everything. help st. jude give kids with cancer a chance. [audio logo] advil liqui-gels are faster and stronger than tylenol rapid release gels. ♪♪ also from advil, advil targeted relief, the only topical with 4 powerful pain fighting ingredients that start working on contact and lasts up to 8 hours.
3:17 am
scammers are trying to take advantage of people during the winter months. they pretend to be from utility company claiming the power will be shut off unless you pay up. cbs' josh siddoorwitz has more. >> reporter: dan deming was suspicious when he got a call from someone claiming to be from the power company. >> a gentleman told me my service was to be shut off. >> reporter: but the i.t. specialist started to doubt himself and what he knew about scams. >> i was pretty conflicted because i know that they try to instill this sense of urgency. your account is going to be shut off. you're going to lose your electricity to try and get you to break out the pocketbook or whatever. but on the other hand, the guy was very well spoken, very smooth. smooth talker, and he had all
3:18 am
this information about me. >> reporter: information, including his address and his account number. >> he also mentioned that my account number had recently changed, and he had that earlier account number as well. >> we do track utility scams, because it is such a popular scam. >> reporter: medically mcgovern with the better business bureau said scam artists also visit businesses and threaten to shut off the electricity and they often want untraceable form of payment like bitcoin or prepaid card. >> once that money is gone, it's gone. so if that is the method of payment they're asking for, that's a definite regular flood that it is a scam. if you do get one of these calls, just hang up and call your utility company directly. >> reporter: that's what deming did, and the power company confirmed he was not facing shutoff. >> that was kind of the one thing that had been drilled into me that luckily i stuck to that day. >> reporter: and experts also warn that scammers can even spoof your caller id to make it look like that call is coming from your utility company.
3:19 am
cbs news, philadelphia. and there is a lot more ahead on "cbs news roundup." stay with us. when caroline has a cough, she takes robitussin. so she can have those one-on-ones again. hey, jim... can we talk about casual fridays? for sure. what's up? get fast powerful cough relief with robitussin and find your voice. ♪robitussin♪
3:20 am
your gut is like a garden growing both good bacteria and bad. that balance is key to a healthy gut environment. benefiber's plant-based prebiotic fiber gently nourishes the good bacteria, working with your body to help your gut, and you, flourish. effortlessly. every day. grow what feels good. with benefiber. a high school teacher in tennessee will be receiving a grammy award this sunday. adrian macklin has been named the winner of the 2025 music educator award, and nancy chen visited cordova high school in memphis to see how macklin is raising young voices and changing lives.
3:21 am
♪ >> reporter: in this memphis classroom, there are voices that lift the soul. ♪ this is the senior concert class at cordova high school. ♪ >> reporter: but the harmony here extends far beyond music. in shorthand, your students refer to f-163. what does that mean? >> they know that f-163 is home. ♪ >> reporter: adrian macklin is the head of this makeshift musical household. ♪ >> we don't refer to ourselves as a choir class. we refer to ourselves as a choir family. >> reporter: you call him pops? >> he is a real-deal father figure, in the classroom and outside of the classroom. >> reporter: we sat down with some of his students, both former and current. >> he had this energy. it's like an attracting energy
3:22 am
that you just want to be around. ♪ >> he gave me life lessons. it's not just about choir. when i first moved here, me and my family were having a little bit of some financial problems and some transportation issues. and macklin would pick me up at 5:30 in the morning, take me to school. >> reporter: macklin's dedication and sheer determination changing the course of his students' lives. >> i came into high school and hooked up with a couple of people i thought were friends. i got myself into a little bit of trouble. and one day they told me my schedule had changed. and i go to room f-163. i went maybe two weeks telling them i don't want to be in here. get me out. by the third week, i was singing everything. >> reporter: and now you want to go into music education? >> yes, ma'am. >> that brings tears to my eyes when he told me that at the beginning of the school year. >> reporter: when you consider the number of lives you've impacted, what do you think?
3:23 am
>> oh, gosh, there are kids that come in, they're dealing with things. they're troubled. i've had kids come in homeless. and my smile, me caring for them, i know that i've made a change in them. >> i hear you, altos. >> reporter: macklin, who began singing in church as a child, decided to dedicate his life to teaching when he, too, was in high school, a choice made when he and his best friends auditioned together for a state competition. >> they made it. i did not. >> reporter: and you thought? >> i did that. >> reporter: so you weren't jealous or mad. >> was not jealous, was not mad. i think that's when the light bulb came on and said this is what you want to do for the rest of your life. ♪ we shall overcome ♪ >> reporter: for almost 20 years, macklin has taken his choirs around the country to showcase their talents. ♪ >> reporter: and those talents he insists need to include academic excellence as well.
3:24 am
♪ >> a funny saying he had is he is not going to take around a bunch of singing dummies around the country. ♪ >> reporter: in macklin's class, you'll find the school's top three academic achievers, natalia crosby was her class valedictorian. what does it mean when he told you you're representing not only yourself, but community. >> it was a lot of pressure because we're a choir of predominantly african americans who are like minority students. so we already have like vision and other people's minds of what we are. it was like okay, let's go in whenever we sing, whenever we perform, and let's show them we're more than whatever they could think we are. >> if you were to say something to mr. macklin, what would it be? >> thank you for believing in a kid who probably sometimes didn't believe himself. you mean the world to me. i love you so much. ♪
3:25 am
>> reporter: you've taught for nearly two decades countless students. >> yes. >> reporter: what keeps you going? >> it's the joy of seeing them be successful. knowing that the little part that i did made a change in your life. >> that was nancy chen reporting. 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. "cbs news roundup" will be right back.
3:28 am
3:29 am
3:30 am
0 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
KPIX (CBS) Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on