after leaving corennia and her daughter, i took a walk up the street.if people here are running out of patience. as information becomes more available to people and they see what their options are, people are going to start to go after it. not because they want wealth or they want fame, because they want something different, they want something brighter. it feels like you took a picture in 1965 and nothing happened. it is crazy. how are you doing, buddy? okay, i'm going to show you a game. put your hands here. ready? the kids in the neighborhood didn't seem to have a care in the world. play? but their future looks bleak unless the cuban economy improves. ♪ i turned to someone who has been watching the situation closely. >> this was main street of old havana. >> ted henken is a professor of latin american studies at baruch college in new york. he visits cuba often, and has written expensively about its new business landscape. >> the changes have been significant, but woefully insufficient. >> he told me that cuba is going broke. the price of socialism is