there's even a name for them, supercommuters, and their numbers are decidedly on the rise. janet shamlian has our report from houston. >> the day starts early in this houston carpenter shop. but no one in the warehouse serving the md anderson cancer center has had an earlier wake-up call than their maintenance manager rodney beseda. he leaves his house at 4:15 a.m. because his daily drive to work one way is 95 miles. >> the first five minutes can be very difficult. i'm like, oh, my gosh, how am i going to do this? >> but he does. 3:30 behind the wheel a day. 1,000 a week on his car, and monthly, $450 for gas. >> worm with a hook. >> the father of four who travels from fayetteville, texas, is a supercommuter, one of a growing number of americans who live in one city and work in another. >> the enormous increase in supercommuters is due to the willingness of americans to travel huge distances to keep a job, hold a job, and get a job but not at the price of making their families move with them. >> mitchell moss, the author of the census based study which found extreme commutes