tv CBS News Roundup CBS June 20, 2025 2:42am-3:30am PDT
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he's only iran's second supreme leader since a revolution in 1979, established a conservative, anti-american islamic republic. it's deeply unpopular with many iranians mass protests, like those calling for an end to forced islamic dress and other restrictions on women, have been met with deadly force. israel's prime minister, benjamin netanyahu, has called on iranians to rise up against their own government. but fattahi told us iranians do not want israel or the u.s. to engineer regime change. we don't want their boots on the ground. what is it that you want from the united states? don't compromise with the regime because they're they're killing peoples. world would be a better place without iranian regime for all of us. if this conflict
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weakens the ayatollahs grip on power, fattahi told us her party would work with other iranian opposition groups to try to topple the regime. >> that was holly williams reporting in iraq. here in the u.s., the housing market is in a rut. mortgage rates are hovering just under 7% for a 30 year loan, and home prices in most parts of the nation are through the roof. and that's got a lot of homeowners deciding to spend their time and money fixing up the home they're in. but president trump's tariff war is making that more expensive. 60% of builders report their suppliers have already increased the price of materials because of those import taxes. nancy chen reports. >> that tariff increase translates to an estimated typical hike of more than $10,000 per home, a few extra hundred dollars here or there can really add up very quickly on a home renovation. but there are smart ways to fix up your home on a budget.
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>> the shingles. we've had them delivered way ahead of schedule because the pricing was going to go up next week, and we got them here and saved a few thousand bucks. >> david ortiz business, fine home contracting takes him all over connecticut. but these days, the most challenging aspect of his job is keeping up with tariffs. >> we get about 50% of our building materials come outside the u.s. >> really that much? >> so our main supplies, we need to look elsewhere. >> among the biggest impacts to home renovations, 50% tariffs on steel and aluminum that could affect roofs, plumbing and electrical equipment, as well as hvac systems. almost a quarter of the country's available lumber supply comes from canada and now faces a nearly 15% tariff. new appliances, tiles and even window parts could also cost more. >> so in bathrooms. probably this is the most impacted for of all the rooms.
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>> perrotti says he's seen his products drop by half as price hikes force homeowners to pull back. what advice would you give people if they're thinking, i might sit this one out until tariffs go away? >> if you zoom out into this industry we were building and remodeling for about half the price ten years ago. so unfortunately it continues to go up. but if you were to do one project, painting is usually a really nice to freshen things up. new flooring. you can definitely avoid the tariffs just by the different companies that are producing flooring. >> on top of finding domestic alternatives, perrotti also urges clients to set aside extra money in their budgets for rising costs down the line, up to 30% in material costs alone for projects like bathrooms. he also says to work closely with suppliers to stay on top of fluctuating policy and move quickly to lock in prices when possible. >> if the client is trusting and
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understanding that we are genuinely trying to, you know, help them through it, i think it's i think we're also doing our job and hopefully at the end we've created something that they enjoy. >> brady also says if you are tackling remodeling on a budget right now, prioritize plumbing and utilities over finishes like new flooring or countertops and ask yourself, do you really need a major remodel? or could new furniture and window treatments give your home that lift? as for repairs, probably recommends working on anything exterior over the inside if you can, over the inside if you can, because the outside is your sisters are running... early? early!? this headache... we've got an hour... ...try painquil. the max strength liquid pain reliever that starts working fast. painquil. the aches, pains, strains, head-pounding, back-aching, fights pain fast, medicine. i was excited when i first heard of pronamel clinical enamel strength. this is a product that has our best enamel science yet. pronamel clinical enamel strength has 3 times better enamel protection, as well as repairs 66 percent of microdamage.
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♪ pepto nausea! ♪ sunday morning. a school debate club can open doors to all kinds of things. just ask david begnaud. >> hooray! >> a culprit. >> that was me in 2000. in my dad's suit, i think. >> david begnaud suddenly, on the biggest stage of my life and it's the same place that oprah, brad pitt, stephen colbert, and three supreme court justices, all in part got their start high school speech and debate. >> class dismissed. >> and as the new documentary. speak shows. >> the causes, effects and solutions. >> it provides a platform and a purpose. >> we live in a country. >> for teenagers looking to tell
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their own story. it helped me to find my own voice. and now i'm lucky to be the emcee for the tournament. every year. >> for the first time in the history of the national speech and debate association, we have a three time champion in original oratory. >> woo! >> that's esther oyetunji. you are like the tom brady. of original oratory. >> thank you. >> who are the top dogs? >> esther. >> esther. >> that's sam schaefer and noah chao-detiveaux. two of five students that the film follows as they compete in original oratory. >> so it's a ten minute and 32nd speech where essentially you are trying to convince the audience that there is a certain problem we need to fix in the world. politicians claim to protect children, yet 9 million kids live below the poverty line. the power of speech and debate is that there are so many different perspectives and just so many different life stories,
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and that's why listening is my favorite part. >> we brought the three star performers together to listen and talk about speech with scott wunn, who runs the national speech and debate association. we all met at the ron clark academy, a hogwarts inspired middle school in atlanta. >> when i started speech and debate and i look at my first videos, i'm not the same person like people see up on that stage. and to take someone who is shy but had a lot to say and be able to progress and learn how to like, how do i argue for myself and for other people? how do i learn to convey stories and say people's stories in a way that's honest, but also ethical? like, those aren't skills you get to to learn how to do in any other environment but speech and debate. but it's also super competitive because you're competing against the top of the nation. fourth grade teachers were fatally shot as they shielded their babies from gunfire. >> it's like semi paradoxical in the sense that, like, you're there because you beat me. you're there because a bunch of people decided you were better at this than i did. and yet i
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would not have anybody else on the stage than you. >> probably one of the greatest lessons they all learned is how to lose, how to have their thoughts challenged. it's pretty cutthroat, but also pretty awesome. >> doing speech in high school prepares you for everything, whether it be a job interview, being able to confront people when you don't feel comfortable in something. our professional league is life. we can see nostalgic legislation yanking us backward. >> the film features sam giving a speech about what he sees as the dangers of weaponizing nostalgia. >> nostalgic thinking is often cloaked as a. >> morality crisis. >> when i watch the movie, i thought, that's a guy who has found what sets his soul on fire. >> 100%. and it's it's speech, it's advocacy, and it is empowering people around me. my father's nostalgia for bonfires and brotherhood blinded him to his queer son's reality. >> you were very transparent in ways that i don't think i would have had the courage to be at
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your age. >> i mean, i have speech to thank for that speech. like really, no other activity is so subjective and so vulnerable because it's just you listen to us, please. >> and that vulnerability is what also allows noah to perform what i would call a public therapy session. in the film, your intensity is on full display. >> there's nothing that you. >> can do. >> i know, i know, i know, i get intense and i think a lot of us get intense because, like, it's a chance to competitively fight for something you believe in. i gave a speech where i talked about how my mom died. >> your mother died. >> by suicide? >> yes. and thank you for. for the language you're using. absolutely, absolutely. >> and you were very honest in your speech about it. >> how messed up does the world actually have to be to convince a mother that her son's life, that my life is better without her in it? >> what point were you trying to get across? >> grown people like adults.
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women like, would come up to me and be like, yeah, your mom's going to hell. you are complicit to something that was very, very wrong. so i entered the year being like, no, this is a right. like we have to respect them. we can't stop suicide by condemning it as evil. >> it sounds to me like your speech did as much for you as the point you were trying to make to others. >> i mean, it did. like it helped me along my grief journey a lot. like, it took me from somebody who was scorned and just trying to get people to understand that i don't hate my mother because of the way she died. and it took me to somebody who could advocate to keep people on earth. right. and i think that's that's a journey that was facilitated and really only happened because i was giving a speech. don't stop suicide by labeling it as something evil. stop it by making the alternative life better. >> this is a pathway to train people for leadership. this is a pathway to teach listening
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empathy. yes. and it will be the key. i truly believe over the next 100 years to the success of our world. there's no doubt about it. let them speak. because when they speak, they grow. and them growing is what our future needs. >> david begnaud yakking it up. cbs news roundup. we'll choose advil liqui-gels for faster, stronger and longer-lasting relief than tylenol rapid release gels because advil targets pain at the source of inflammation. so for faster pain relief,
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>> there's an old saying you've heard it. looks can be deceiving. and there's a museum where illusions and your ability to see through them are tested every single day. bradley blackburn reports. >> at the museum of illusions. >> in new york. >> around every corner, it's a wonder for the eyes. there's a vase that's a face art that moves with you, and a room that seems to go on forever. >> you're just mesmerized. >> you don't know where to look or where to turn. >> it's a funhouse for our perception. built for the tiktok age. >> but these visual tricks are windows into how the mind works, and they're fascinating to scientists, to. >> the brain uses all the information it can get to figure out what's in front of it. >> doctor martin doherty with england's university of east anglia, has studied one particular puzzle for years,
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called the ebbinghaus illusion. >> the two orange circles. which would you say is the larger. >> the one with the smaller blue circles, the. orange looks larger. >> it looks larger. but of course, as you'd expect, they're actually the same size. the illusion works by using context to mess around with your perception. >> he long thought that everyone saw it the same way, but in a new study, he and his colleagues found radiologists who have years of training to ignore visual distractions actually see the image differently and accurately. >> according to the theory. that shouldn't happen. it shouldn't be possible. and there's no previous research has shown that you could can learn to see through them. >> one other group has been shown to solve the puzzle. young kids, but that ability goes away after age seven. >> we think that's because it takes time to learn to integrate context into your perception. >> makes you think. >> whoa. >> i'm in a different world. >> it's evidence of the deep abilities of a trained brain. but for most of us, illusions are proof of our limitations.
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>> it looks. >> like one. >> thing, but. >> it's actually another. when you see these visuals, this like your brain just starts going crazy. >> and a reminder you can't always believe what you see. bradley blackburn, cbs news, new york looks good to me. >> and that's today's cbs news roundup. for some of you, the news continues. for others, tune in later for cbs mornings and follow us online anytime at cbsnews.com. reporting from the cbs broadcast center in new york. i'm carissa lawson. >> hello and thanks for watching. i'm carissa lawson in new york and this is cbs news roundup. here are the top stories. president trump says
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he's delaying a decision on entering the war in the middle east, hoping to negotiate with iran over its nuclear program. a court judgment is expected on friday in a landmark $7.4 billion opioid settlement. and a spacex rocket test goes terribly wrong, sending a dramatic fireball into the sky. president donald trump has approved a plan for attacking iran, but the white house says he won't make a final decision for another two weeks. that will allow time for any negotiations with iran. the president believes there is still a substantial chance for talks. and cbs news has learned the fbi is stepping up its efforts to monitor any possible sleeper cells linked to hezbollah, the terror group backed by iran. cbs's erica brown has the very latest from the white house. >> the white house says president trump will decide within the next two weeks whether he will order u.s. forces to strike iran. white house press secretary karoline leavitt read a direct quote from
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the president this afternoon. >> based on the fact that there's a substantial chance of negotiations that may or may not take place with iran in the near future, i will make my decision whether or not to go within the next two weeks. >> multiple sources tell cbs news president trump thinks disabling fordow, iran's most secure nuclear site, some 300ft beneath a mountain, is necessary because of the risk of iran producing nuclear weapons. >> it is a fact. >> in the united states. government maintains this fact that iran has never been closer to obtaining a nuclear weapon. >> on wednesday, a senior intelligence source and a defense department official told cbs news the president approved the attack plans on iran, but has not made a final decision on whether to move forward. one week into the conflict. casualties continue to rise on both sides. thursday, an iranian airstrike hit a hospital in southern israel, injuring dozens and a large number of israelis were hurt in a missile attack on
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high rise buildings outside tel aviv. >> they're targeting civilians because they're a criminal regime. they're the arch terrorists of the world. they want to have nuclear terrorism, which will put the entire world under nuclear blackmail. and they would use these weapons. >> israel launched airstrikes. it said neutralized a nuclear reactor it claims was created to build a nuclear bomb. erica brown cbs news the white house. >> a young american man who was one of the hostages taken by hamas during the october 7th attack on israel, is finally home. it was a warm welcome in tenafly, new jersey, as hundreds of people turned out to greet a 21 year old edan alexander. he spent nearly 600 days in captivity in gaza before he was finally released last month. a major court judgment is expected on friday, which could have ramifications for opioid manufacturers. a federal bankruptcy judge will decide whether to approve a nearly $7.5 billion settlement involving
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purdue pharma. that's the maker of the pain medication oxycontin. cbs's scott macfarlane is in west virginia, a state hit hard by the opioid epidemic. looking at the potential impact of this ruling. >> jared buckhalter is a young dad who's the size of a college linebacker. it was a football injury that eventually overpowered him at 16, when he was hooked on painkilling pills. >> take the best feeling that you've ever had in your life and times that by ten to a normal person. that's how i could really explain it to someone that has never experienced it. >> how do you quit that? >> that's the problem. >> buckhalter lives near morgantown, west virginia, the state with the highest opioid overdose death rate in the nation. he's nearly six years clean. >> every day. recovery has to be my number one priority, because if it isn't, i'll lose everything that i put in front of it. >> states that are groaning beneath the weight of treating the addicted sued purdue pharma, maker of the highly addictive
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oxycontin, after years of negotiating and the collapse of a previous deal, the company and its owners will pay more than $7 over the next 15 years. if approved. where do you think we can be in 15 years? is most of this gone? >> i don't think so. >> doctor patrick marsolek is an addiction specialist at west virginia university. he says he'd like some, but not all of the money spent on treatments. >> they say an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. and i know that's kind of cliched, but yes, we have tools to help people once they get sick, but it would be nice to have less people getting sick. >> roughly 10%. about $850 million of the settlement will go to those who suffered addiction or families of those who died. for buckhalter, he fears the families who suffered the addiction can never be made whole. >> they've lost their husband, wives their the pain and suffering that has happened. there's really no dollar that can be reimbursed for. for all the pain and suffering that we've been through. >> even if the settlement is
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approved, it could take months until money is distributed to families, to addiction victims. and of the $850 million or so, it will be spread among nearly 50 states, which means some families could expect thousands. scott macfarlane, cbs news, morgantown, west virginia. >> space x suffered yet another setback, this time in dramatic style. take a look at this. a spacex starship rocket suddenly exploded in this massive fireball on one of the company's launch pads. it happened during an engine test on wednesday night at the headquarters in starbase, texas. and it's just the latest in a string of mishaps this year for elon musk's company. cbs's jason allen reports. >> the sky over starbase, texas lit up overnight as spacex starship exploded ahead of an expected engine test firing. the fireball could be seen for miles just after 11 p.m., the flames burning out of control for more than 90 minutes, but no injuries
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were reported. spacex described it as a major anomaly and suggested a ruptured nitrogen tank may be to blame. this is the fourth unplanned loss of starship this year, following failures in january. >> there's all. >> march. >> we did spring a leak in some of the fuel tank systems inside of starship. >> and just three weeks ago, when the ship broke apart over the indian ocean. >> we are in essentially a tumble. >> cbs news space consultant bill harwood does this present a potential setback in that desired pace of tests? >> well, i think it's a setback, for sure. i mean, it's going to take time to repair the ground equipment. they've got to make sure they understand exactly what happened, so they can do whatever is necessary to make sure it doesn't happen again. >> the starship super heavy is the largest and most powerful rocket ever built. it's key to spacex founder elon musk's dreams of colonizing mars. and nasa is counting on a version of starship to land astronauts on
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the moon in 2027 as part of the artemis program. >> before that can happen, they're going to have to launch dozens of starship super heavies to prove their reliability and safety before nasa is going to put people on board. and if you think about those moon landings, supposedly starting in two years or so, i don't see how in the world they can get there from here. >> jason allen, cbs news, dallas. >> straight ahead on cbs news roundup, we take a look at just how the high cost of living is forcing kayley: my mom is a veteran and she was injured in the line of duty. sandi: i hurt my leg in a training accident when she was only two years old. kayley: she had seven different surgeries over the span of nine years, and there were tons of complications. sandi: i couldn't be the mom my kids needed me to be. kayley: she missed so much. sandi: after my last surgery, i got an infection so bad i thought it was going to kill me. kayley: i told her she couldn't leave me yet. there was still so much she had to see. i hadn't even graduated. sandi: i'm doing much better now.
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i'm an active part of my kids' lives. kayley: she can kick a mean soccer ball. sandi: dav's been there for me and my family. through thick and thin, they've had our back. narrator: every year, dav helps more than a million veterans like sandi get the health and disability benefits they've earned so they can achieve victories great and small. sandi: my victory is getting my life back. i may have lost my leg, but i've gained so much. i got my joy back. kayley: we got our mom back thanks to dav. narrator: support more victories for veterans. go to dav.org. ♪ i got the eye of the tiger ♪ ♪ a fighter ♪ ♪ dancing through the fire ♪ ♪ the eye of the champion ♪ ♪ and you're gonna hear me roar ♪ ♪ (music) ♪ ♪ roar ♪ ♪ oh ♪ ♪ oh ♪ ♪ roar ♪ ♪ i got the eye of the tiger ♪
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there are the millions of americans who can't afford any type of car. it's an affordability crisis, playing out from coast to coast. elise preston has this story. getting to work is work for francesco lo voi andrade. he rides his bike, hops. >> on a train, and then takes a bus every day. >> so an hour and a half each way? >> yeah, half an hour to get to. just to downtown to get to the train station. and then another half an hour just from the train station to get here. and then i take the bus and i'll take me straight to my job. i will do this journey every day just to get my family, you know, through. >> his 20 mile journey was easier when he had a car. but after a crash fixing it just cost too much. >> it's almost like a struggle. every paycheck. >> andrade is the sole provider for his family. to cut down on childcare costs, his wife stays at home with their young son. >> it's heart wrenching, you know, because it makes me feel
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like i'm not enough, you know, as a human. like i'm not really doing much. >> their struggle mirrors millions. 1 in 3 california families cannot make ends meet or afford basic needs like rent, groceries and gas. united way ceo pete monzo says the striking numbers are just a snapshot of a national problem. >> it's a crisis we've been living with. it's like we're running a high fever, right? we have too many households where people are working hard and they can't earn a decent standard of living. >> one of the biggest challenges access to transportation. aaa says the cost of owning a new car, payments, insurance, maintenance and fuel is more than $12,000 a year for the average american household. >> that's a lot of money. >> you're basically saying to a family, it's going to be 1000 a month or more to get to and from work, get to and from school. >> the cost may not be as high in some states, but nationwide,
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with inflation, the financial burden is steadily rising for transportation, along with housing and child care. what would you say. >> to people who say, well, just move. >> for any one family, that might be a decent idea, but it's pretty disruptive to just pick up and leave all your other family relationships and all your community ties to move somewhere to make it cheaper. expecting them all to move somewhere cheaper. it just doesn't make sense. >> to bring costs down. experts suggest paying off your car loan and keeping up preventive maintenance for now. andrade is saving up to afford a car for his family. >> they tell me, you know, don't give up, you know, you got this. >> the father hopes his journey >> the father hopes his journey will pave a smoother road ahead the darkness of bipolar depression made me feel like life was moving on without me. 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 and ii depression.
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and in clinical trials, movement disorders and weight gain were not common. elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke. caplyta is not approved for dementia-related psychosis. call your doctor about new or sudden mood changes, behaviors, or suicidal thoughts right away. antidepressants may increase these risks. report fever, confusion, stiff muscles, which may be life-threatening, or uncontrolled muscle movements, which may be permanent. high cholesterol and weight gain may occur, as can high blood sugar, which may be fatal. common side effects are sleepiness, dizziness, nausea, and dry mouth. these aren't all the side effects. ask your doctor how caplyta can help you let in the lyte. find savings at caplyta.com. (♪♪) i was excited when i first heard of pronamel clinical enamel strength. this is a product that has our best enamel science yet. pronamel clinical enamel strength has 3 times better enamel protection, as well as repairs 66 percent of microdamage. i recommend pronamel clinical enamel strength. it's time to change the way you think about pads. meet always pocket flexfoam.
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we've got new bounty. it's 2x more absorbent so you can use less. and one sheet holds up better while ordinary brands fall apart. it's gone! get more done with one. bounty. the quicker picker upper. >> people are leaving small towns and rural communities in record numbers by the year 2050. one study found that up to 90% of the u.s. population will live in urban areas instead. it's got a lot of cities making plans to create more livable common areas for their residents. that includes urban rivers. jim axelrod reports for decades, the willamette river that runs through portland, oregon, was a look. >> but don't touch situation. >> when we first moved here, there was no way in hell you'd get in the water. >> a river contaminated by raw sewage. closed for swimming
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since 1924. but that was then. this is a very different now. how do any of you, when you dive in, think? i'm not sure this is safe. >> never. >> willie levinson, founder of the human access project, helped make the willamette into a vibrant recreational space. >> step number one find a way to clean up the river. step number two. there's the cultural change around getting people to see there's value in this river. >> a $1.4 billion pipe project that kept sewage from spilling into the river took care of step one. then came step two. the big float, an inner tube parade that brought thousands to the water and made the willamette party central. >> i talked to people who tell me i feel differently about our city now. they feel more connected to the city. >> this could be better. >> which is exactly what nick wesley is hoping to do in
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chicago. >> i think a lot of people see their waterways as a lot of unrealized potential. >> nick's nonprofit, urban rivers, is leading the charge to transform the chicago river. you just reached your arm in to the chicago river and pulled out freshwater mussels. >> yeah. >> and have it do for chicago what the willamette did for portland. when it comes to people swimming in the chicago river, is it a question of if or when? >> i think it's when within ten years, it'll be viewed as something people do. >> while this idea of an urban river renaissance certainly offers hope in cities like here in chicago, and as we've already seen in portland, there is still plenty of work to be done. of the 3.5 million miles of rivers in the united states 50% are still too polluted for fishing, boating or swimming. >> the most powerful thing is a community of people on a river that love that river. >> amy sowers is with american rivers, a group focused on
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protecting and restoring rivers, an effort that began with the 1972 clean water act and now includes river renaissance projects in los angeles, boston, atlanta and new york, among other cities. >> clean water act is a great start, and now we need to ask ourselves, what did we need moving forward? >> chicago illustrates an answer a culture change that supports the effort. chicago had hoped to host its first swim in the chicago river when organizers hit roadblocks, getting the proper permits fast enough. they moved it to lake michigan, but organizers and willie levenson, who flew in from portland, are determined to swim in the river next year. >> once the chicago river becomes a part of the culture, chicago has a hidden level of joy that it's going to discover. >> high praise from a man who's already helped his own city already helped his own city discover theirs. 60% of women experience
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>> housecafe in atlanta. there's only one type of football that frustrates fans and fills all 29 tv screens. >> with soccer bar. >> mainly, and. we commit to that before any other sport. >> what does it take to run a place like this? >> if i was a. >> fan before i was a, i was a guy sitting at the bar and watching a game. >> humberto bermudez took over the neighborhood gym in 2019, coaching his staff through early mornings. >> sometimes we got to play a game at 730 in the morning. >> late nights. >> or a world cup that is in korea. then you got to play it at two in the morning. >> it's that dedication that makes the bar a cornerstone for football or soccer fandom. i'm looking over your shoulder. it says america's best soccer bar. what does that feel like? >> it feels awesome. this was the best reward for all of us and for all the fans, because i tell them all, thank you guys. >> is it pressure? >> it's a lot of pressure. like
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today. today we know the wave that we're waiting. we're waiting. a tsunami of people. and it's a great pressure. >> men in blazers. the soccer focused media powerhouse named brew house america's best soccer bar on match days, you can see why it's shoulder to shoulder. tv monitors are in just about every corner of the bar. outside, two. >> especially this bar. to be honest, i. >> always come here for the champions league. euro world cup. i always come here. >> the crowds here at brewhouse cafe are just a sample size of what? restaurants and bars all across the country are seeing as fans flock to places like this to support the game. a recent study found that soccer fans have risen dramatically in the last year, with 84% of them watching at least one match per week. the rise is attributed in part to the growth of the national women's soccer league, and on the men's side, stars like lionel messi joining major league soccer. do you think that
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in the next year, or maybe even now, that soccer is up there with the football and basketball baseballs? >> i think it is. it keeps growing and growing and growing, and it's not going to stop. >> that growth is a welcome sight for arsenal superfan amir bell. >> but just seeing the game grow. football has always been a community thing, and one of the biggest things for me is kind of building upon that community aspect. on anticipation before next year. >> the men's world cup comes to north america in 2026. 78 of the tournament's matches, including the final, will be played in 11 u.s. cities. atlanta is one of them. what is that like, knowing that some of the matches will be played here next year? >> awesome. that's the best feeling. i mean, i live my life based on world cups. >> let's go. >> but before that all kicks off, the brewhouse cafe team is bracing for the hundreds of fans who will be crowding the bar for
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