Sperm Whales of Dominica; Monkey Island; Sloths | 60 Minutes Full Episodes

Video Statistics and Information

Video
Captions Word Cloud
Reddit Comments
Captions
tonight on this special edition of 60 Minutes presents animal magnetism what's it like to be in the water with them magical 60 Minutes is eye to eye with the whale of Moby Dick Legend but Melville's novel was fiction sperm whales are especially maternal Generations live together while taking care of their calves and they have the biggest grain in the animal kingdom and they sleep like this there are roughly 1,800 monkeys on Kyo Santiago they live in isolation in what is a natural laboratory today scientists are studying how the stress of a devastating hurricane affected their overall health and relationships and what that might teach us about ourselves since we share 94% of our DNA with them so the two toad I always say look like a cross between a wook and a pig cuz they've got that sort of beable nose and then these ones have the sort of you know Beatles haircuts and and MOA Lisa Smiles behind that ringer for Ringo cook says is a secret being Nature's couch potato is the reason sloths have survived for more than 60 million years in spite of well themselves good evening I'm Cecilia Vega welcome to 60 Minutes presents tonight three stories of animal magnetism attract us Leslie stall pays a visit to Monkey Island off the coast of Puerto Rico where the inhabitants roam free and have much to teach the scientists who study them Sharon alony moves ever so slowly among the Central American tree tops with sloths but we begin in the depths of the Caribbean Sea in 2022 nearly every member country of the United Nations pledged to protect at least 30% of the world's Land and Sea by 2030 to reverse the Damage Done by humans and protect vulnerable species one of the animals at risk is also one of the largest in the ocean and among the least understood sperm whales are not the predators of Moby Dick Legend they have brand six times larger than ours and spend most of their lives in the darkest depths of the ocean it is difficult to describe their size without comparing them to a school bus last spring we traveled with National Geographic Explorer Enrique Salah to the Caribbean island of Dominica where he proposed protections for the hundreds of sperm whales living there you guys ready go go go go go go guys go look in the water coming straight to you yeah most of enri salah's Dives don't start like a fire drill even though he has spent thousands of hours underwater as an Explorer look down at the back of you look this way this way we came face to face with a pot of whales but these are not the whales we traveled all this way to see they are pygmy killer whales known to threaten sperm whales and because they are here the sperm whales are not these killer whales can grow up to 8 and 1/2 ft in size Salah told us seeing them up close almost never happens you've never been able to get into the water with one of these they're that elusive they are very elusive why is that why do you not see them they are very smart they hunt like wolves they hunt in groups and they don't care about interacting with humans they are after the prey we were off the coast of Dominica a country in the Eastern Caribbean residents call it nature Island those rainforest covered volcanic Peaks drop thousands of feet down to the seafloor below which is why hundreds of sperm whales live in these Waters they are one of the deepest diving mammals on the planet they are mostly females here families made up of grandmothers mothers and daughters who stay together for Life nursing and raising their young when Enrique Salah was here his National Geographic team filmed this it is a pod of sleeping female sperm whales vertical Giants up to 40 ft long suspended near the surface their nap lasts only about 15 minutes until the whales are ready to dive again and what can be an hourlong Journey for squid thousands of feet down even to researchers why they sleep like this is one of the great Mysteries what's it like to be in the water with them magical we have in our minds the legend of mobidik these nasty aggressive animals but you jump in the water and they are so docile and gentle they have never attacked humans and they are so curious especially the babies so it's one of the most amazing Wildlife encounters that one can have on the planet your official title is explore in Residence not bad it's an oxymoron explorers are not supposed to be true you're not supposed to be sitting in one place what does that mean to be an Explorer in the year 2023 very different from what an Explorer of the 19th century was I can dedicate my life and work with an amazing team of scientists policy experts filmmakers storytellers to work with local communities governments indigenous peoples to assess the health of ocean places and help to protect them he grew up north of Barcelona Spain near the coast his first dive was in a Marine reserve it drove everything that they have done afterwards if we give the ocean space it can heal itself Sala moved to California californ where he was a professor of marine ecology for seven years at the scrips institution of oceanography you have had a long career in Academia at a top university and you tried that and decided not for me you walked away I walked away because my job was to study the impacts of humans in the ocean the impacts of fishing and global warming and one day I realized that all I was doing was writing the obituary of the ocean writing the obituary of the ocean yeah I felt like the Doctor Who's telling you you're going to die with excruciating detto but not offering a cure have you found that cure there is one solution that is proven it's success story everywhere in the world which is Marine reserves or Marine protected areas areas where damaging activities are ban and marine life can come back he founded the pristine Seas project in 2008 it combines sea exploration scientific research and public policy and has worked with 17 countries to turn these large swaths of the ocean into Marine protected areas in Dominica scientists estimate the sperm whale population declines by 3% each year Sola says a preserve would protect them from their greatest threats not those pygmy killer whales we saw or whaling which has been banned for decades but plastic trash ocean noise pollution and ship strikes if they continue with the status quo here what happens if nothing is done the population will probably continue declining so reducing those threats hopefully will allow the sperm o population to rebound and the more Wells there are the more benefits Dominica and the local communities will obtain hurricane Maria devastated those communities in 2017 today the island is continuing to rebuild and prepare for the future climate Francine Baron heads the agency in charge of that effort what was it about hurricane Maria that made the leaders of this country say we have to do something we really have to act we suffered the equivalent of 226 loss of GDP so we could see the trend and we realized that we needed to become much more resilient when Enrique Salah came to you with this idea of creating a a sanctuary for these whales what was his pitch to you we see whale watching as an important part of our tourism product and it's something that needs to be protected and uh the idea of creating uh greater protection for the whales is something that Dominica is very open to and we were very pleased with the suggestion that enrik made to creating a recognized Sanctuary for the Wales enrik Salah Compares it to a model that has worked in Rwanda where protecting mountain gorillas help helped bring tourism dollars to the local economy you going to find us some whales sure all right Captain Kurt benois was born and raised in Dominica and has been in the whale tourism business for more than two decades we set out on his 38t lady rose from a small fishing Village on the west coast our government permit to swim with the whales was good for 6 days Captain Ben Wa uses a homemade device that pick up the distinct clicking of sperm whales as far as 11 M away we got whales in the South every 3 miles we checked to see if we were getting closer it's come to Papa that is here tell me about this really Hightech device you've got here you have underwater microphone which picks up sound from 360 so what I did I took a salad bowl with nprint so the hydrophone is kind of hidden so as it goes out it actually brings you straight to wherever you we hear the sound so this is a salad bow from your house yes what do the whales sound like it's like a horse is Galloping on a hot surface so if you he several of them that means there's a lot of whals there let's keep on going man I'm going to find these guys all right on the second day a water spout see it it's right here look guys see him you can see it's top look at him oh my gosh no swimmers in the water males here live with their families until their teen years then they roam mostly alone swimming thousands of miles away Caribbean male sperm whales have been found as far away as Norway returning here only to mate our cameraman got lucky enough or unlucky enough to have the whale poop on him so the whales go down they hunt squid they come back to the surface they breathe they rest and they poop and that poop is full of nutrients which fertilizes the shallow Waters so a good thing I guess it's a good thing come on people we're looking for spouts but our luck didn't last okay guys nothing is up we spent the next day searching for sperm whales and the next nothing at all nothing at all and the next not a single click you guys is pretty quiet and then in the last hour of the last day of our trip yeah lots of animals in the area guys wo they're coming back but I'm getting songs 360 so that means the wheels we above them we're right there yes yes yes yes go go and St it's coming to you CIA it's coming to you coming to you jumped in the water and a young female swam right to us she came within feet at first her size was terrifying she made a sound like a creaking door hinge it's one of the ways whales communicate and socialize with eyes on the side of her head she stared right at us she had squid in her mouth leftover from lunch thousands of feet below she stayed and rolled around and her jaw was wide open she was using echo location bouncing those clicks off of us trying to figure out what we were you could hear the clicking you could hear her once you were really close to her you could you could hear that so L I could feel in my bones mhm you grabbed my hand you could tell I was nervous I was excited too you are they are huge you have to respect them you have to respect them there is a sense of awe that comes with being in there she was looking right at us and she left us a souvenir piece of squid sperm whales live in Shane Giro is another National Geographic Explorer he started the Dominica sperm whale project and over the past 18 years he's identified more than 35 families did you recognize the whale that we saw the animal you met belongs to the ec2 clan the other clan of whales that we've known exists in the Caribbean but we haven't seen all that much and those groups identify themselves by making specific patterns of clicks called kodas it's a part of who they are where their grandmother grew up and so it really ties the animals and the place together what does the Koda of the ec2 sound like they make the 5 R3 Koda and it sounds like this five slow clicks and she came up to you and made this 5 R3 Koda saying I am from the ec2 clan are you she was rolling around and she kept coming back but is that me assigning human characteristics to a whale or is she actually a playful animal these are the animals that are holding the largest brain to ever exist maybe in the universe and they use that for complicated thinking and uh Behavior absolutely this was an animal that was playful and that Curiosity of the animal actively coming towards you just shows that this is an animal that's investigating something in its world and most people don't know back on the dock there is a treasure here and R Sal says it's that world he's trying to protect being in the water with sperm Wells is a magical experience there's something spiritual there this is more than science and data sense of awe and wonder that is unavoidable when you are in the water with these gentle Giants in November the Prime Minister of Dominica announced that the island nation will create the first sperm whale Reserve in the world the sanctuary will be 300 square miles and have a new senior whale officer assigned to ensure the whale's safety Cecilia Vega describes what it was like swimming with sperm whales she is swimming right at us at 60 minutes overtime.com with extreme weather events on the rise across the globe like the rare Category 5 hurricane that hit Mexico in October we were interested in a study that's taking place on a remote island very few people are allowed to visit where scientists are studying how the stress of of these environmental crises affect longevity and overall health as Leslie stall first reported in November the subjects are not what you'd expect they're monkeys reesus macak monkeys who've been studied there for over 80 years because 94% of their DNA is the same as humans they survived with relative environmental stability until 6 years ago when the island was hit with a devastating storm after taking tests for tuberculosis measles and covid Leslie and her team were allowed to visit the island called Kyo Santiago or Monkey Island off the coast of Puerto Rico there are roughly 1,800 monkeys on Kyo they live in isolation and what is a natural laboratory halfway between captivity and the way they would live in the wild yeah are they fighting yeah yeah she's looking around and screaming for help trying to get others to come to her Aid wow biologist James hyim of NYU and Noah Snider mackler of Arizona State University are part of a team of investigators in this long-term research project what's the lifespan usually the lifespan here on the island for the females the median lifespan is about 18 years and then in males about about 15 years right do they have is there a predator is there any noat is here another way life here is unlike the wild is that these guys are sered their meals every [Music] morning researchers tell us there's a hierarchy the highest ranking monkeys get to eat first I've even seen high ranking individuals go up to a low ranking individual who is eating food in their mouth and hold their mouth open and take the food out of their mouths and ankles what did they get Purina monkey Chow there's a monkey Chow made by Karina oh my goodness rees's monkeys are commonly used for medical research because there are close relatives genetically and physiologically similar to humans they have systems that are quite like us eyes that are like us lungs and hearts that are like us these reesus macac monkeys their ancestors came here from India in 1938 the ma is used in larger numbers for medical and Zoological research than any other kind of primate American primatologist Clarence Carpenter took 500 of them on a grueling 14,000 M sea voyage that lasted 51 days he wanted to create a naturalistic research facility to study the monkeyy social and sexual behaviors their early years here were tough many died from disease but enough of them lived on so that by the 1950s scientists began tattoing them and taking a daily census that meticulous recordkeeping has continued with today's monkeys all of whom descended from the original group giving scientists rare access to more than six Decades of their biological and behavioral data one of the things they learned is that they're highly adaptable acclimating quickly to the island they also learn that they can be quite aggressive especially around food and during The Mating Season are these monkeys intelligent sure they're they're pretty so they're pretty intelligent you know they're socially intelligent how similar to us are they and how they live they form really strong social relationships with their um best friends and their family members they have best friends some close friends some best friends right rees's monkeys live in female Le societies Mothers Daughters aunts and grandmothers stick together in groups while the males leave when they reach maturity and join other troops for breeding few people know the troop tensions and allegiances better than research assistants Daniel Phillips and hosway Negron who've worked on Kyo for years years they arrive Every Morning by boat at 700 a.m. and for the next 7 hours they document things like aggression grooming vigilance and feeding do you ever get to know individuals in other words you know that monkey versus that one yeah yeah we we need to recognize them right away because I need to know like who is interacting with who how they like groom each other or attack each other and how can you tell the difference what what are the characteristics that you see you can see the differences on even how they walk how they move their even faces have different in other words their faces become as ordinary in a way to your eyes as human faces yes you recognize even families exactly like your face is familiar you shouldn't you should be the son of this female everything changed for the research and the monkeys when hurricane Maria slammed into Puerto Rico in September 2017 155 mph winds smashed into homes and Office Buildings destroying everything in sight including the power grid and communication systems nearly 3,000 people died there was no way for the team to get to Monkey Island Angelina Ruiz lambid the then scientific director of Kyo 7 months pregnant at the time sheltered in her home outside of San Juan with her husband and two young children you thought the monkeys were all going to die we thought that the monkeys were going to die James hyim and Noah Snider mackler couldn't get any news about their colleag or the monkeys so two days after the storm the team came up with an idea and you hired a helicopter we hired a helicopter they Enlisted the pilot to fly over Kyo and do a survey and they had a list of questions can he see any monkeys are they alive what is the status of the vegetation are the standing pools of water that they might be able to drink Angelina who had decided to go up with the pilot was horrified this is footage she shot from the helicopter and I see this destruction like 80 plus years of work completely flattened this is Kyo before the hurricane with a dense canopy of trees and Lush foliage this is after a green Oasis turned brown buried in dead branches the island lost 2/3 of its V agitation heartbroken by what she was seeing from the air Angelina wanted a closer look but even on the ground she didn't see any monkeys so then I get on the helicopter again back up again I need look they're here and that's where I see a social group running from the helicopter and it's like oh there's monkeys they're still Kyo I think I estimated okay those that must be around like 300 400 monkeys or so out of 1,700 yes but once the staff was able to return and do a complete census on the ground they found to their utter astonishment that most had lived they estimated just about 50 had died and you're thinking how could they survive this how could they how could they survive this it's still a mystery what did the monkeys do to ride out the storm where did they Shelter From the wind and what did they eat so one of the big questions is without being fed how are they nourished yeah so although the hurricane did dramatically devate the island one thing it also did was deposited a great amount of seaweed and Aly onto the island and so one possibility is that the monkeys were eating more of this kind of veget a which they still seem to enjoy after the hurricane the monkeys had to adjust to a new far more hostile environment their innate adaptability certainly helped so they they bob up and down to try and stop themselves from falling forward six years after the storm the adjusting continues attempts to replant the trees have been stymied because the monkeys ever curious about anything new in their environment uproot them before they have a chance to grow so now there's very little shade this used to be almost forested right lots of space and shade now they're forced to sit in a few shaded areas and so they've been clumped by the changing distribution of shade so an interesting thing that we saw is that individuals became more social not just more social the research have noticed that the monkeys are more tolerant of each other which at first seemed counterintuitive I'm thinking of humans in a situation where there's fewer resources and I see in my mind's eye competition I see them saying get off my property or whatever but you're saying that it was the opposite here perhaps but there's also famous examples of people pulling together yeah so I think it can go both ways we're capable of great greed and competition and and cruelty but humans are also capable of great kindness and compassion and friendship and generosity and that kind of Duality exists in recist M societies too and I think anyone you talked to here in Puerto Rico would would bring up the fact that they you know the people of Puerto Rico sort of jelled and increased their support of one another in the face of this event Beyond observing their social interactions they were also able to to track biological changes since they had access to blood tests done on the monkeys for 13 years so what we found is that individuals who had lived through the hurricane had immune systems that looked like they had aged an extra two years what is that in human years is it 6 to8 human years they aged 6 to8 years they aged six to eight human years oh my gosh through the trauma that was on average that's the work that we're trying to do right now is what makes some of these individuals more resilient to the hurricane right is the hypothesis that it has something to do with friendships we think that those individuals who were able to have stronger bonds stronger friendships might have been protected from this really stressful event the hurricane opened all new avenues of their research with questions such as what predicts who survives a catastrophe like an earthquake or a hurricane and how quickly they recover so when you step back and look at your study in terms of climate related trauma or any kind of trauma are you expecting to find answers for survivability in these situations for human beings given the strong similarity between these primates these monkeys and us we know that a lot of this the the work that we're doing and and the things that they might do to you know be more resilient to this might be translatable to humans to us and might provide ways for us to intervene and help buffer against the negative effects of these traumatic events the stopwatch has long been the symbol of 60 minutes but any measure of time is pointless for the subject of our next Story the slow moving sloth you might think these distant relatives of the armadillo would make the perfect meal for just about anything faster and yet somehow sloths have been hanging on in one form or another for 64 million years to understand this quirky animal 60 Minutes hung out with a quirky zoologist Lucy cook has been documenting the strange lives of sloths for 15 years cook was Sharon alon's guide on a trip to Costa Rica where as we first reported in September scientists are making new discoveries about a creature that's turned survival of the fittest upside down this is an area where there are lots of sloths so that we have that on our side the first thing we learned about sloths is that it's hard to spot them in the wild we were warned to keep our eyes on the ground for poisonous snakes as Lucy cook scanned the Treetops the sloth is a Master of Disguise it Blends into the canopy and can easily be mistaken for a tuft of leaves they tend to to hunker down when it rains so making it even harder to see them our luck improved on the beach oh there's one up there she's she's in the nook of the tree looking a bit like a termite hump and she's hunched over so what we're looking at is her back that is not the side of the sloth we went all the way to Central America to see so Lucy cook took us to an animal sanctuary to get a better view of the two species of sloth that live here the bratus and the tut toad so the two toad I always say look like a cross between a wook and a pig CU they've got that sort of beable nose and then these ones have the sort of you know beetles haircuts and and Mona Lisa Smiles behind that ringer for Ringo Cooks says is a secret being Nature's couch potato is the reason sloths have survived for more than 60 million years in spite of well themselves their eyesight is lousy their hearing not much better in a tree they can move like a Tai Chi Master to avoid the eyes of Hungry Birds of Prey but on the ground cook says gravity removes any shred of dignity even with a hurricane strength Tailwind a sloth will top out at a half mile hour the first people that described the sloths The Conquistadors that first observed them they said terrible things one said it was the stupidest animal that he'd ever seen and another said one more defect would have make its life impossible and they just they just didn't understand them you know cook says what those early explorers didn't understand and what is frankly hard to believe when you watch the effort it takes for a sloth just to Blink is that this hairy ninja is uniquely built to survive why so slow why do they move so slow because they're saving energy they're vegetarians and leaves don't want to be eaten any more than Antelope do right so they create a lot of toxins so the sloth can digest those toxins but only very very slowly they don't want to process them fast and so they're all about burning as little energy as possible sloths spend about 90% of their lives hanging upside down and typically only climb to the ground for bathroom breaks once a week with habits like that and nails like this you can understand why they are solitary creatures and prefer to be alone until they don't what they do is the females will climb to the top of a tree when they're in heat and scream for sex okay so really low key really lowkey but they scream in dsharp like that's the the they make this and I'll do it and I he may well on the strength of my impersonation let's see if Teddy who's a boy exactly let's just see if he goes okay I'm going [Music] to I've actually seen bruses having sex it's the only thing they do quickly I mean it was I was shocked but then afterwards both male and female retreated and had the deepest snooze behind Lucy Cook's cheeky sense of humor is a hefty resume she has a master's degree from Oxford and published four books including two on sloths she's also hosted Wildlife programs for the BBC and National Geographic the photos cook takes on her Expeditions have gone viral leading to donations for conservation and crowds at lectures that mix biology with standup we humans are obsessed with speed we idolize animals like the cheetah capable of doing n to 60 in 3 seconds flat well so what are they cute or are they so ugly they're cute oh no they're cute surely but then I mean I think a naked morat's cute so you're asking the wrong person you like a beist animal yeah bats hyenas I mean there's like a whole list of of animals that I think you know just have extraordinary earily strange and wonderful lives and and just to me just add to the richness of of the universe just look how one of those beist animals can leave Lucy cook Star Struck you guys have got to see as we were making our way through the Costa Rican rainforest cook noticed this what looks like fluffy golf balls she realized was a cluster of something we'd never heard of come and have a look ch ch The elusive Caribbean white tent making bats look they're they're they're bats but they're white and they and they live in these leaves I like my heart rate's gone right up I'm going to start pouring in sweat and I might start crying actually cuz it's just so I mean it's just a miracle of evolution I mean it's just why like why that sense of wonder that's about as exciting as it gets has made Lucy cook a compelling advocate for sloths like them she looks at the world from a different point of view you your latest book is called on the I do apologize I really like you and your work but yeah my book's called in it cook challenges The Narrative that in the animal kingdom males are usually dominant and promiscuous while females are submissive and monogamous she traveled the world to collaborate with scientists and study dozens of animals reporting how killer whale pods are led by postmen a puzle orcas and how tyrannical matriarchs control mircat Society her reexamination flips parts of Charles Darwin's theories upside down Charles Darwin's a hero of mine I studied evolutionary biology but he was a Victorian man and so when he came to Brand the female of the species she came out in the shape of a Victorian housewife passive koi chaste you know we were sort of femine footnote to the Macho Main Event basically I can hear people saying is this biological winess well it would be if it wasn't true so you just have to ask the hyena for example the female spotted hyena if she's passive and cor and she'll laugh in your face after she's bitten it off you know it's like challenging conventional wisdom is a large part of Lucy Cook's crusade to improve the reputation of sloths but there is a more somber kind of Rehabilitation she wanted to show us this is the toucan Rescue Ranch near Costa Rica's Capital San Jose so sloths are incredibly strong they care for sloths nearly killed by power lines how are the slots injured so most of the time it's through electrocution where it'll just look like this straight Vine you know going through the forest and so they'll grab a hold of that and then become electrocuted Leslie how was an occupational therapist who started the ranch 19 years ago now she has a team of six veterinar to treat the electrical Burns millions of years of evolution could not prepare the sloths for human sprawl but the Vets told us they believe the sloth slow metabolism somehow allows them to recover from injuries that might kill other creatures the toucan Rescue Ranch also takes in orphans this is little Gio and um this is maryn and then we have Landon here oh he's a toddler he's a toddler and this is our tiniest little Benji okay now my ovaries have cracked it can take up to 2 years for the orphans to be ready to go back into the wild we watched as a female named nisara was prepared for release she was given a final checkup and a tracking colar before getting a lift to a promising tree off she goes and if she falls asleep in the middle of the release is that a bad thing there she goes it's a scary moment Mission Impossible has nothing on this like woohoo with that high drama behind us we headed down the Caribbean coast with Lucy cook to visit another British scientist Becky Cliff is conducting the first population study of sloths ever that might seem like lwh hanging fruit it is is not why is it so hard to get scientific data on sloths they've evolved over the last 64 million years to be Masters of Disguise right they are so good at pretending to be coconuts and bird nests then they're hiding from the very people who are trying trying to help them neither of the sloth species in Costa Rica is officially considered endangered but Cliff says her staff is suddenly seeing fewer sloths and some are suffering from an illness she suspects May be related to climate change we're getting extreme periods of hot dry weather and then extreme periods um of prolonged cold and rain and that is not what sloths have evolved to survive in what we're discovering is that the microbes in the sloth stomach that they use to digest the leaves they eat when the sloth gets too cold those microbes die so even though the sloth might be eating and looking well it's not digesting its food properly so they're losing energy and they're getting very week it sounds like they're starving to death but with a full stomach that's exactly it it's a really strange phenomenon that I think only happens in sloths but it's happening here for Cliff to collect data she has to collect sloths which branch is she that's the full-time job for her colleague dear Leon he climbed Barefoot up a three-story high tree covered in biting ants snatching the sloth then lowering it in a bag come on little one hi that's impressive so do you have to do that every time you want to get a sloth and this is easy yeah the stuffed sloth she's holding is not a gimmick it was used to comfort the real one as we helped replace a memory chip in a tiny backpack the sloth wears oh you're very strong very strong and then lean her back a little bit come on sweetie I'm going to clip those little things up this is like dressing a baby done W bam what kind of information does this give you we collect a lot of U manual data in terms of what type of tree she's in how high in the tree she is there's also a Data Logger inside here which collects a lot of information about her behavior so even her micro body movements are being recorded inside there there we go yeah that's a go 32 sloths will get backpacks and be returned slowly to the wild Lucy cook told us she hopes this study will provide a deeper understanding of an animal we can be too quick to judge what can we learn from the sloth we can learn how to be more slow and sustainable ourselves because we need to you know we're destroying this planet at a an alarming rate and part of that is because of our addiction to speed and convenience so if we took a few carefully slowly digested leaves out of the sloth's book you know we might save this beautiful planet and all of the amazing creatures that live on [Applause] it I'm Cecilia Vega we'll be away for the next two weeks while CBS celebrates New Year's Eve live from Nashville and on January 7th broadcast the Golden Globe Awards we'll be back on January 14th with an all new edition of 60 Minutes Merry Christmas and happy New Year at the CBS Evening News we focus on Solutions in tonight's money watch tips to protect your personal information we look at a store and we say how do we make it relevant to people's lives so this is what we eat to live longer finding Solutions giving people context in depth how much money we can spend on a groceries finding solutions to healthare problems based on all the doctors that you've spoken with what should parents know Finding solutions to help people understand what are the right choices to make for you and your family we take a closer look at an important decision a growing number of women are making information is knowledge and knowledge is power the CBS Evening News with nor O'Donnell on CBS and streaming on Paramount Plus
Info
Channel: 60 Minutes
Views: 120,503
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: 60 Minutes, CBS News, sperm whales, monkey island, sloths, nature, monkeys, animals, 60 minutes full episodes, 60 minutes australia full episodes 2023
Id: 8tyD2YJHhlc
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 43min 20sec (2600 seconds)
Published: Wed Dec 27 2023
Related Videos
Note
Please note that this website is currently a work in progress! Lots of interesting data and statistics to come.