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October 19, 2009 11:10 AM

Teen Entrepreneur Sells T-Shirts

(NFTE)
Seventeen-year-old Kalief Rollins isn't just a salesman, he's a relentless salesman. I don't know if he could sell ice cubes to Eskimos, but from personal experience I know he can sell a
(NFTE)
$20 T-shirt that says "Caution: Educated African American" to a lilly-white CBS News correspondent.

Obviously, it's hard to say "no" to Kalief.

Kelief lives in Compton, CA where he runs the "Phree Kountry Clothing" company out of his mom's garage. "I've wanted to be an entrepreneur since birth," he told me. His mother confirmed. She says in first grade he used to spend his lunch money on candy -- not for himself, but for resale to his fellow classmates. He would sell a 50 cent bag of Skittles for a buck. The kid knew his price-points from the get-go. In junior high he sold jewelry and today - T-shirts.

He started the shirt business as part of the National Youth Entrepreneurship Competition. More than 20,000 students enter this contest every year. Judges pick a winner based on the student's business plan and presentation and this year the prize went to Kalief.

He won $10,000 dollars and a trip to Washington D.C. to meet President Obama.

Our viewers will also have a chance to meet Kalief tonight in my Assignment America segment on the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric.
Tags:
assignmentamerica ,
hartman ,
assignment ,
america ,
entrepreneur
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Sneak Preview
October 12, 2009 10:57 AM

Amazing Basketball Shots

(Dude Perfect)
A lot of people ask me what I look for in an Assignment America story.

Typically, I'm looking for something heartwarming or humorous. But sometimes a story doesn't have to be either. Sometimes a story just has to be fun to watch.

In the TV news business we pitch those kinds of stories to our bosses by saying they have "great visuals." If a story has "great visuals," we'll make up any reason to call it news and put it on the air.

Last night's 60 Minutes was a perfect example. If you saw the piece about people jumping off of cliffs wearing bird suits, that was epitomy of "great visuals." The story won't win them another Emmy for investigative journalism, but it was wonderful eye-candy.

Likewise, tonight's Assignment America won't win me any Cronkite comparisons, but it'll be a heck of a lot of fun to watch.

It's about a group of college students who set out to make the most amazing basketball shots ever caught on camera. No, it won't make you laugh or cry, but I guarantee it'll keep you glued to the screen.

As a follow-up, I'm hoping they next try to make a basket while jumping off a cliff wearing a bird suit! Of course, I'd have to fight 60 Minutes for that story.

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Tags:
dudeperfect ,
assignment america ,
hartman ,
basketball ,
shot ,
amazing
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Sneak Preview
September 28, 2009 3:01 PM

Assignment America: Ella, lost dog

(CBS)
Over the last 20 years, The Love Me Tender animal rescue in central Tennessee has rounded-up more than a thousand abandoned dogs. And although most are timid and untrusting, recently a volunteer couldn’t help but notice when one dog shattered the mold.

“I could just tell right away she was somebody’s baby,” said Kathy Wilkes Meyers. “She just didn’t act like a stray dog to me.”

Myers found the dog a few months ago. It was emaciated and drinking from a drainage ditch along an empty stretch of highway about 30 miles south of Nashville.

Kathy says it’s typical for people to dump unwanted pets in the middle of nowhere like that – but again, the dog’s demeanor convinced her there was more to the story.

So she did some detective work and eventually found out what really happened to this dog.

It’s an amazing story that will surely bring tears to even the most grizzled animal rescue worker.

Be sure to check out our story tonight on the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric.






Tags:
hartman ,
lost ,
dog ,
ella
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Sneak Preview
September 10, 2009 5:50 PM

Taxi Driver To Donate Kidney To Customer

(CBS)
I used to think of myself as a generous person. If somebody drops a glove in an airport, assuming I’m not in a rush, I’ll often pick it up for them. When I’m in a convenience store I’ll usually leave a penny rather than take a penny. Or if somebody wants the shirt off my back, I’m always willing to sell it to them for a fair price.

Steve Hartman's Full Story Here

But this week I learned what it really means to be generous. In fact, I don’t think I’ve met a more generous, empathetic man in all my life.

Friday, I get the pleasure of telling, and you get the pleasure of watching, the story of Tom Chappell. I just finished putting his story together and I’ve already watched it a dozen times myself. I may watch it a dozen more times before the broadcast on the Evening News with Katie Couric. I do that sometimes when a story really makes me feel good and Tom Chappell makes me feel good.

Tom lives in a trailer in Phoenix, Arizona. He squeaks out a living driving a cab for V.I.P. taxi. His story began a few months ago when a cranky woman got in his cab and immediately started scolding him for being late. Most cab driver’s would have probably barked right back, but not Tom. Tom listened to her vent, found out the real reason she was so irritable, and eventually offered her his kidney. And no, I don’t mean that metaphorically. He really offered her his kidney! Obviously, that gesture alone makes for a great story.

But this tale is just getting started. So please make an appointment to be a near a TV Friday so you can meet this remarkable cab driver. That’s my tip for the day.


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Tags:
cab ,
hartman ,
customer ,
gift ,
kidney ,
taxi ,
assignment america
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Sneak Preview
August 21, 2009 12:05 PM

"Recession Ride Taxi Service" Preview

(CBS)
What do you think is the best idea for a new business?

1) Taco ingredient home delivery
2) Flavored ice cubes - for those who want a hint of lemon in their drinks, but don’t want to use an actual lemon.
3) A bar on wheels
4) A taxi cab where people don't have to pay if they don’t want to.

And no, you can’t say "none of the above."

These ideas are all the brain children of 46-year-old Eric Hagen of Burlington, Vermont. For the last several months he’s been trying to come up with a way to supplement his income.

Fortunately for Eric, he does have a day job. He helps run blood drives for the Red Cross. Also fortunately for Eric, his friends talked him out of actually following through on any of his ideas. All but one, that is.

A few weeks ago Eric started the "Recession Ride Taxi Service."
His motto is "Pay What You Want."

I went up to Burlington this week to meet Eric because, believe it or not, he’s actually making money. Yes, some people don’t pay the going rate. But many others are paying MORE than the going rate. They say they like the idea of being trusted to pay a fare that's fair. Eric's convinced he’s stumbled on a new business model. Although when I asked him what other businesses might be able to use "pay what you want" pricing, he struggled, "um…delivery services, ahh, other taxi cabs, umm, couriers, ahh, delivery services…"

Too bad. I was hoping to get a steal on a new car.

To see Eric’s full story, please tune in for tonight's Assignment America on the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric.


Tags:
hartman ,
assignment america ,
taxi ,
free ,
job ,
recession ,
ride
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Sneak Preview
July 17, 2009 10:59 AM

Assignment America Preview

(CBS)
When you trip on the sidewalk, do you get mad at yourself?

Or do you get mad at the sidewalk?

The 92-year-old woman in tonight's Assignment America gets mad at the sidewalk -- or, more specifically, she gets mad at "the bastards" at the city who didn't properly maintain the sidewalk.

Kathleen Harris has been giving those city officials an earful for years and tonight she brings her bluntness to the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric.

Of course, there are a lot of seniors who have unkind words for their elected officials (look no further than my father), but what makes Kathleen different is what she has done to make the "SOBs" accountable.

A few years ago, after she tripped on a sidewalk in her hometown of Oswego, NY, and nearly broke her nose, Kathleen tried to get the city to pay her doctor bill. The city refused -- citing a New York State law that says a city can't be held liable for a sidewalk problem unless someone notified the city, in writing, about the problem before the accident.

It's a good out for the city because, really, who in their right mind is going to go to the trouble of documenting every single crack on every singe sidewalk in town?! No one! -- but Kathleen Harris, of course.

Kathleen has now completed the 4 year project. She now knows every piece of pavement that isn't flush to within a quarter of an inch. And she has turned her log sheets over to the city -- all 10,000+ entries.

So what is the city going to say next time someone trips over a sidewalk and wants to sue? I don't know, the city attorney isn't returning my phone calls. But if I hear from her this afternoon I'll be sure and report it in tonight's broadcast. If not, you'll still hear from Kathleen. And believe me, she's worth tuning in for all by herself.

Tags:
steve hartman ,
assignment america ,
sidewalk ,
crack
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Field Notes
February 20, 2009 1:25 PM

The Case Against Homework

Steve Hartman is a correspondent for CBS News based in New York. His weekly Assignment America segment airs Fridays.
(CBS)
If you’ve got kids in elementary school, you won’t want them to miss tonight’s Assignment America. On second thought – maybe you will want them to miss it. All I know for sure is that, after they see this story, they’re going to be even less excited about doing homework.

But for good reason.

This week I interviewed a 5th grader from Long Island, N.Y., who is trying to ban homework. It all started when Ben Berrafato had to write an essay about something he felt passionately about. Since he hates doing homework, he wrote about that. It was such a well-crafted essay, the New York Daily News ran it on their editorial page.
Read Ben's essay here.
He’ll be reading some of the essay for us tonight on the Evening News with Katie Couric. I also looked into some of his claims that homework has been proven to be a waste of time. And low and behold ...

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Tags:
fifth grader ,
assignment america ,
homework ,
steve hartman
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Sneak Preview
January 5, 2009 3:04 PM

In Case You Missed It: Animal Kingdom Odd Couple

Okay, so you've heard "man's best friend" cliche over and over. But one dog moved on to a bigger - much, much bigger - mammal to befriend. She was the subject of Friday's Assignment America with Steve Hartman. Meet Tarra and Bella, the pachyderm-canine duo of the Tennessee's Elephant Sanctuary.

Tags:
elephant ,
hartman ,
video ,
dog ,
animals ,
assignment america
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In Case You Missed It
November 12, 2008 2:57 PM

Honoring "The Master"

(CBS)
Steve Hartman is a correspondent for CBS News based in New York.
Either I’m getting old or journalism schools aren’t doing their job. Or maybe both. Regardless, there are young TV reporters out there who have never heard of Charles Kuralt. I first met one of these deprived 20-somethings at a TV station in Los Angeles. Then I met another in Minnesota. How can you teach someone the art of TV story telling without at least mentioning the master?! And if young TV reporters don’t know the name, imagine the blank stares I would get from the rest of their generation.

That was my main reason for wanting to do this series of updates on Kuralt classics we’re calling, "On the Road … Again." But it was also an excuse ...

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hartman ,
kuralt ,
on the road
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On The Road
November 12, 2008 1:18 PM

Revisiting "On The Road": All Tangled Up

More than 30 years ago, CBS News' Charles Kuralt went "On The Road" and filed a host of now-legendary dispatches. Some were everyday stories about individuals, and others remarkable tales of achievement or struggle.

One day, Kuralt stopped his RV in Darwin, Minn., where he met a man who compulsively saved, for years and years, twine. Call it compulsive collecting, but even the twine-ball's creator, Francis Johnson, said to be a collector of something so mundane: "you don't have to be crazy, but it helps."

Check out Kuralt's original report here - and watch the Evening News tonight to see how our Steve Hartman went back and traced Kuralt's steps ... and to see if Francis Johnson's string theory holds up today.
Tags:
on the road ,
charles kuralt ,
steve hartman
Topics:
On The Road

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