¶ Intro / Opening
Do you think that we will have a crash? We thought it was a good time to check in with Andrew Ross Sorkin. One of the country's most influential financial reporters. He's written a book about the market crash a century ago. Are you scared? I'm anxious that we are at prices that may not feel sustainable. We are either living through some kind of remarkable boom. Or we're reliving. 1929 The natural disaster in our area is not hurricanes or tornadoes or earthquakes. It is Lyme disease.
Genetic engineers believe they found a way to slow the spread of the debilitating disease carried by TIC. It is amazing to see this. Tonight, a look at something that's never been attempted, genetically engineering wild mice to prevent people from getting sick. Do you worry about fooling around with Mother Nature? It's a fairly safe bet that most kids taking piano lessons don't. Now along comes a piano teacher named Payam Cascude. If you learn 135, he's
Piano's not supposed to be fun. It's supposed to be strict, it's supposed to be stressful, and we're like, Why? Our students don't just learn piano, they love piano. I'm Leslie Stahl. I'm Bill Whitter. Okay. I'm Anderson Cooper. I'm not sure. Sharon Alphonse. I'm John Wertheim. I'm Cecilia Vega. I'm Scott Pelle. Those stories and in our last minute, actress Sally Field with a childhood lesson about America. Tonight on 60 Minutes.
¶ Market Booms, Busts, And Bubbles
The stock market has been steadily rising for many months now, despite occasional volatility around issues like tariffs and war. This resilience got us thinking about booms, busts, and bubbles. So we decided to talk to one of the country's top financial reporters, Andrew Ross Sorkin. As we first reported in October, Sorgan had just written a book called 1929 about the market crash a century ago.
We wondered if he ran out of news to cover, or was he alerting us that what's happening in the markets right now is a replay of what led to the most devastating financial collapse in our history. Tuesday, October 29th, 1929. Imagine the New York Stock Exchange back then. The crush of frightened traders dumping stocks. Investors losing their shirts, businesses, their homes. Sweeping away the roaring twenty. Walking that same but transformed floor today. Everything's digital.
Well yeah. Okay. Andrew Ross Sorkins says we're in our own roaring twenties, the twenty twenties, with stocks climbing for months just like then. The crazy part about this is from nineteen twenty eight. To September of 1929, the stock market was up 90%. When you say the stock market was way up, immediately I think of now. Are you scared? I'm anxious.
I'm anxious that we are at prices that may not feel sustainable. And what I don't know is we are either living through some kind of remarkable boom, and part of that's artificial intelligence and technology and all of that. or everything's overpriced. or we're reliving. 1929 There was so much anxiety. Sorkin has covered the markets for two decades. He joined the New York Times after college, soon founding the deal book newsletter covering finance. He also co hosts Squawk Box on CNBC.
Good to see you too, thanks for having me runs the Deal Book Summit where he interviews the high and mighty. He co-created billions, the TV show Wrote a bestseller about the 2008 crash and now a book about 1929. We're always being undone by bubbles. There was the internet bubble in 2000, the housing in 2008.
¶ The Peril Of Eroding Investor Protections
Are we in another bubble, in AI bubble or something like that? I think it's hard to say we're not in a bubble of some sort. The question is always when is the bubble going to pop? One symptom of a bubble is when the market goes up and up, but the underlying economy, the real economy, goes soft. And that appears to be happening right now. I would argue to you that the economy is being propped up.
Almost artificially, by the artificial intelligence boom, there are hundreds of billions of dollars that are being invested today in artificial intelligence. This is either a gold rush. or a sugar rush. And we probably won't know for a couple of years which one it is. Four million shares a day. 1929 was a sugar rush caused by speculation and debt. People who didn't really have much money were lured by Wall Street bankers to invest using a newfangled concept to take on debt called credit.
you only had to put down 10% of the stock price, borrowing the rest from your broker. Prior to nineteen nineteen, most people did not take on credit or debt at all. It was a sin, it was a moral sin to use credit to buy anything. And it was really General Motors. That basically came up with the idea that we're gonna lend you money so you can afford to buy our cars. Brilliant. And then the bankers realize what is happening, and they realize that they can lend out money so that
More folks can buy stocks. It was all sort of wrapped in the flag of democratizing access. And in good times, when the stock is going up, it's like free money. In bad times, you're on the hook and you're on the hook in a very bad way. Since then, laws, regulations, and agencies have been put in place to protect investors, especially the less affluent, from being exploited. We put up barriers after 1929.
Protections. So those are coming down. They're tumbling down. Wanna the SEC rules aren't as stringent anymore. Yes. The Consumer Protection Bureau practically doesn't exist anymore. Correct. That's what concerns me. It's not that we're going off a cliff tomorrow. It's that there's speculation in the market today. There's an increasing amount of debt in the market today. And w all of that's happening against the backdrop of the guardrails coming.
¶ Democratizing Risky Private Investments
Including guardrails that allow only the wealthy to invest directly in private companies that have fewer regulations, like AI startups before they go public. So over the last twenty or thirty years, folks who had access to who could invest in private equity and venture capital. clearly outperformed folks who didn't. That's how you really made money. But you have to remember that these kind of assets are gambles. Public companies after the SEC was created
were required to have all sorts of disclosure rules so that the public could understand what's going on inside them. Private companies don't have that. But historically, the average ordinary American wasn't really allowed to invest in the private company. But in this flag of democratizing finance, there's a lot of people who want access to that. Isn't this something? This is spectacular. Sorkin took us to the Fifth Avenue mansion of one of the big bankers back then who pushed democratization.
If this idea of bringing the regular guy into buying stock, if that was a big problem back in nineteen twenty nine, why are we going there again? Doesn't it defy some kind of logic? There is a view that it's been only the elite That have had access To these investments, Facebook before it ever went public, Uber before it went public. So there's this idea that it's unfair actually to the ordinary investor because we haven't allowed them to get access to some of these.
investment opportunities early. And there is a real push, partially by the Trump administration. Um partially by the industry itself which wants to more money in to open up the market to more and more people. So we have these guardrails for a reason. I mean they're there to protect and they have protected. They have protected a lot of people, but some people would say they protected people from getting rich.
Many people don't believe in capitalism anymore. And I think a lot of it is because they were not a part of the growth of the economy. We went to Larry Fink, CEO of BlackRock, the world's biggest money manager, handling about$14 trillion in assets like pension funds. His annual letter to investors is a kind of industry roadmap. In 2025, it suggested opening our retirement 401k's bastions of caution to riskier private investments in the name of wait for it. Democratizing investing.
As I wrote, there are many great opportunities to be investing in in uh in this in startup companies, to in invest in AI or data centers. Right now we are precluded to uh put those type of assets in many retirement products. And uh the Trump administration has now said we are going to allow in our 401k products the opportunity to invest in these private markets. But may are risky, aren't they? Yes. But everything is risky other than keeping your money in a bank account overnight.
But we're talking about four own Ks investing out of retirement accounts. Yes. You're risking the Nestex. Or part of the n a little part of the name. What the markets will teach you over the last hundred years, even at the worst moments, if you have the ability to persevere and you have a long term horizon, you're gonna do fine. And a diversified portfolio is essential.
We're not suggesting, you know, one shoe fits all. We are suggesting uh the opportunity to have that ability to invest in these private market investments.
¶ Crypto Speculation And Market Outlook
He also believes we should be investing in crypto. It wasn't that long ago that the big bankers, Jamie Diamond and Larry Fink, were s saying that crypto was stupid and a fraud. I did say uh Bitcoin,'cause we were talking about Bitcoin then, uh, was the domain of money launderers and thief. But you know, the markets teach you you have to always um relook at your assumptions. There is a role for crypto in the same way there's a role for gold.
that is a it's an alternative. For those looking to diversify, this is not a bad asset, but I don't believe that it should be a large component of your your portfolio. But Sorkin says some crypto can be abused in ways similar to nineteen twenty nine. Take meme coins. Cryptocurrencies that can be manipulated by speculators who pump them up then let them crash. There are a number of examples where it felt like there was an inside group of people.
Who were colluding to pump up some of these cryptocurrencies and other things. I give you a bizarre story of my own. I was on television with Larry Fink, and he makes a joke, I think, about how there should be a Sork in coin. Sorkin coin. We well two hours later, somebody makes a sorkin coin. And all of a sudden this sorkin coin is now worth millions of dollars and I'm watching it. Are you serious? Up and up and up and up and up.
The Sorkin coin peaked at one hundred seventy million dollars worth of trading in a decade. And I think today it does something like twenty or twenty-one dollars a day. So um I'm thrilled to have Bill Gates with us so Sorkin is trusted by the world's top business leaders who talk to him often exclusively. I I have no problem being hated, by the way. What role do you think these business leaders should be playing now?
My own view is that most COs in America today are very scared to speak out publicly about anything. They are so worried that they are going to be potentially uh attacked by the administration or regulated. They're gonna have a merger in front of some agency that's not gonna be allowed to go through. They are so nervous about criticizing anything that's going on. with this administration.
There are some economists who suggest that because Mr. Trump ties his success to the success of the market, that he's not gonna let anything like what happened in tw nineteen twenty nine happen and that we should feel secure because of that. I think it's hard to know how things get out of control. When confidence disappears, it happens like this. So you spent nearly ten years on this book. The inevitable question is Do you think that we will have a crash? Or not.
The answer is we will have a crash. I just can't tell you when and I can't tell you how deep. But I can assure you, unfortunately, I wish I wasn't saying this, we will have a crash. Hi, my name is Lloyd Lockridge, and I'm the host of a new podcast from Odyssey called Family Lore. In this podcast, I'm going to have people on to tell unusual and sometimes far-fetched stories about their families. I've heard my whole life that she indebted the margarita.
And then we're going to investigate those stories and find out how much of it is true. Hatton, one month before the Wright brothers. Oh my god. Please. Please follow and listen to Family Lore, an Odyssey podcast, available now on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your shows.
¶ Nantucket's Lyme Disease Crisis
Now Dr. John LePuk on assignment for sixty minutes. Biologist Charles Darwin began crafting his theory of evolution on a trip to the Galapagos Islands, where he discovered animals had developed unique traits that varied from island to island. Nearly two centuries later, on a different island, scientists aren't just observing evolution, they now have the technology to shape it.
We met a team of modern-day Darwins on Nantucket, where, as we first told you last fall, they're hoping to use genetic engineering to reduce the transmission of Lyme disease. a tick-borne illness found primarily in the Northeast and Upper Midwest, but also throughout the United States. The scientists' target may surprise you. It's not the deer often associated with the disease or even the ticks, but wild mice, the main carriers of Lyme.
With the rate of emergency room visits for tick bites at a record high in some regions, this could be the summer Americans consider a new strategy to fight disease. Sculpting evolution. 30 miles off the coast of Cape Cod, Massachusetts, is the island of Nantucket, a 14-mile-long, three-mile-wide oasis known for its natural beauty, pristine shorelines, and protected landscape. But Hidden is a scourge that's afflicted 15% of its residents.
The natural disaster in our area is not hurricanes or tornadoes or earthquakes. It is Lyme disease. It is the one plague that might be severe enough that communities might want to engineer a wild organism in order to get rid of it. Or at least reduce the level. a line. Deep in the island's brush, in 2024, we found MIT Associate Professor Kevin Esfeld, a pioneer in genetic engineering, waving a white flag in search of tick. So we just grab it.
These tiny vectors of Lyme disease were not hard to find. Pop it in. These are the big ones. Yeah. Because These are largely adults. If the adults are this small, imagine the tiny, tiny, what are they called? Nymphs? Nymphs, yeah. We often think of poppy seed size. Esfeld's collaborator is Sam Telford, an epidemiologist at Tufts University, who's been studying ticks on Nantucket for the last 41 years. There's a fifty percent chance, maybe more, that this is actually carrying Lyme disease.
But you're not afraid because it has to be. Attached. Right. Right. That's correct. These guys will swell up. Yeah. Fifty to a hundred times that size with blood, you know, that becomes that that big. And that's how you know when they're engorged, you know that they've been feeding on you. If you see it that big, then you're in trouble. The scientists aren't here just to collect ticks. They're interested in this critter. This is a wild white-footed mouse. And you've tagged it.
I've tagged it so uh when I come back in April or May of next year, we get an idea of what overwintering success is. Telford is tracking the mouse population on Nantucket as part of a novel project. The scientists want to use genetic engineering to interrupt a cycle of infection necessary for Lyme disease to flourish.
Whitefooted mice are the main host of Lyme bacteria. When an uninfected tick bites an infected mouse, the bacteria transfer to the tick. When that infected tick then bites an uninfected mouse, the cycle continues. Deer don't get infected, but they help spread the disease because ticks in bed on them to feed, then reproduce, with a single female tick laying as many as 2,000 eggs.
Here's Esfeld and Telford's big idea. Change the genetic makeup of the mice so they're immune to Lyme. That way, the ticks that bite them won't get infected. You don't have to kill the mouse in order to interrupt the cycle. It'd be so much more economical and straightforward to just go out and poison all the mice, right? Get rid of the mice. but then there's a whole food chain that might depend on these mice that would be impacted.
The dream is that we can use new technologies to ensure that wild creatures can live in peace. playing their normal ecological role, but without causing disease that make people suffer.
¶ Engineering Mice For Lyme Immunity
If Esfeld's dream becomes a reality, eighty year old Dr. Timothy Lepree might finally be able to retire. So how did you get Lyme disease, do you think, Winnie? Was it big? So if they take that like you are Over the past 40 years, he's been the island's emergency room head, sole surgeon, even its medical examiner. Today, Dr. Lepre runs the only private practice on Nantucket, where he treats dozens of patients with Lyme disease each year. Fall my finger.
And yes, that's a giant tick in his waiting room. Being in private practice, it is uh While not well paid. Uh You get paid in like what? Chickens and donuts and We prefer lobsters. Lobsters, clams, and scallops. But you'll take you'll take anything, right? I will take anything. Come on down, Shauna. Lyme disease can be treated with antibiotics, but if left untreated, the infection can spread to the heart, joints, and nervous system, as it did for 33-year-old Shauna Aspin.
My body hurts all the time. Thank you. Okay. I don't know if that's for my lime sysies or what. Yeah. Asplant was first diagnosed with Lyme when she was ten years old. A few years later, the left side of her face stopped moving. A residual effect from the disease is still noticeable today. Let's see you smile. Yeah, no. Right. My eyebrows it just doesn't move. We see people with facial palsies. We see little kids with swollen knees. man.
We see people with lime rashes. So it alters people's behavior and activities. The problem on Nantucket can be traced back to 1926, when locals voted to import two female deer to the island to give a lone buck company. As the deer population grew, so did the tick. On top of that, by the 1950s, half the land on the island was put into conservation. The untamed brush and wild grasslands create an ideal ecosystem for Lyme's host to thrive.
We have a problem with tick-borne disease because we engineered the environment to maximize the number of ticks and the maximize the number of mice that are the best host of Lyme disease. And it came back and bit us. Literally. A trip at age 11 to the Galapagos Islands sparked Esfeld's lifelong obsession with evolution. In 2013, he was the first to propose that CRISPR, a revolutionary technology that enables scientists to edit DNA,
Could be used to change a species' genetics in perpetuity. Hacking the laws of inheritance. I mean it's not like we want a fitness advantage. This idea led to the project they call Mice Against Ticks in the sculpting evolution lab Esfelt Runs at MIT. For the last ten years, he and researcher Joanna Buckthal have been studying whether they could add a gene for an antibody that prevents Lyme infection to a mouse embryo that, as we see here, has progressed into two cells.
Is it going to be into one of those? Yeah. Or both of them. So our technique involves injecting both cells to maximize the likelihood that we get the antibody gene in their DNA. Buckthal and embryologist Zack Hill showed us how they genetically engineer lab mice. He's gonna actually inject through the plasma membrane and into the nucleus for both of these cells. How are you at darts? Not very good. A lot better at this. You're gonna hit the center of this.
Okay. So I already have an embryo set up on the on the dish here. So I'm just trying to find the nucleus here. It is amazing to see this. So that little burst that you can see in the nucleus and is when he's actually in injecting the genome engineering tools directly into the nucleus where the DNA is. The injection mix contains both the antibody gene and CRISPR, which acts like molecular scissors.
After CRISPR finds and cuts the targeted area of DNA, the cell inserts the gene into the mouse's genetic code. When this mouse is born, it will be immune to Lyme disease, and so will its children. If I get a polio vaccine, my kids aren't gonna be immune to polio unless they get the vaccine. That's exactly right. So this is a heritable immunization. What do you mean, Pat?
What we're actually doing is we're encoding immunity so that that immunity is passed on generationally and every mouse that gets the antibody gene is actually immune. typical standard evolution happened very slowly, right? Over thousands, maybe millions of years. Are you splitting? Speeding up evolution here?
¶ Community Debate And Ethical Concerns
We are absolutely speeding up evolution, and that's precisely why we have to be careful, because we are doing things that couldn't happen naturally. The plan is to release thousands of engineered mice on Nantucket over time, starting during the winter months, when the native mouse population is low. But first, Esfeld needs community buy-in. Bye. The United States of America. You're going to start.
It chose Nantucket not only for its high rate of line, but also for its tight-knit, well-educated community with the tradition of town hall democracy. Um I am going to call the October twenty third Select Board meeting to order at five thirty PM We also need to start small and we're not going to be able to We saw this in action in October 2024 when, for the tenth time, the scientists presented their latest findings to locals.
So it appears that we have indeed produced the first heritably Lyme immune laboratory mice capable of breaking the disease transmission cycle. Followed by a public QA. We have a huge population of field mice here, shall we? Oh, I drip up. Having had Lyme disease twice, I thought, what a cool idea. But mice are kind of the foundation of the food chain. So tinkering with the food chain makes me a little cautious too.
How long before it's actually going to take effect and keep me from getting Lyme disease again? When you're in these meetings, what's that been like? Some people are really gung-ho about this. Some people have deep reservations. But what I found heartening about this, and Nantucket in particular,
Pretty much everyone agrees that this is how we should go about developing these kinds of technologies. That it should not just be scientists in their laboratories, get a clever idea, and then boom, it's there. Doctor Timothy Leprey says he's supportive of the proposal. But as an avid falconer, he wants more testing to be done to ensure there won't be unintended consequences to the island's ecosystem. Could a change in in the field mouse lead to a change in the hawk?
Well that's the question. I don't think so. Cảm ơn các bạn đã theo dõi và hẹn gặp lại. But I think that has to be shown. Do you worry about fooling around with Mother Nature? Absolutely. But on the other hand, I'm not terribly fond of Mother Nature if she's gonna give my kids disease. All of technology is saying to Mother Nature,
You're beautiful and we appreciate you very much and we need to conserve you, but we're not always happy with the way things work naturally. And so we're going to change. But in this case, you're changing the environment for everybody. This is, I agree, different because it's Hard for you. Yeah. And I think that means we need to do the science differently because we need to ensure that people have a voice early enough to actually influence the direction that the technology is developing.
If federal and state regulators agree, the team plans to first release the engineered mice in a small field trial on a private island. So they can better understand the ecological impacts before any potential experiments on Nantucket. What is the home run for you? I think it's a field trial that works. It's something that allows us to dramatically reduce the
the fraction of ticks that are infected, that doesn't have anything obviously go wrong with the ecosystem. And then the community has a good discussion. And then they decide. And I think there's benefits as we discussed, even if they say no. And then we walk away.
¶ The Payam Method: Revolutionizing Piano
It's a fairly safe bet that most kids taking piano lessons don't like that. That was certainly my experience. I took piano from age five to twelve before quitting in frustration. The scales and sheet music and strict teacher just got the best of it. Now along comes a piano teacher named Payam Kaskude. The thirty-two-year-old son of Iranian immigrants says he's come up with a new method of teaching that has students loving their piano lessons.
What makes this near unknown worth a 60 minute story? Well, his students are sweeping national competitions. He's won over a legendary tech innovator and an Oscar-winning composer. They'll both tell you why they've joined his musical revolution, but we think you ought to hear from Pyam first.
Piano's not supposed to be fun. It's supposed to be strict, it's supposed to be stressful, it's supposed to be like this very intense instrument you're learning. And we're like, why? Like, why can't it be fun? Why can't we actually enjoy the songs we're looking for? Our students don't just learn piano, they love piano. And that's one of the biggest keys to it. Can you play a little bit from right there? Same spot.
Can you show us how you can play without licking? You wanna look up? Yeah, let's look up. Seattle suburb of Bothell, Washington, Pyam and his team of young teachers All former students of his are giving piano lessons and having fun. That was really good. Students are charged between$75 and$100 per lesson. to high school talents. 哇 Amazing. Wow. How long have you been practicing that? I think for four ish week.
In piano we have this thing called the diploma, which is sort of like the black belt of the musical world. Traditionally, about one to two percent of students reach diploma level and it takes them about twelve years. In our school, 96% reach it and it takes them about four years. I can hear the traditionalist saying Hold on a minute. It can't be that easy. It can't be that fun. I mean, in order to be a really good pianist, you've got to have discipline.
Yes. Gotta have hard work. You've gotta have rigor. Mm-hmm. Are they wrong? I agree and disagree. Of course nobody will become phenomenal at anything unless they actually put in the time and energy. But when you actually enjoy what you're doing, you don't realize that you're putting in the time for them. So they love it first. They love it first. If you learn one three five and if you learn that's just
¶ Playful Learning And Musical Composition
The Paya method begins not with sheet music, but with ABCs and one, two, threes, and with actually writing numbers on piano keys. This is a song I would teach my three-year-old student that would come into class one day. And we understand this is one, this is five. They're not reading notes. They're not even sometimes looking at sheet music. We're playing a game. And it's fun for them because they'll go,
And then I'll say, good job, let's go one, one, two, five. And then they'll think and they'll And what they're doing is building this coordination. and using tools they already know, numbers and letters, to learn a new language, the language of music. For example, I really want to learn Chinese. If somebody put a book in front of me that was in Chinese, my brain would just Lock up.
Exactly. And I have no idea what I'm doing. But if they taught me using a language I know, which is A, B, Cs and 1, 2, 3s, it would make sense. I'd be like, oh, I learned it and then I'm just mapping it up. And just as students of Chinese eventually learn Chinese characters, the Piam students do shift to sheet music. eighteen levels of his curriculum. How long does it take to go from this to this.
This is our level two. This is our level 13. This would take about a year and a half to two years for students. And during all that time, you're learning songs that you actually enjoy. The operative word in music is after all play. So be playful. Hans Zimmer has written the musical scores for more than 150 films. He's been nominated for 12 Oscars and won two, including for his score for the Lion King.
But before he was a renowned composer and performer, he was a frustrated music student. You had an unconventional music education is I had an unconventional education, to say the least. Eight schools um asked me to leave. Is that the the the playfulness? unconventionality of of the education. Is that what drew you to Pyam and his method? Yes, absolutely. I mean, you know, it it's exactly what I wish I could have had. Most of Paim's students don't aspire to be concert pianists.
And his playful approach seems to have them loving their lessons. But what really sets him apart is that he's also teaching them to compose their own original songs at very young ages. Delara is just twelve. This is your third composition you've written? Это ваша композиция? Oh that's excellent. Piam wrote. This, his first original song, when he was nine years old, as a gift for his newborn sister.
At age 11, he entered a different original composition into an arts competition sponsored by the National PTA. The first composition competition I ever entered was the PTA Reflections program, and I won. So you have students now? Yes. perform and write for this very same competition. Exactly. How have they done? Phenomenal. The best I ever did in the competition was win second place at state. And I thought that was the biggest achievement in the world.
In 2024, we submitted 41 of our students to compete in the Reflections competition. There were 300,000 nationwide. So we made up a very, very small portion of them, but we won 13 out of 15 district winners. We won five out of five Washington state first place winners. And then those five students went on to compete nationally and four of them won four of the 14 national medals that were awarded.
Oh. Even when they're learning other people's compositions, Paim's students are encouraged to play around with tempo and style and That is not how I learn piano at all. Not how I learned it. Certain way to do it. Exactly. Yeah. That's what we're trying to change about the musical world.
¶ Scaling Success And Impact
On day one I said I want to help scale this thing. Hadi Partovi met Payam when his then twelve year old son Darius enrolled in piano lesson. So how have you seen it?org. a nonprofit that has a free online platform that millions of teachers have used to teach the basics of computer coding to hundreds of millions of kids. There's a lot of parallels between Piam Music and Code.org. One is we don't teach coding with ones and zeros or, you know
angle brackets and semicolons, we teach it with blocks and dragging and dropping to make it easier. Similarly, Pad Yam music teaches music starting with A, B, C's and one, two, threes before you learn the code of how music is written. So Hadi Partovi is now CEO of the City. Of course. Piam Music, with the goal of taking this tiny school, now with just a few hundred students, national. So the plan is to open Pyam schools all across the country? That's correct.
Partovy has raised money to fund the expansion from an impressive list of investors, including film composer Hans Zimmer. What made you decide to not just recognize Pyam's method and what he's doing, but to actually invest in it? to this day I just remember these piano lessons as being horrible and Here's a man who figured out a way of giving children this opportunity to have absolute happiness, you know, to love music and love themselves.
Zimmer visited Payam's first new location in Santa Monica, California, and listened to star pupils play their compositions, including Hadi Partovi's son Darius, now 19. I'd love to hear the piece. Slightly slower. Just breathe but then. With my son, I didn't even realize that he was writing music until one day I was like, Oh, wh whose piece are you playing? And he was like, I'm just making it up as I go and I was like, What?
Do you have to, or how do you, convince the music establishment, music school instructors, that what you've got here is something special? Over time we'll be able to convince the music establishment that this new way of teaching is better. But right now we just need to convince parents. And the easiest way to convince parents is when they watch their son or daughter fall in love with music. best decision I made. The best decision I made. Yes. Definitely.
Sharsad Salastani's daughter Aili is nine. Sashwati Sanyal's daughter Anya is 15. And Julia Ying's son, Jonathan, is away at college after years of lessons at Pa Music. It is life-changing for Jonathan. In what way? In the way that learning could be fun. So I see my daughter Anya to be more confident. And you feel good about yourself. So that is really different about this goal. So they're all having fun. ¿Va a tenerlo? But they are learning. They want to work hard at the piano. It's contagious.
¶ Reporter's Lesson And Sally Field On Liberty
That was fantastic. So to the skeptics, you say Try it once and you'll understand. I'm doing We couldn't resist a piano lesson fifty years after my last one. Back up here? That was it. Finish level two. Ha ha Amazing. How about that? Improvising the classics. Same song, but you have a different feeling. Go to sixty minutes overtime. The last minute of 60 Minutes.
As the nation celebrates 250 years of independence, Oscar winner Sally Field wanted to share something she learned as a child in Van Nuys, California. When I was in the seventh grade, I was asked to memorize something that I never forgot. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, or abridging the freedom of speech. Or of the press or the right of the people peacefully to assemble. It's the first amendment to the US Constitution.
I barely knew what it meant at the time. I s certainly didn't know the importance of it. And now, almost sixty seven years later, I understand it like never before. I have the right to speak out, make a sign and peacefully join a protest without fear of punishment or retribution. Or worse. I have learned that this fragile thing called democracy needs to be protected, that the brilliance of our Constitution begins with the words, we the people.
I believe in the resilience of our Constitution, and I believe in the goodness and strength of the people. I'm Scott Pelley. We'll be back next week with another edition of 60 Minutes. I've been hearing For decades, that the markets can solve climate change. Today, we have more incentives for market solutions than ever, and emissions are rising. On this season of Drilled Carbon Cowboys, the story of three market solutions colliding in one multinational boondo. at all.
gotta give Bruce of the guys credit. They're Republicans. They don't give a shit about any of this now. Listen anywhere you get podcasts.
