IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.
  • UP NEXT

    Unsettled: A Mother and Daughter Living Without Papers

    08:48
  • Fear: Dreamers travel to Mexico to stay in the U.S.

    10:54
  • Scarred: The young victims of Israel's airstrikes in Lebanon.

    10:53
  • Occupy and destroy: Israel’s systematic demolition of Lebanese border villages

    06:18
  • America Speaks: What Happened in the 2024 Election

    04:03
  • The destruction of Chimney Rock: A small mountain town grapples with its future

    05:31
  • A Deadly Detour: Texas policy, heat fuel rise in migrant deaths

    08:55
  • Born into war: Babies are an unstoppable force in Gaza

    15:27
  • ‘I haven’t come back’: Freed from Hamas, former hostages cope with life after Oct. 7

    08:41
  • Stolen Son: How a hostage mother never gave up trying to save her son

    05:02
  • War games: Video game streamers take Russia's propaganda war to the next level

    06:02
  • How an Israeli hostage rescue in Gaza became so deadly, according to eyewitness accounts

    08:24
  • The line of fire: Analyzing the Trump assassination attempt

    03:55
  • The daily struggle for food in Gaza: Battling hunger in a war zone

    06:06
  • Hezbollah explained: The origin of the Lebanese militant group fighting Israel

    05:45
  • A pregnant migrant’s harrowing journey and struggle to settle in the U.S.

    06:29
  • Stolen son: A hostage’s mom fights to bring her child home from Gaza

    04:46
  • Salma’s diary of the war in Gaza: How her journal saved her life

    08:35
  • Gaza’s youngest survivors: Saving the Al-Shifa babies

    14:17
  • 27-year-old doctor cares for 850 patients in Gaza’s last standing hospital

    05:39

NBC News

Miners, keepers: Could bees be the answer to West Virginia’s coal slump?

06:09

In Summers County, West Virginia, what was once a booming coal-fueled economy has diminished as coal usage in the U.S. has dropped to its lowest since 1979. The Appalachian Beekeeping Collective based in Summers County is hoping to help the economy by introducing former coal miners and low-income West Virginians to beekeeping. The Collective plans to pay the new beekeepers for the honey they produce to supplement their income and introduce a new kind of natural resource to West Virginia.