With pets being treated like family, businesses aim to meet new needs
One in 4 pet owners refer to their beloved animals as their "child."
Nancy Chen is a CBS News correspondent, reporting across all broadcasts and platforms.
Prior to joining CBS News, Chen was a weekday anchor and reporter at WJLA-TV in Washington, D.C. She joined WJLA-TV from WHDH-TV in Boston, where she spent five years as a weekend anchor and weekday reporter.
Throughout her career, she has covered a variety of stories on the national and global level, including the Kyle Rittenhouse trial; the Congressional ballpark shooting; the Boston Marathon bombings and aftermath; the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio, Brazil; the 2015 Super Bowl; the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia, and the 2013 EF5 Moore, Oklahoma, tornado.
Chen joined WHDH-TV from KSBY-TV in San Luis Obispo/Santa Barbara, Calif., where she was a multimedia journalist. She also worked as a web producer at KABC-TV in Los Angeles and was involved in production for NBC Sports in Beijing during the 2008 Summer Olympics. She began her career as a print reporter, writing for the Tulsa World for three years.
Chen was born in Texas and raised in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where her family still lives. She graduated from the University of Southern California with a degree in international relations as a Trustee Scholar and also studied Chinese at Peking University in Beijing.
One in 4 pet owners refer to their beloved animals as their "child."
Grant Wahl's loved ones and colleagues look back on his life and legacy after his death in 2022.
Alex Morgan, Crystal Dunn and Julie Ertz are making history by being moms while playing at the highest level of soccer.
Spotters will closely follow the games on a monitor, allowing them to rewatch collisions in slow motion and monitor players' movements.
The breakout star known for her role in "Everything Everywhere All at Once" stars in the new film "Joy Ride" — and hopes to tackle producing and directing next.
Fewer than 6% of undergraduate classical music majors are Black and Latinx, according to Washington Musical Pathways Initiative artistic director Jamila Tekalli Hanner.
Hiring freezes and layoffs are affecting some industries, and some are wondering what's next.
The daughter of refugees, Sheng Thao would end up fleeing an abusive relationship and living in a car with her young son, all before graduating college.
Nadon is one of five Asian American principal dancers in the ballet company's 75-year history.
A report released in March found that AI services could automate as many as 300 million fulltime jobs worldwide.
Buying a home has traditionally been seen as the smarter financial move. But is that still the case?
Forests inundated with salt due to rising sea levels are turning into cemeteries of trees.
The annual Boston Marathon is taking place Monday, a decade after a terror attack killed three people and injured hundreds of others.
Amy Nofiziger, a fraud expert for AARP, says that as the deadline approaches, scammers, "know that we're stressed and that it's going to be easy manipulating us."
Researchers at the summit of New England's tallest peak head out every hour on the hour to track temperature and humidity.