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RECAP: DECEMBER 25

         
COVER STORY:
 Boys Town: A beacon for troubled youth | Watch Video
Nearly 100 years ago a young Irish priest who believed there were no bad boys built a town that continues to turn around the lives of youngsters in dire straits. Tony Dokoupil reports.

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‘TIS THE SEASON:
 The season for Poinsettias | Watch Video
You can’t live in Greenville, S.C., and not understand that the poinsettia has a special place in the community. How the red-and-green plant came to be a Christmas perennial, and its connection to this city, is the story uncovered by correspondent Mark Strassmann.

For more info:

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Serena Altschul examines a collection of menorahs at the Jewish Museum in New York City. CBS News

‘TIS THE SEASON: Menorahs: Let there be lights | Watch Video
Hanukkah, the Jewish “Festival of Lights,” is a time for family and dedication, a tradition that wouldn’t be complete without lighting at least one menorah. Or, in the case of David Moore and his daughter, Jami, 154 of them. But their impressive collection -- the product of a father and daughter’s loving tradition -- isn’t as massive as the Jewish Museum’s in New York City.

Serena Altschul checks out the history and artistry of Hanukkah lamps.

For more info:

      
MOVIES:
 Adam Driver on entering the fast lane | Watch Video
The actor plays a bus driver in “Paterson” and a Jesuit priest in the historical drama “Silence” -- far from a lightsaber-wielding villain. Tracy Smith reports.

For more info:

             
PASSAGE:
 In memoriam | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” remember three inspiring individuals who left us this past week.

‘TIS THE SEASON: “All I Want for Christmas Is You” | Watch Video
For 22 years Mariah Carey’s “All I Want For Christmas Is You” has been the Christmas gift that keeps on giving. This year it once again sits atop Billboard’s Holiday 100, and is the most-downloaded song of Carey’s career.

Ben Tracy talks with Walter Afanasieff, who co-wrote the song with Carey, about what it’s like to create a holiday classic.

Mariah Carey - All I Want For Christmas Is You by MariahCareyVEVO on YouTube

For more info:

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Performing inside the Tank at Rangely, Colorado. CBS News

MUSIC: Reverberations: A water tank’s sonic splendors | Watch Video
A relic of the Old West in Colorado has acoustics as complicated as a Gothic cathedral’s, attracting musicians and visitors from around the world. Barry Petersen reports.

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HARTMAN:
 A Christmas homecoming (Video)
In 2011, in a classroom outside Raleigh, North Carolina, a second-grader had one wish from Santa - not a toy, but a visit from her dad, who was serving in Iraq. Steve Hartman looks back on a Christmas miracle.   

        
SUNDAY PROFILE:
 The Dalai Lama on seeking joy | Watch Video
Looking beyond religion and national boundaries, the spiritual leader says seeking commonality - with as little as a smile - can solve the world’s divisions. Seth Doane reports.

READ AN EXCERPT: From “The Book of Joy”

For more info: 

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The Milky Way, as viewed from Great Basin National Park in Nevada. CBS News

ON THE TRAIL: The brilliance of the night sky | Watch Video
Great Basic National Park in Nevada is one of a handful of International Dark Sky Parks. Conor Knighton takes in night visions, on his yearlong exploration of America’s National Parks.

NATURE UP CLOSE:  Great Basin National Park

For more info:

      
‘TIS THE SEASON:
 Charles Osgood sings “I’ll Be Home for Christmas” (Video)
It’s a “Sunday Morning” tradition: Celebrating the holidays with song. Our beloved “Anchor Emeritus” Charles Osgood visits to perform a classic, “I’ll Be Home for Christmas.”     

     
‘TIS THE SEASON:
 A classic CBS Christmas animation (Video)
In 1966 illustrator R.O. Blechman designed this touching animated Christmas message, which aired for several years on CBS. 

       
NATURE:
  Winter wonderland (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning in a winter wonderland, in California’s Sierra Nevada near Lake Tahoe. Videographer: Skip Brown.

      
WEB EXCLUSIVES: 

      
NATURE UP CLOSE:
 Adélie Penguins

     
RECAP: DECEMBER 18

COVER STORY: What’s to be done about fake news? | Watch Video
Are hacking, fake news and trolling presenting new and extraordinary threats to our safety and electoral process? Or are they just a 21st-century version of the same kinds of free speech that’s protected as the foundation of our democracy? Ted Koppel reports.

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ALMANAC:
 “The Nutcracker”  | Watch Video
On December 18, 1892, Peter Ilych Tchaikovsky’s timeless ballet had its world premiere in St. Petersburg, Russia. Jane Pauley reports.

FROM THE ARCHIVES: The taskmaster behind “The Nutcracker” (VIDEO)
For 50 years Irine Fokine (whose mother, prima ballerina Alexandra Federova, danced in the first performance of “The Nutcracker” in St. Petersburg in 1892) has overseen performances of the Tchaikovsky ballet.  In this report originally broadcast on “Sunday Morning” December 23, 2007, correspondent Bill Geist attended rehearsals at Madame Fokine’s Ridgewood, N.J., dance studio, where she guides her young students through leaps and plies.

FROM THE ARCHIVES: A “Harlem Nutcracker” (VIDEO)
In a story originally broadcast on “Sunday Morning” on December 8 1996, host Charles Osgood reports on “The Harlem Nutcracker,” a reinvention of the classic Tchaikovsky ballet, reimagined by way of Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn, as a jazz-infused fantasy involving a grandmother revisiting the dreams of her youth. Features interviews with choreographer Donald Byrd and conductor David Berger.

For more info:

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Expert gift wrapper Alton DuLaney gives some wrapping tips to Nancy Giles. CBS News

‘TIS THE SEASON: That’s a wrap! (VIDEO)
One of the country’s most famous holiday gift-wrappers is Alton DuLaney, of Splendora, Texas. In 2008, he won the $10,000 grand prize in the Scotch brand Most Gifted Wrapper competition. Today, select clients pay him to wrap their gifts. Nancy Giles discovered why DuLaney considers his wrapping an art form.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: An expert’s how-to guide to wrapping a present

For more info:

          
MUSIC:
  Robbie Robertson’s “Testimony” | Watch Video
Anthony Mason interviews the principal songwriter for the seminal rock group The Band, and together they revisit a time when Robertson was part of a revolution in music. 

BOOK EXCERPT: Robbie Robertson on the “Last Waltz” concert

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PASSAGE:
 Craig Sager: “Every day is just a canvas waiting to be painted” | Watch Video
Jim Axelrod remembers sports broadcaster Craig Sager, who died this week after battling cancer.

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‘TIS THE SEASON: 
The Harmony Project | Watch Video
In the many voices of the Harmony Project choir of Columbus, Ohio, its members find one community. Jane Pauley reports.

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HARTMAN: 
The Secret Santa police (Video)
This week, the Kansas City, Kansas, police department was on the take. Each officer in this room got at least a grand, courtesy of the anonymous, wealthy businessman known only as Secret Santa. Steve Hartman has more.

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Actress Nicole Kidman, who stars in the real-life drama, “Lion.” CBS News

MOVIES: Nicole Kidman on a mother’s love | Watch Video
The Oscar-winning actress knows just how to break our hearts, but no story she’s ever told on screen makes her as emotional as her own. Tracy Smith has a profile.

For more info:

       
MILEPOST: 
National Film Registry
“The Lion King,” “Thelma & Louise,” “The Breakfast Club” and Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Birds” are among the 25 films which have been added to the Library of Congress’ National Film Registry.      

         
PASSAGE: In memoriam (Video)
“Sunday Morning” remembers several notable figures who passed away this week, including the creator of the Heimlich Maneuver, Dr. Henry J. Heimlich; E.R. Braithwaite, a teacher, diplomat and novelist famous for his roman a clef, “To Sir, With Love”; and actor Alan Thicke, best known for playing the TV dad of “Growing Pains.”

          
BOOKS:
 The alchemy of Paulo Coelho | Watch Video
Brazilian author Paulo Coelho’s book, “The Alchemist,” has spent an astonishing eight years on The New York Times Best Seller List, and has sold more than 65 million copies. His latest novel, “The Spy,” was inspired by the life of Margaretha Zelle, a Dutch courtesan and dancer popularly known as Mata Hari, who was executed as a spy in 1917.

Correspondent Rita Braver meets Coelho at his home in Geneva, Switzerland, to discuss his unlikely journey to becoming one of the most translated authors in the world.

BOOK EXCERPT: From “The Spy” by Paulo Coelho

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Paulo Coelho on books and the Internet
The Brazilian-born author of such bestsellers as “The Alchemist” has more Facebook followers than any other writer (more than 28 million), so he has a special affinity for the Internet. But what about books? In this web exclusive, Paulo Coelho explains to correspondent Rita Braver why he rid his home of thousands of books.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Paulo Coelho’s homage to Ernest Hemingway
In this web exclusive, the bestselling author of “The Alchemist” talks to correspondent Rita Braver about how he was inspired by Ernest Hemingway’s “The Old Man and the Sea,” and what he hopes readers take away from his own books.

For more info:

       
PULSE: 
What’s your favorite Christmas song?
“Jingle Bells” (10%)
“Silent Night” (10%)
“White Christmas” (6%)
“O Holy Night” (3%)

          
NATURE:
 Penguins (Extended Video)
We leave you this last Sunday Morning before Winter among the penguins of Antarctica. Videographer: Ed Forgotson Jr.

      
WEB EXCLUSIVES: 

          
CALENDAR:
 Week of December 19Watch Video
From the Electoral College presidential election to the Winter Solstice, “Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Jane Pauley reports.

      
NATURE UP CLOSE: 
 Seals

RECAP: DECEMBER 11

     
COVER STORY:
 Carnegie Heroes: A definition of selfless humanity | Watch Video
The Carnegie Hero Fund Commission rewards those who ignore extraordinary risk to themselves to save the lives of strangers. Scott Simon of NPR reports.

For more info:

      
ALMANAC: 
 Kraft’s processed cheese | Watch Video
December 11, 1874, was the birthday of James Lewis Kraft, who revolutionized dairy products with his “improved process of sterilizing cheese.” Jane Pauley reports.

For more info:

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Billy Eichner with guest Lupita Nyong’o on “Billy on the Street.” Tru TV

      
TV:
  The outrageous Billy Eichner | Watch Video
In “Billy on the Street,” unsuspecting pedestrians become participants in the comedian’s high-octane, staccato talk show/prankfest. Richard Schlesinger reports.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Bill Eichner on his “Billy on the Street” persona
He’s loud, outrageous, and accosts pedestrians with obnoxious pranks about pop culture. But as Billy Eichner assures Richard Schlesinger in this web exclusive, his character on the TV series “Billy on the Street” is not really him.

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NOBEL PRIZE:
 Inside the Bob Dylan Archive | Watch Video
The University of Tulsa houses a treasure trove of materials from the newest Nobel Laureate in Literature. Jane Pauley reports.

For more info:

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Sutton Foster in the new Off-Broadway revival of “Sweet Charity.” The New Group

STAGE: Sutton Foster: A showbiz myth come to life | Watch Video
It’s a showbiz myth as old as showbiz itself: the understudy who becomes a star. But it actually happened to Sutton Foster. The two-time Tony Award-winner is now starring in a revival of “Sweet Charity.” Mo Rocca finds out how Foster became one of the brightest stars on the Great White Way.

For more info:

       
‘TIS THE SEASON: 
Gift ideas from Techno Claus | Watch Video
David Pogue of Yahoo Tech delivers some gift suggestions for those on your list who love gadgets.

For more info: 

      
HARTMAN:
 One student’s special military operation (Video)
Rishi Sharma, 19, is no soldier. But the son of Indian immigrants is working tirelessly to preserve the legacies of World War II veterans so they can be honored for years to come. Steve Hartman reports.

For more info: 

       
MOVIES:
 Viggo Mortensen: Making peace with the camera | Watch Video
He’s a respected movie star as comfortable playing a blockbuster king as he is an arthouse villain, and his latest film, “Captain Fantastic,” has brought him even more accolades. But Viggo Mortensen’s relationship with the movie camera has been conflicted, he tells Tracy Smith.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Viggo Mortensen: When acting is the “most embarrassing” job
In this web exclusive, the star of “Captain Fantastic” talks with Tracy Smith about his comfort level with the camera.

For more info:

      
REMEMBRANCE:
 A little-known story from the life of John Glenn | Watch Video
Our contributor offers us an previously unknown story from the life of an American hero.

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Conor Knighton at Volcanoes National Park in Hawai’i. CBS News

ON THE TRAIL: Living near volcanoes | Watch Video
“Lava Flow” homes are sprouting up near Hawai’i’s Volcanoes National Park. So who would live so close to an active volcano? Conor Knighton continues his yearlong exploration of America’s National Parks.

PLAYLIST: Watch more from “On The Trail”

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THIS AND THAT:
 Three short takes (Video)
Jane Pauley offers glimpses into the week’s news, from the Mall of America’s first black Santa, to a pioneer in the world of lost luggage.

For more info: 

      
NATURE:
 Great Basin National Park (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning among the soaring pines, and early signs of winter, at Great Basin National Park in eastern Nevada. Videographer: Derek Reich.

       
WEB EXCLUSIVES: 

      
NATURE UP CLOSE:  Seals

RECAP: DECEMBER 4

      
HEADLINES: 
Dozens feared killed in Calif. warehouse fire
Many are feared dead in Oakland, California, following a fire at a converted warehouse that was being used for a party. Carter Evans has the latest.

       
COVER STORY: 
Remembering Pearl Harbor, 75 years later | Watch Video
On December 7, 1941, war came to a remote Pacific outpost, and forced an isolationist nation to rise as a global superpower. Lee Cowan talks with survivors of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

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HISTORY:
 Pearl Harbor: How FDR responded to the “day of infamy” | Watch Video
In the hours following Japan’s devastating attack on U.S. military forces in Hawaii, President Franklin D. Roosevelt was remembered for “not losing his cool.” David Martin reports on the timeline of FDR’s actions between the attack on Pearl Harbor and his address to a joint session of Congress seeking a declaration of war against Japan.

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BOOKS: Michael Lewis and “The Undoing Project”: Why gut instincts are often wrongWatch Video
The bestselling author’s new book examines two esteemed psychologists’ studies of why human judgment is often fatally flawed. John Blackstone reports.

For more info:

        
MOVIES:
 Billy Bob Thornton: Still a fish out of water | Watch Video
The actor, returning in “Bad Santa 2” after wrapping a tour with his band The Boxmasters, thanks his lucky stars every day. Tracy Smith reports.

For more info:

      
PASSAGE:
 In memoriam (Video)
“Sunday Morning” remembers some of the noted personalities who passed away this week, including TV producer Grant Tinker; Michael James Delligatti, a McDonald’s franchise owner who created the Big Mac; chef Peng Chang-kuei, who invented General Tso’s Chicken; and TV commercial actor Milt Moss.

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Photographer Timothy Greenfield-Sanders with his portrait of Caitlyn Jenner. CBS News

ART: Revealing stories of “The Trans List” | Watch Video
Every portrait tells a story -- especially the portraits of Timothy Greenfield-Sanders. But his latest project is slightly different:  With “The Trans List,” Greenfield-Sanders trains his lens on the transgender community, and catalogs their stories in a film that airs on HBO this Monday. Serena Altschul reports.

For more info:

      
STEVE HARTMAN: An unlikely friendship between white cop, black teen (Video)
When Officer Kirk Keffer spotted a solitary figure walking through an industrial section of Benicia, Calif. late one night, he offered the young man, Jourdan Duncan, a ride. Their meeting would prove consequential to them both. Steve Hartman reports. 

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Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones, with correspondent Anthony Mason. CBS News

MUSIC: Keith Richards and Mick Jagger return to their roots | Watch Video
The British rockers, who have just released a new blues album, “Blue and Lonesome,” talk to Anthony Mason about returning to their roots, and about the Rolling Stones’ endurance .

GALLERY: The Rolling Stones through the ages

PREVIEW: Keith Richards: There are times on stage when I feel immortal

WEB EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: Mick Jagger and Keith Richards on the blues
Mick Jagger and Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones talk with “Sunday Morning’ correspondent Anthony Mason about their fascination with American blues music, and how as young British fans they bonded over the works of such artists as Chuck Berry, Sonny Terry, Brownie McGhee and Big Bill Broonzy.

WEB EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: Keith Richards on “Satisfaction”
Keith Richards tells “Sunday Morning” correspondent Anthony Mason that playing such classic Rolling Stones songs as “Satisfaction” never gets old.

WEB EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: Keith Richards: “I was the most likely to die”
2016 saw the loss of many music legends, from David Bowie and Prince to Leon Russell. In this web exclusive, Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones talks with Anthony Mason about his thoughts on having survived many of his fellow musicians, and how it may have changed his views on mortality.

For more info:

The Rolling Stones - Hate To See You Go by TheRollingStonesVEVO on YouTube
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Hordes prepare to participate in GISHWHES. What is that? Tune in and find out! CBS News


FUN & GAMES:
 An epic scavenger hunt (Video)
In August this year, you might have noticed some offbeat people doing some offbeat things, like milking a cow in formal wear, or playing badminton in the middle of a shopping mall. But these events seemed perfectly normal to the 30,000 people in the world’s biggest scavenger hunt aimed at charity. It’s called GISHWHES: The Greatest International Scavenger Hunt the World Has Ever Seen. David Pogue, of Yahoo Tech, tagged along with one group participating in the competition organized by Misha Collins.

For more info:

      
CALENDAR:
 Week of December 5 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Jane Pauley reports.

       
NATURE:
 Monk seals in Hawaii (Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning in Hawaii, among monk seals in the waters off the Marine National Monument. 

        
WEB EXCLUSIVES:

        
ALMANAC:
 The giant squid | Watch Video
On December 4, 2006, an elusive ocean beast was captured live on video for the very first time, Jane Pauley reports.

NATURE UP CLOSE:  Turkeys

RECAP: NOVEMBER 27

      
HEADLINES: 
Cuba prepares to mourn Fidel Castro (Video)
Cuba is mourning its revolutionary leader Fidel Castro. Flags are flying at half-mast, as the nation marks nine days of official mourning. Manuel Bojorquez reports from Havana, while in London, correspondent Jonathan Vigliotti reports on how the world is commemorating the death of a dictator, called both a hero and an executioner.

        
COVER STORY:
 Fidel Castro: How he stood up to the U.S., and won | Watch Video
For more than half a century, the Cuban revolutionary and communist dictator played David to the U.S. Goliath. Martha Teichner reports on the life of the former Cuban leader, who died on Friday at age 90.

       
ALMANAC:
 Anders Celsius | Watch Video
November 27, 1701 was the birthday of the Swedish scientist who created the temperature scale that bears his name. Jane Pauley reports.

       
HISTORY: 
Castro, the good and the bad (Video)

        
ART:
 A collision of quilting and rock music
Faith Salie meets an artist for whom the craft and artistry of quilting collides with a heavy metal/punk rock sensibility.

For more info:

       
MOVIES:
 Casey Affleck’s time has come, again | Watch Video
So far, the star of the acclaimed “Manchester by the Sea” is fine with fame not quite catching up with him. Tracy Smith reports.

For more info:

        
PASSAGE:
 Florence Henderson (Video)
“Sunday Morning” looks back at the life and career of actress Florence Henderson, who died Thursday night at age 82. Henderson was best known as the beloved matriarch of TV’s “The Brady Bunch.” Jane Pauley reports.

FROM THE ARCHIVES: Florence Henderson, America’s Mom (Video)
In this February 21, 2010 profile for “Sunday Morning,” the actress famed for playing the matriarch of TV’s “The Brady Bunch” talks with correspondent Sandra Hughes about growing up, her stage and television career, and why a lot of women “hated” her for her portrayal of Carol Brady. Florence Henderson died on Nov. 24, 2016, at age 82.

       
POSTCARD FROM JAPAN: 
Tokyo’s station master | Watch Video
Although the Tokyo Olympics are almost four years off, the station master at the city’s landmark train station already seems to be running his own kind of marathon every day. Seth Doane has sent us a Postcard from Japan.

    
CULTURE: Joshua Seftel and “The Secret Life of Muslims” (Video)
More than three million Muslims live in the U.S., and in recent days, there has been a disturbing rise in hate crimes against them. Filmmaker Joshua Seftel, who as a child was taunted by other kids because he was Jewish, created a new documentary series, “The Secret Life of Muslims,” to explore the stories of Muslims in America.

For more info:

        
MUSIC:
 Lady Gaga on her “real success” | Watch Video
The theatrical pop diva’s latest, “Joanne,” is her fourth No 1 album, but as she tells our Lee Cowan, Lady Gaga measures success by those closest to her heart.

GALLERY: Lady Gaga performs

For more info:

Lady Gaga - Perfect Illusion by LadyGagaVEVO on YouTube

HISTORY: Fidel Castro’s shadow will continue to loom large | Watch Video
Historian Douglas Brinkley on the legacy of the Cuban revolutionary and dictator. 

            
NATURE:
 Yellowstone National Park (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning from Yellowstone National Park, where male elk are bugling for mates. Videographer: David Bhagat.

        
WEB EXCLUSIVES:

      
CALENDAR: Week of November 28 | Watch Video
From Cyber Monday to Giving Tuesday, “Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Jane Pauley reports.    

       
MOVIES: Meet the magical cast of “Fantastic Beasts” (Video)
“CBS Sunday Morning” producer Sara Kugel talks to the cast of “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them,” and finds more magic behind the scenes of the new film based in J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter universe.

NATURE UP CLOSE:  Turkeys
        


RECAP: NOVEMBER 20, “THE FOOD ISSUE”

Host: Jane Pauley

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CBS News

This Sunday before Thanksgiving marks the beginning of the holiday season for us here at “Sunday Morning,” and each year we celebrate our nation’s bounty and culinary delights with our special “Food Issue.” 

Here’s a brief look at what’s on this year’s menu, along with links and recipes:

RECIPE INDEX: Check out recipes, cooking tips and menu suggestions from top chefs, cookbook authors, and the editors of Food & Wine magazine.

THANKS: Table settings for the 2016 Food Issue courtesy of Villeroy and Boch USA, of Monroe Township, N.J.

Furniture courtesy of L. & J.G. Stickley, Inc., of Manlius, N.Y.

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Jane Pauley on the set of “Sunday Morning.” CBS News

        
COVER STORY:
 Trading a grocery store trip for home delivery | Watch Video
Online grocery sales have increased 15% since 2015, while meal kits mailed to your home are taking off. Anna Werner reports.

For more info:

        
ART:
 Curating a museum’s menu | Watch Video
Visitors who feast their eyes at San Francisco’s Museum of Modern Art can also feast on reproductions of classic dishes by the world’s greatest chefs. John Blackstone reports.

For more info:

      
SUPERFOODS:
 Turmeric, the spice of life | Watch Video
One of the most talked-about superfoods is being tested for medicinal use against a variety of diseases, from Alzheimer’s and diabetes to cancer. Lee Cowan reports.

For more info:

      
WHAT’S BAD IS GOOD:
 Eggs | Watch Video
Some foods which we were told were bad for us, turns out, are actually GOOD for us. Serena Altschul checks out a few.

For more info:

       
RESTAURANTS:
 Chef Rene Redzepi and the transformation of Noma | Watch Video
His Copenhagen restaurant has been consistently named the world’s best -- and now he’s shutting it down, with a new plan in mind. Faith Salie reports.

For more info:

      
MO ROCCA:
 The Cheese Nun | Watch Video
Mother Noella, of the Abbey of Regina Laudis, practices the sacred art of cheesemaking.

WEB EXCLUSIVE: Mother Noella on the science and spirituality of cheesemaking (Video)
In this web exclusive, Mother Noella, a Benedictin Nun of the Abbey of Regina Laudis, talks with correspondent Mo Rocca about enzymes - the catalyst in the traditional cheesemaking process - and how they relate to the spiritual. You can, she says, find the universe in a microbe.

For more info:

       
DINING OUT:
 10 restaurants that changed America | Watch Video
Delmonico’s, which invented the fine dining experience in 1837, is just one of the restaurants that shaped how Americans eat. Jim Axelrod reports.

For more info:

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Some like it hot: Hot chicken, a fiery Nashville tradition born from the wrath of a wronged woman. CBS News

TRENDS: Hot chicken: Nashville’s local indelicacy | Watch Video
Fried chicken doused in cayenne and enough spices to make you sweat is an addictive combination of pleasure and pain. Jan Crawford reports.

For more info:

       
WHAT’S BAD IS GOOD: 
Potatoes | Watch Video
Spuds are the star of the new restaurant franchise, Potatopia. Serena Altschul reports.

For more info:

       
SUNDAY PROFILE:
 The sparkling Christie Brinkley | Watch Video
The supermodel and actress has launched her own line of sparking wines. Mark Phillips reports.

For more info:

       
GIVING:
 How one restaurant nourishes the soul | Watch Video
Staplehouse, in a converted warehouse in Atlanta, devotes 100% of its profits to The Giving Kitchen, which benefits restaurant workers in need. Tracy Smith reports.

For more info:

       
HISTORY:
 “The Jemima Code”: A history of African-American cooking | Watch Video
In “The Jemima Code,” author Toni Tipton-Martin explores a commercial stereotype, and highlights the stories and recipes of African-Americans’ contributions to the American table. Michelle Miller reports.

WEB EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: A Southern chef’s legacy
In this web exclusive, chef Chris Williams talks with Michelle Miller about the legacy of his great-grandmother, the African American chef, cookbook author and entrepreneur Lucille Bishop Smith. The restaurant Lucille’s, a Houston institution, carries on her traditions.

For more info:

        
WHAT’S BAD IS GOOD:
 Butter | Watch Video
After decades of health concerns, consumption of the rich, creamy butter is spreading to a 40-year high. Serena Altschul reports.

For more info:

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Smith Island, off the coast of Maryland, is the source of a multi-layered cake with a delicious word-of-mouth reputation. CBS News

DESSERT: Cakes from a dessert island | Watch Video
Smith Island, off the coast of Maryland, is the source of a multi-layered cake with a delicious word-of-mouth reputation. Rita Braver reports.

FROM THE ARCHIVES: “The Twentieth Century”: The Sailing Oystermen (Video)
Walter Cronkite hosts this documentary that examines a disappearing way of life for Chesapeake Bay skipjack sailors, dredging for oysters under restrictions aimed at preserving a dwindling supply. The film also captures life on Smith Island. Originally broadcast February 7, 1965.

For more info:

     
NATURE:
 Turkeys (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning before Thanksgiving among the wild turkeys at the Allegheny National Forest near Foster Brook, Pennsylvania. Videographer: Carl Mrozek.

        
WEB EXCLUSIVES:

        
MOVIES: Meet the magical cast of “Fantastic Beasts” (Video)
“CBS Sunday Morning” producer Sara Kugel talks to the cast of “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them,” and finds more magic behind the scenes of the new film based in J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter universe.

NATURE UP CLOSE:  Elk and wild turkeys at Great Smoky National Park

        

RECAP: NOVEMBER 13

COVER STORY: The view of voters in West Virginia coal country | Watch Video
Ted Koppel talks with Donald Trump supporters in West Virginia, a state where 69 percent of voters supported the Republican nominee, to hear what they hope will come out of the Trump presidency. 

       
ALMANAC:
 The mechanical cow milking machine | Watch Video
On November 13, 1930, a N.J. dairy farm introduced the Rotolactor, a rotating mechanical cow milker. Jane Pauley reports.

        
HISTORY:
 Restoring a World War II aviation gem | Watch Video
Lee Cowan shows us a B-29 bomber rescued from the boneyard, and the people who helped launch it back into the skies.

      
ART:
 Sir Elton John’s album
Elton John began collecting photographs when he got sober 25 years ago. Today his collection numbers nearly 8,000, and is considered one of the most important in the world. 

Anthony Mason talks with Sir Elton about his love of photography, and his collection that went on exhibit this week at the Tate Modern in London.

For more info:

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Bobby Flay explores the world of Greek diners. CBS News

      
BOBBY FLAY:
 Greek diners run in their blood | Watch Video
Contributor Bobby Flay looks at the Greek diner -- multi-generational joints with lots of character, and lots of items on the menu!  Flay visits the Broad Street Diner in Keyport, N.J. (recently named the #1 diner in New Jersey), and the Bel Aire Diner in Astoria, Queens (named the best diner in New York City) to find out why diners are a Greek family tradition (And how do they offer all of that food?)

For more info:

      
STEVE HARTMAN:
 Wedding gift (Video)
Brandon and Kathy Gunn, of Northville, Mich., have been married nine years now, and yet they just recently opened their last wedding present. The present has a lesson for all us. Steve Hartman reports.

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Warren Beatty with correspondent Mo Rocca on Hollywood’s Walk of Fame. CBS News

    
MOVIES:
 Warren Beatty: Living legend | Watch Video
Warren Beatty has been a leading man for more than half a century, but as he tells correspondent Mo Rocca, he’s far from finished. Beatty talks about his stellar career and his latest film, “Rules Don’t Apply.”

For more info:

      
PASSAGE:
 In memoriam (Video)

      
TV:
 Trevor Noah: Finding humor in the darkest of times | Watch Video
Growing up under South Africa’s apartheid system, the host of Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show” sees a painful past as a story of triumph. Michelle Miller reports.

BOOK EXCERPT: Read a selection from Trevor Noah’s memoir, “Born a Crime”

For more info:


VETERANS: 
The Good CemeterianWatch Video
Andrew Lumish, of Tampa, Fla., devotes his energies to scrubbing the grime and moss from veterans’ gravestones, to reveal the names and lives of the departed. Anna Werner reports.

For more info: 

       
PASSAGE:
 Election 2016 by the numbers (Video)
Jane Pauley breaks down this week’s presidential election.

        
NATURE: Great Smoky Mountains (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning among the autumn colors of the Great Smoky Mountains of North Carolina. Videographer: Charles Schultz.

        
WEB EXCLUSIVES:

     
IN MEMORIAM:
 Bill Flanagan on Leonard Cohen (Video)
Leonard Cohen, one of the greatest songwriters of our time, has passed away at the age of 82. “Sunday Morning” contributor Bill Flanagan reflects on his career and his haunting music.

       
ELECTION 2016: 
Nancy Giles: Time to get to work
Nearly 100 million people did not bother to vote, making that “more perfect union” a more distant prospect.

        
NATURE UP CLOSE: 
 Mount Rushmore National Park


RECAP: NOVEMBER 6

      
COVER STORY:
 Election 2016 nears the end: How did we get here? | Watch Video
When it comes to the presidential election, there’s one thing many Americans can actually agree on: by Wednesday it should be over. The campaign has been ugly and divisive to a tremendous degree. But as Martha Teichner reports, that’s actually not at all unprecedented in American politics.

For more info:

        
HISTORY:
 Worst president ever? The ignominy of James Buchanan | Watch Video
Mo Rocca has a history lesson on President James Buchanan, whom many historians consider to be our nation’s worst chief executive.

For more info:

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Artist Steve Penley with correspondent Erin Moriarty. CBS News

ART: Steve Penley’s palette of red, white and blue | Watch Video
Can art be partisan? Erin Moriarty of “48 Hours” meets artist Steve Penley, the man who has been called the Republican Party’s favorite artist, to find out.

GALLERY: The very American art of Steve Penley

For more info:

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Alec Baldwin and Kate McKinnon as Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton on “Saturday Night Live.” NBC/Broadway Video

ELECTION 2016: Humor, the last line of defense | Watch Video
Has Election 2016 been God’s gift to humorists? From late-night TV to satire and political cartoons, Lee Cowan takes note of what’s made this difficult year a laughing matter.

For more info:

       
ELECTION 2016:
 The world watches | Watch Video
Seth Doane examines how a global audience is viewing America’s presidential contest.

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California voters will decide this week on Proposition 64, which would make marijuana legal throughout the state (but also allow local bans on sales). CBS News


PROPOSITIONS:
 Marijuana on the ballot | Watch Video
Barry Petersen looks at Americans’ changing attitudes towards marijuana and the implications of California’s Proposition 64, which would legalize the drug in the country’s largest state.

For more info:

         
HARTMAN:
 Family feud (Video)
Steve Hartman introduces us to a pair of brothers, each with a successful career in politics. The fly in the ointment? One is a Democrat, the other a Republican.

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Singer-songwriter Paul Simon. CBS News

LEGENDS: Paul Simon: Expanding his “big bag of sounds” | Watch Video
The singer-songwriter is out with a new album, “Stranger to Stranger,” which debuted at #1 on the Billboard chart. Lee Cowan stops by Paul Simon’s home and studio to try and find the secret to his success.

For more info: 

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Conor Knighton at the southernmost U.S. National Park -- in American Samoa. CBS News

ON THE TRAIL: Living in American Samoa | Watch Video
Conor Knighton continues his trek through our National Parks, visiting the only U.S. soil south of the Equator, where U.S. nationals born in the American territory in the South Pacific are only confirmed some rights.

For more info:

      
COMMENTARY: 
Bob Schieffer on our unsavory presidential campaign | Watch Video
The veteran CBS newsman and former host of “Face the Nation” shares his thoughts about this year’s election. Democracy at its finest?

         
ELECTION:
 The history of voting (Video)
Jane Pauley explores the history of ballots and voting machines at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C.

For more info:

        
NATURE:
 Mount Rushmore (Video)

We leave you this Sunday morning in the company of past presidents - at Mount Rushmore in South Dakota. Videographer: David Bhagat. 

WEB EXCLUSIVES:

      
NATURE UP CLOSE: 
Spiders!
Lean in for a good look at some Arachnids.

RECAP: OCTOBER 30

DVR-ers! If your cable box or Tivo is set to record “CBS News Sunday Morning” you should be good to go!   

        
HEADLINES:
 Powerful quake strikes central Italy (Video)
Another powerful earthquake struck central Italy Sunday morning. The magnitude 6.6 tremblor was the strongest to hit the nation in 35 years. Seth Doane reports.

HEADLINES: FBI head’s letter “deeply troubling” (Video)
A defiant Hillary Clinton is criticizing FBI director Jame Comey’s controversial letter to Congress, just days before the election, saying the agency is investigating a new batch of emails belonging to Clinton aide Huma Abedin and which are said to number in the thousands. Jeff Pegues reports a new search warrant has still not been obtained.

       
COVER STORY:
 A dog’s secret life | Watch Video
The animated movie “The Secret Life of Pets,” one of the summer’s biggest blockbusters, explored what our animals are up to after we leave the house each day. Pets have a secret life, all right. But for dogs, it’s mostly about how they experience the world: through their noses. Did you know they can actually tell time through their sense of smell?  Martha Teichner reports.

For more info:

         
ALMANAC:
 Workplace time clock | Watch Video
On October 30, 1894, a patent was awarded for the first device to use a card to record the times at which an employee punched in and out from work. Jane Pauley reports.

       
HALLOWEEN:
 Ravens get a bad rap | Watch Video
An intelligent bird has nonetheless become a maligned symbol of death and the supernatural in popular culture and folklore.

For more info:

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Eddie Redmayne with correspondent Tracy Smith in London. CBS News

MOVIES: Eddie Redmayne spreads more magic in “Fantastic Beasts” | Watch Video
Tracy Smith profiles the Oscar-winning star of “The Theory of Everything,” “The Danish Girl,” and the new J.K. Rowling fantasy, “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them.”

WEB EXCLUSIVE: Read an extended interview with Eddie Redmayne

For more info:

        
ART:
 Color me impressed | Watch Video
While some publishers may be concerned about book sales, there’s one category that is flying off the shelves: coloring books for grown-ups. Rita Braver reports on the adult coloring craze, with visits to bestselling artist Steve McDonald (“Fantastic Cities”), and art therapist and author Lacy Mucklow (“Color Me Happy”).

FROM THE ARCHIVES: Art by the numbers (Video)
Critics sniffed, but paint by numbers was a popular fad in the 1950s. To mark the hobby’s 50th anniversary, the works of amateur, number-aided artists were honored with an exhibition - the most comprehensive ever - at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History. Bill Geist meets the inventor of paint-by-numbers, Dan Robbins, and curator William “Larry” Bird, as well as aficionado Trey Speegle, who shows off his personal collection of hundreds of paint-by-numbers canvases. Originally broadcast on April 27, 2001.

For more info:

        
PASSAGE:
 N.Y. museum acquires first emoji | Watch Video
The Museum of Modern Art announces it has acquired the original cell phone pictographs introduced by Japan’s national phone company in 1999

         
WORK:
 An old-school gravedigger plies his trade | Watch Video
Sometimes the old ways still work best, and Everard Hall may be the best testament to that. Nearly five decades ago, he began digging graves in the Maine town of Milbridge. Hall still digs graves by hand, and takes tremendous pride in his work.

“I was put on Earth to be a gravedigger,” he told correspondent Mark Strassmann. “It’s a God-given talent. Everybody has an occupation that they do perfect. Mine is grave-digging.”      


STEVE HARTMAN: Special Olympians team up for zombie film (Video)
Sam and Mattie have quite a long list of accomplishments - the pair met while competing in the Special Olympics and forged a special bond. Their friendship has taken them many places, but it was a surprise to many when one of their wacky adventures landed them in front of and behind the camera for a zombie horror movie. Steve Hartman reports.

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Singer Josh Groban, who is making his Broadway debut in the new musical, “Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812.” CBS News

ON BROADWAY: Josh Groban’s childhood dream comes true on Broadway | Watch Video
In a studio on New York’s 42nd Street, the cast of the new musical adapted from Tolstoy’s “War and Peace” rehearses for opening night. Twenty-four members of this production will be making their Broadway debuts, including the leading man, Josh Groban.

For weeks now, the 35-year-old singer has been putting in grueling 12-hour days to get ready. “I’m coming from another world,” he told Anthony Mason, “and I wanted to make sure that it was known, right off the bat, that I was coming to this world with the maximum amount of respect for it.”

For more info:

          
HALLOWEEN:
 Scarecrows: An ancient tradition (Video)
The scarecrow is an ancient tool of farmers trying to protect their crops from hungry birds. But these nostalgic agricultural aids - the stars of the annual Peddler’s Village Scarecrow Festival in Bucks County, Pa. - are being supplanted by more modern methods. Luke Burbank checks out some farms using less traditional ways to scare off bothersome birds.

FROM THE ARCHIVES: An ode to scarecrows (Video)
In this poem which was originally broadcast on “Sunday Morning” October 28, 1984, Charles Osgood pays homage to the scarecrow, in all its festive incarnations, as found at the Nut Tree Harvest Festival in Vacaville, Calif.

For more info:

        
OPINION:
 Bob Sirott: Some of us will miss our losing Cubs
The Cubs, who have not played in a World Series since 1945, and have not won a World Series in 108 years, are now battling the Cleveland Indians for the title of Champions of the World. Chicago broadcaster Bob Sirott, who has rooted for the Cubs since childhood, offers his thoughts on what a winning Cubs team would mean for its long-suffering fans.

FROM THE ARCHIVES: Bill Geist, long-suffering Cubs fan (Video)
Chicago baseball fans know a thing or two about losing, and about superstitions that would mean defeat for their beloved Cubs. Correspondent Bill Geist, a long-time fan, visited Wrigley Field, but didn’t dare go inside, as the Cubs played the New York Mets for a spot in the playoffs. Originally aired on Sept. 24, 1989.

FROM THE ARCHIVES: Cleveland baseball-loving nun (Video)
In the past the Cleveland Indians have been lifted into the World Series, no doubt, thanks to the cookies baked for them by Sister Mary Assumpta and the Sisters of the Holy Spirit in Garfield Heights, Ohio. Bill Geist met Sister Assumpta, an ardent baseball fan, as she attended her beloved Indians’ Opening Day game, armed with cookies and prayers for a win. Originally aired on April 19, 2010.

For more info:

        
CALENDAR:
 Week of October 31 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. (With recipes!) Jane Pauley reports.

       
NATURE:
 Spiders (Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning before Halloween in a garden haunted by spiders in upstate New York ... in Erie County, no less! Videographer: Carl Mrozek.    

         
WEB EXCLUSIVES:

      
NATURE UP CLOSE: 
Autumn colors
The season’s changing hues appear to be magical, even when we understand the biology behind the process.




RECAP: OCTOBER 23

ATTENTION NEW YORK CITY AND LOS ANGELES VIEWERS: Because our broadcast will be preempted in those two markets due to the Giants-Ram football game, you can catch our broadcast by tuning in WLNY 10/55 at 9 a.m. ET in the New York City area; and in Los Angeles at 1:45 a.m. Monday morning on KCBS.  

        
COVER STORY:
 Fighting genetic disease with help from HIV virus | Watch Video
Martha Teichner reports on how gene therapy -- not available in this country -- could save children with rare terminal illnesses.

For more info: 

           
ALMANAC:
 Birth of plastic surgery | Watch Video
On October 23, 1814, London doctor Joseph Carpue performed what is widely regarded as the Western world’s first nasal reconstruction operation.

ART: Rock art: Seven Magic Mountains (Video)
Along I-15 in Nevada, just outside Las Vegas, seven technicolor towers appear as if a mirage in the desert. It’s the vision of Ugo Rondinone, a Swiss artist living in Harlem, who calls his Day-Glo painted limestone creations the 7 Magic Mountains. Lee Cowan made a pilgrimage.

For more info:

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Bestselling author John Grisham, with correspondent Anthony Mason. CBS News

       
FINE PRINT:
 John Grisham, looking for a place to hide | Watch Video
The bestselling author, back with a new thriller, “The Whistler,” doesn’t miss practicing law, he explains to Anthony Mason.

BOOK EXCERPT: Read the opening chapter of Grisham’s “The Whistler”

For more info:

  • “The Whistler” by John Grisham (Doubleday): Also available in Large Print Paperback, eBook, Abridge Audiobook CD and Digital Download, and Unabridged Audio CD and Digital Download
  • jgrisham.com

        
OPINION:
 Some frank words about swearing | Watch Video
Faith Salie swears that people who curse are a lot more intelligent. (It’s @#$*& true!)

For more info:

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New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd with correspondent Mo Rocca. CBS News

Q&A: Maureen Dowd’s “own little basket of deplorables” | Watch Video
When asked if she ever reads the comments to her articles, New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd replied, “Never.” And that’s probably a wise decision. She told Mo Rocca, “I’m always making one side or the other angry” -- and more likely, both. But her siblings, Peggy and Kevin, create Dowd’s own personal focus group. “All I have to do is go home. They’re my own little ‘basket of deplorables,’” she said.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Maureen Dowd: “Trump is a classic clinical narcissist”

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Maureen Dowd on Hillary Clinton’s trustworthiness

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Maureen Dowd: Trump “believes in winning, the issues are just distractions”

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Maureen Dowd on Bush-Cheney Administration

For more info:

      
STEVE HARTMAN:
 Woman gets liver transplant, and much more (Video)
Heather Krueger was diagnosed with stage 4 liver disease and needed a transplant urgently. When she found a donor, it truly was a match made in heaven. Steve Hartman has more from “On the Road.”

        
MUSIC:
 Phil Collins: “Not Dead Yet” | Watch Video
The pop star, author of a new memoir, “Not Dead Yet,” talks with correspondent Jim Axelrod about how his success fueled a drive to succeed even further, leading to an alcohol dependency that nearly killed him.

BOOK EXCERPT: Read a section of Collins’ memoir, “Not Dead Yet”

For more info:

        
PASSAGE:
 England posthumously pardons homosexuals (Video)
It happened this past week: the righting of a long-standing wrong in Britain, where the government announced it was granting posthumous pardons to roughly 50,000 men convicted of homosexual offenses in years past. The policy shift is informally referred to as Turing’s Law, after Alan Turing, the math genius who helped break the Germans’ Enigma Code during World War II, only to apparently commit suicide in 1954 after a conviction. Jane Pauley reports.

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Conor Knighton at Kenai Fjords National Park in Alaska. CBS News

ON THE TRAIL: Disappearing glaciers | Watch Video
Conor Knighton explores the melting landscapes at Glacier National Park in Montana and Kenai Fjords National Park in Alaska, where the speed of ice’s disappearance has been anything but glacial.

VIDEO PLAYLIST: Catch up with Conor Knighton’s yearlong trek through America’s National Parks

For more info:




CALENDAR: Week of October 24 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Jane Pauley reports.

        
NATURE: 
White Mountains of New Hampshire (Extended Video)
We leave you this autumn Sunday morning in the White Mountain National Forest in New Hampshire. Videographer: Scot Miller.

         
WEB EXCLUSIVES:

      
NATURE UP CLOSE: 
Whale sharks
The largest fish in the world is no danger to humans -- and has a fascinating biology.



RECAP: OCTOBER 16

       
COVER STORY:
 Hispanics and the vote | Watch Video
Turmoil over immigration, one of the hottest hot-button issues of the election, has left America’s largest minority (and key voting block) questioning where, or if, they really fit in. Maria Elena Salinas of Univision reports.

CBS NEWS POLL: Hispanics in America

For more info:

         
ALMANAC:
  Marie Antoinette | Watch Video
On October 16, 1793, the Queen of France, wife of the executed King Louis XVI, was herself led to the guillotine by the revolutionaries behind the French Republic. Jane Pauley reports.

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Because automobiles are extensions of their owners’ personalities, cars and politics were made for each another. CBS News

       
MESSAGING:
 Bumper stickers: A vehicle for political expression | Watch Video
They do more than decorate a car -- they also express the personality and beliefs of the driver (and invite politically-motivated road rage). Martha Teichner reports.

For more info:

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Songwriter Carole Bayer Sager (right), with correspondent Rita Braver. CBS News

       
MUSIC:
 Carole Bayer Sager: Playing her song | Watch Video
Lyricist Carole Bayer Sager wrote (with Marvin Hamlisch) the song “Nobody Does It Better”; “That’s What Friends Are For,” with Burt Bacharach; and many other classic pop songs. She’s also written a new memoir, from CBS’s Simon & Schuster, called “They’re Playing Our Song.” She talks about life, love and lyrics with Rita Braver.

BOOK EXCERPT: Carole Bayer Sager on creating the theme from “Arthur”

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Carole Bayer Sager on her relationship with Burt Bacharach
Grammy-winning lyricist Carole Bayer Sager has written a new memoir, from CBS’s Simon & Schuster, called “They’re Playing Our Song.” She talks about life, love and lyrics, and specifically her heartbreak when she discovered her ex-husband, Burt Bacharach, was having an affair. Rita Braver sat down with the lyricist.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Carole Bayer Sager on her new memoir, “They’re Playing Our Song”
Grammy-winning lyricist Carole Bayer Sager has written a new memoir, from CBS’s Simon & Schuster, called “They’re Playing Our Song.” Rita Braver talks to the lyricist about her life, aging gracefully, and being in control of her image.

For more info:

       
OPINION:
 Jim Gaffigan on what’s to love about Canada | Watch Video
The comedian knows a thing or two about our northern neighbor, which may soon become home to disgruntled American voters.

For more info: 

       
PEP TALK:
  Canada’s message to America (Video)
What do Canadians think about the U.S.? A video which comes to us compliments of Toronto ad agency The Garden Collective is quite complimentary.

       
GOOD WORK:
 A family history at SC Johnson | Watch Video
Five generations of Johnsons have led this now-$10 billion-a-year company, making it one of the oldest family-owned businesses in America. But while their products are household names, the Johnsons themselves prefer to keep a lower profile. They don’t trumpet themselves as a dynasty; they rarely do media interviews; and they’ve never considered allowing the company to be publicly traded.

Lee Cowan goes inside SC Johnson, the company behind Johnson’s Floor Wax, Windex, Drano and many other familiar products.

For more info:

       
STEVE HARTMAN:
  A road trip’s life lesson (Video)
When Anita Hughes got lost on her way home, she turned to a stranger for help. Hughes found her way, and something else very special: her confidence. Steve Hartman meets her “On The Road.”

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The “Sex and the City” star looks ahead to her new HBO series about a suburban working mom with a foundering marriage, called “Divorce.” CBS News

        
SUNDAY PROFILE:
 Sarah Jessica Parker with a very different take on love | Watch Video
For six seasons, Carrie Bradshaw and her posse prowled New York City looking for love and other urban adventures in HBO’s “Sex and the City.” Actress, producer and fashion icon Sarah Jessica Parker looks back fondly (but from a distance) at her alter-ego, and at a career that has spanned the orphaned moppet “Annie” to a suburban wife and mother in the bleak HBO comedy “Divorce,” in this profile by Jane Pauley.

For more info:

      
OPINION:
 Rockers who defy time itself | Watch Video
Contributor Bill Flanagan on the Desert Trip festival, a celebration of musicians in their 70s and their ageless music.

POTUS: The Nixon Presidential Library re-opens (Video)
Visitors to the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum in Yorba Linda, California, are looking back with new perspective this weekend. John Blackstone reports on the library’s re-opening, with some familiar faces.

For more info:

       
NATURE:
 Whale sharks (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning among whale sharks feasting on tuna eggs in the waters off Isla Mujeres, a Mexican island in the Caribbean. Videographer: Mauricio Handler.

           
WEB EXCLUSIVES:

      
CALENDAR: Week of October 17 | Watch Video
From the “Great Shakeout” earthquake drills to NYC’s Halloween Dog Parade, “Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Jane Pauley reports.

      
ELECTION: 
Faith Salie on the Presidential Cookie Bake-off | Watch Video
It’s time for the quadrennial Presidential Cookie Bake-off, pitting Melania Trump’s Star Cookies vs. the Clinton Family’s Chocolate Chip Oatmeal Cookies

         
FACEBOOK CHAT:
 Jane Pauley answers viewers’ questions (VIDEO)

NATURE UP CLOSE: Sandhill Cranes

RECAP: OCTOBER 9

Join us in welcoming Jane Pauley as the new host of “Sunday Morning.”

FACEBOOK CHAT: Jane Pauley answers viewers’ questions (VIDEO)         

HEADLINES: More backlash against Trump for lewd comments (Video)
The GOP nominee for president’s Facebook apology for his lewd comments about sexual assault, recorded in 2005 and released Friday, did little to assuage anger from fellow Republicans, many of whom are now calling on Donald Trump to step aside. Major Garrett reports.

         
HEADLINES:
 Swath of destruction left behind by Matthew (Video)
Hurricane Matthew swept through the Caribbean and up the Southeastern U.S. coast, proving to be a damaging storm. Aside from hundreds dead in Haiti, more than two million people lost power. Rebuilding will be expensive: by one estimate, damage in the U.S. could reach $6 billion. Mark Strassmann has the latest. 

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CBS News

COVER STORY: Why do placebos work? | Watch Video
A placebo is an inert substance -- usually something like cellulose, starch or sugar -- given in medical trials. But the “placebo effect” goes well beyond the actual pill … and may even include telling the participant that the medication she’s taking isn’t actually medication.

Susan Spencer reports on some of the surprising effects discovered by medical researchers using placebos.

For more info:

       
POSTCARD FROM JAPAN:
 Caring for bonsai (Video)
They can grow for centuries, and are designed to evoke the majesty of nature, in miniature - small wonder that experts will spend a lifetime perfecting their craft to care for a bonsai tree. Seth Doane reports.

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The Associate Justice and author of “My Own Words” believes three females on the Supreme Court are not enough. CBS News

SUNDAY PROFILE: Ruth Bader Ginsburg: Her view from the bench | Watch Video
At 5’3”, Ruth Bader Ginsburg is diminutive, but she looms large as a powerful liberal voice on the United States Supreme Court, appointed by President Bill Clinton in 1993 -- and, along with Elena Kagan and Sonya Sotomayor, one of three women on the bench. Which strikes the Associate Justice as not nearly enough. Jane Pauley reports.

For more info:

       
PASSAGE: Jane Pauley returns to morning TV (Video)
This week marks the 40th anniversary of the day a young newswoman from Indiana took her place as co-anchor of the “Today” show. And now, almost 40 years to the day, Jane Pauley takes over as host of “CBS Sunday Morning,” following in Charles Osgood’s footsteps.

        
TV:
 Nick Nolte: “Reality never runs smooth” | Watch Video
The Oscar-winning star of such films as “Who’ll Stop the Rain,” “The Prince of Tides,” “The Thin Red Line” and “Affliction” is now starring in a new TV series, “Graves,” as an ex-president out to fix what his administration had broken, 20 years after leaving office. Lee Cowan reports.

For more info:

        
          
STEVE HARTMAN:
 Tooting his own horn (Video)
David Bilger, a musician with the Philadelphia Orchestra, has been mentoring 17-year-old Baset Azizi, even though Baset lives 7,000 miles away, in Kabul, Afghanistan. The story of how this young trumpet player connected with Bilger is as unlikely as what happened once their lessons, conducted across the Internet, progressed. Steve Hartman reports. 

       
MUSIC:
 Celine Dion: The real thing | Watch Video
Singer Celine Dion doesn’t need any fairy dust. She’s got talent, stamina, and a catalog that includes some of the biggest hits of the last 20 years.  Her Las Vegas show has drawn more than four million fans since she began playing the Strip in a theater built just for her in 2003. Back then there were doubts. Now, after her record-breaking 1,000th perfomance, Dion is firmly in the pantheon alongside Vegas deities like Elvis and Sinatra. Mo Rocca reports.

For more info:

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Crater Lake National Park, Oregon. CBS News

ON THE TRAIL: The Old Man of Crater Lake | Watch Video
A mysterious tree stump that bobs in the pristine waters of the collapsed volcano has taken root in the imaginations of park visitors. Conor Knighton continues his yearlong trek through America’s National Parks, at Crater Lake National Park in Oregon.

For more info:

        
OPINION:
  Ben Stein: Trump must go | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” contributor says GOP nominee’s lewd comments about sexual assault are the last straw.

       
 CALENDAR:
 Week of October 10 | Watch Video
Jane Pauley takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead.

        
NATURE:
 Sandhill cranes (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday morning in Indiana, among the sandhill cranes at the Jasper-Pulaski Fish and Wildlife Area in Medaryville. Videographer: Jamie McDonald.

       
WEB EXCLUSIVES:

ALMANAC: The calliope (Video)
October 9th, 1855, 161 years ago today, was a day for music lovers to really let off steam. For that was the day the calliope - in which steam forced through pipes created a distinctive sound - was patented by Joshua Stoddard of Worcester, Mass. Jane Pauley reports.

        
THE NEW SEASON: 
Fall books | Watch Video
If you’re looking for some fictional relief from the ups and downs of the political season, New Yorker fiction editor Deborah Treisman has some fall reading to recommend.


       
OCTOBER 2: PRE-EMPTED FOR NFL FOOTBALL

RECAP: SEPTEMBER 25, “CELEBRATING CHARLIE”

We are devoting this week’s broadcast of “Sunday Morning” to honoring our longtime host, Emmy- and Peabody Award-winner Charles Osgood, who is leaving the anchor seat after 22 years. We’ll hear from Charles’ colleagues and some of his biggest fans; revisit several of his most memorable stories; and share some musical highlights.

       
WATCH THE COMPLETE BROADCAST:
 09/25/16 “Celebrating Charlie” (VIDEO)

     
ALMANAC:
 Charles Osgood, Baltimore boy | Watch Video
Tracy Smith on the life story of the veteran CBS News anchor, while Charles Osgood -- baseball fan, newspaper delivery boy, and music student -- returns to the city of his youth, Baltimore, Md., in a report originally broadcast in 2005.

       
SEE YOU ON THE RADIO!
 Charles Osgood tribute: Scott Pelley, David Muir and Lester Holt (Video)
The network news anchors from CBS, ABC and NBC pay homage to a broadcast trailblazer.  

     
NEWSMAN:
 Charles Osgood: A broadcast journalist’s journey | Watch Video
Rita Braver on the work of the intrepid radio and TV journalist.

      
SEE YOU ON THE RADIO! 
 Charles Osgood tribute: “CBS This Morning,” “Today,” “GMA” (Video)
The morning news anchors from CBS, NBC and ABC pay homage to the host of CBS’ long-running “Sunday Morning.”

     
CLASSIC OSGOOD STORY:
 Keith Haring: How a furtive artist invaded the art world | Watch Video
In this 1982 profile Charles Osgood meets the graffiti artist whose paintings took Soho by storm.

     
CLASSIC OSGOOD STORY:
 Tony Bennett and the art of friendship | Watch Video
In this story originally broadcast on November 7, 2003, the singer-painter talks to Charles Osgood about his mentor and friend, the artist Everett Raymond Kinstler.

         
MUSIC: 
Charles Osgood, music man | Watch Video
For the past 22 years, “Sunday Morning” didn’t need a house band. We had Charles Osgood, who was his own accompanist, on the piano or the banjo. Anthony Mason reports on the anchor’s musical proclivities.

WEB EXTRA: The U.S. Army Band and Chorus perform “Gallant Men” (Video)

      
COLLEAGUES: 
“Sunday Morning” contributors’ tributes to Charles Osgood | Watch Video
David Edelstein, Bill Flanagan, Nancy Giles, David Pogue, Faith Salie and Ben Stein pay homage to our departing host.  

WEB EXTRA VIDEOS: Watch extended comments by each of our contributors: EdelsteinFlanaganGilesPogueSalie and Stein

        
LITERATURE:
 Charles Osgood: Poet-in-residence (VIDEO)
Straight from the news, his subjects he’d choose: Martha Teichner with an ode to CBS News’ resident wit and poet laureate, Charles Osgood.

For more info: 

         
SEE YOU ON THE RADIO!
 Charles Osgood tribute: David Letterman (Video)
The legendary late-night host pays homage to another broadcast legend.  

     
FASHION:
 An Osgood trademark: The bow tie (VIDEO)
If clothes make the man, then the bow tie is essential to Charles Osgood. Mo Rocca finds out how the “Sunday Morning” host tied the knot with his signature sartorial accessory.

         
FAMILY: 
At home with Charles Osgood | Watch Video
Lee Cowan visits the CBS News veteran at his abodes -- in New York, and the south of France.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Charles Osgood reflects on his career
The veteran CBS Newsman talks with Lee Cowan about the joy he has experienced in his work.

       
MOMENTS IN TIME:
 The French Chef (Video)
Bill Geist remembers Charles Osgood’s time in the kitchen with Julia Child.

       
TECHNOLOGY: 
The cluttering of TV screens (Video)
Charles Osgood on the proliferation of information that blocks viewers’ views of TV news.

     
TRIBUTE:
 Ted Koppel’s poem for Charles Osgood | Watch Video
One veteran broadcast journalist honors another

     
MUSIC:
 Charles Osgood and the Boston Pops (Video)
The “Sunday Morning” host performs “So Long (It’s Been Good to Know You)“ with members of the Boston Pops.  

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: The Boston Pops play “Brazil”
Members of the Boston Pops Orchestra perform Ary Barroso’s classic “Brazil.”

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: “Sunday Morning” theme by the Boston Pops
Members of the Boston Pops perform Gottfried Reiche’s “Ablassen,” the theme song of CBS’ “Sunday Morning.”

        
SEE YOU ON THE RADIO!
 Charles Osgood tribute: Stephen Colbert, James Corden, Les Moonves (Video)
Three pillars of CBS - the hosts of “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert,” “The Late Late Show with James Corden” and the chief executive officer of CBS Corporation Les Moonves - pay homage to a broadcast legend.  

       
PASSING THE BATON: Charles Osgood announces Jane Pauley as his successor on “Sunday Morning” | Watch Video
The departing host of the long-running Sunday morning news program names the third host in “Sunday Morning”’s history. 

    
NATURE: 
Chesapeake Bay (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday morning at the mouth of the Patuxent River along Chesapeake Bay’s western shore, not far from Charles Osgood’s boyhood home in Baltimore. Videographer: Carl Mrozek.

WEB EXTRA: Charles Osgood tribute: Vin Scully (Video)
The legendary L.A. Dodgers announcer pays homage to another broadcast legend.

WEB EXTRA: Charles Osgood tribute: Alan Alda (Video)
The actor-director offers words of praise of the veteran CBS Newsman.

WEB EXTRA: Charles Osgood tribute: Joe Torre (Video)
The baseball great pays homage to a great baseball fan: Veteran CBS Newsman Charles Osgood.




RECAP: SEPTEMBER 18

Host: Charles Osgood

      
HEADLINES:
 U.S. airstrike disrupts Syria ceasefire (Video)
The United States is apologizing for a deadly coalition airstrike. The attack apparently struck government troops in Syria. Russia says more than 60 people were killed. Elizabeth Palmer is in Aleppo with a report.

       
HEADLINES:
 Bomb explodes in New York City (Video)
Twenty-nine people were hurt, one of them seriously, when a device exploded in a garbage container in Manhattan’s Chelsea neighborhood last night. Anna Werner reports.

      
COVER STORY:
 Hoping to get lucky | Watch Video
Whether you’re visiting Vegas or taking your first skydive, you’re looking to beat the odds. But can we challenge the randomness of the universe to bring about a better fate? Susan Spencer reports.

For more info:

        
PASSAGE: 
Edward Albee (Video)
Playwright Edward Albee, who died at his home in Montauk, N.Y. last week at age 88, won a Tony Award for his blazing 1962 play, “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” Charles Osgood looks back on the writer who challenged theatergoers like few others.

A LOOK BACK: Q&A with playwright Edward Albee | Watch Video
In 2013 Tracy Smith profiled the three-time Pulitzer Prize-winning dramatist during a revival of his greatest work, “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?”

        
THE NEW SEASON: 
Museums | Watch Video
Ben Tracy on autumn’s new art exhibitions.  

        
TV: Scott Bakula: A private star opens up, kind of | Watch Video
The star of “NCIS: New Orleans” talks about the creative opportunities in a series that “makes the world a better place.” Lee Cowan reports.

For more info:

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Paul McCartney and George Harrison in the new documentary, “The Beatles: Eight Days a Week- The Touring Years.” Abramorama

A LOOK BACK: The Beatles on tour in “Eight Days a Week” | Watch Video
A new documentary, “The Beatles: Eight Days a Week,” captures the heady days of the group’s years on tour, when the lads from Liverpool captured the world. Anthony Mason visits Abbey Studio to talk with Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, and director Ron Howard about their look back.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Ron Howard on The Beatles’ “rocketship ride”
The Oscar-winning director talks about his new documentary on the Fab Four’s touring days, “Eight Days a Week.”

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Reliving The Beatles’ touring days
Oscar-winning director Ron Howard talks about his new documentary, “Eight Days a Week,” and how The Beatles broke new ground in the 1960s with stadium touring.

GALLERY: The Beatles backstage at “The Ed Sullivan Show”

GALLERY: Rare images of The Beatles

GALLERY: The Beatles through the years

For more info: 

           
THE NEW SEASON:
 Fall movies | Watch Video
David Edelstein takes a look at the season’s offerings at the multiplex.  

      
STEVE HARTMAN:
 N.J. town mourns loss of 600-year-old tree (Video)
Basking Ridge, N.J., grew around a church that was built beside a tree 300 years ago. At that point the tree had already seen three centuries. But now experts say the oldest white oak in North America is destined to come down. Steve Hartman went “On the Road” to talk to a town filled with mourners.  


MUSIC:
 Bruce Springsteen: “I’m still in love with playing” | Watch Video
In his first television interview about his new book, “Born to Run,” the rock legend opens up to CBS News correspondent Anthony Mason about his battles with crippling depression, his often-strained relationship with his father, songwriting, and much more. 

WEB VIDEO PREVIEW: Bruce Springsteen on his drive to be a rock star
Bruce Springsteen, who has just written his autobiography, “Born to Run,” talks with Anthony Mason about the genesis of his desire to perform.

For more info: 

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CBS News

ON THE TRAIL: The dogs of Denali National Park | Watch Video
Conor Knighton continues his yearlong exploration of the America’s national parks with a visit to Denali National Park & Preserve.

For more info:

       
TV: 
CBS makeup artist Riccie Johnson’s brush with fame | Watch Video  
Mo Rocca turns the camera on makeup artist Riccie Johnson, who has worked behind the scenes at CBS for more than six decades.

NATURE: Plover River (Extended Video)We leave you this Sunday morning in Wisconsin, along the banks of the Plover River. Videographer: Scot Miller.  


RECAP: SEPTEMBER 11

Host: Charles Osgood

       
COVER STORY:
 A dream come true | Watch Video
After years of planning and construction, the new Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture will soon open its doors in Washington, D.C. The tales recounted in its massive collection of artifacts of African-Americans’ experience over the last four centuries reflects a “belief in an America that often didn’t believe in them.”

Music legend Quincy Jones, who sits on the board of directors, gives Lee Cowan a sneak preview of the astonishing collection.

For more info:

        
ALMANAC:
 Henry Hudson | Watch Video
On September 11, 1609, the English explorer’s ship anchored in New York harbor, near the mouth of the river that now bears his name. Charles Osgood reports.

For more info:

         
AUTOMOBILES: 
Italian beauties on four wheels | Watch Video
Anthony Mason shows us some of the most exotic cars ever designed. 

For more info:

              
MUSIC:
 Demi Lovato: Fighting Back | Watch Video
After beating addiction and other demons, the singer (who tells Tracy Smith she “kind of made a pact with God”) is raising her voice to speak out about mental illness. 

WEB EXTRA VIDEO:  Demi Lovato on the single life
The pop singer opens up to correspondent Tracy Smith about living “more independently.”  

For more info:

       
PASSAGE:
 A World War II icon (Video)
It happened this past week: the death of Greta Zimmer Friedman, who claimed to be the young woman captured in the famous Alfred Eisenstaedt photo, published in Life Magazine, of a sailor and a nurse kissing in Times Square to celebrate the end of World War II. Charles Osgood reports. 

      
STEVE HARTMAN:
 Man and goose forge unusual friendship (Video)
A lifesaving act on an Oregon lake has led to an unlikely connection between a goose and her hero. Steve Hartman goes “On The Road” to meet the inseparable pair. 

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TV host Wendy Williams (right), with correspondent Michelle Miller. CBS News

      
TV:
 Wendy Williams: Talk of the town (Video)
Wendy Williams started out in radio, building the foundation of her brand in New York’s hip hop industry. Known for getting the goods on the who’s-who in the Big Apple’s celeb circles, Williams took her career to a new level when she launched a daily talk show. She tells “Sunday Morning”’s Michelle Miller how she became a media mogul all while being a mom and wife.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Wendy Williams’ shoe collection
Michelle Miller was invited to peruse the TV talk show host’s collection of footwear and bling.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Wendy Williams: “I have no rhythm”
Can the TV talk show host  dance, or perform the clapping game “Miss Mary Black”? Michelle Miller finds out.

For  more info: 

        
REMEMBRANCES: 
9/11: Sorrow and healing coexist at ground zero site | Watch Video
In memorials and witness’ testimony, life coexists with death at the site of the 2001 World Trade Center attacks. 

This Sunday marks the 15th anniversary of 9/11, when nearly 3,000 people lost their lives. Martha Teichner, who reported from ground zero in the days that followed, returns to tell the story of those who died, the memorial erected in their honor, and the people who made it happen.  

GALLERY: Images from “One World Trade Center: Biography of a Building”

For more info:

          
ELECTION 2016:
 What Trump supporters see in their candidate | Watch Video
The polls are tightening for Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton in their race for the White House.  While many political pundits and party leaders have written off Trump’s chances from the beginning, and despite the controversies that continue to swirl around the real estate tycoon and reality TV star-turned-politician, his campaign continues to show remarkable resilience. CBS White House correspondent Major Garrett talks with some of Trump’s supporters, to ask why their faith in the political neophyte is unshakable. 

        
CALENDAR: Week of September 12 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead.

       
NATURE:
 Vortex Spring (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday below the surface of Vortex Spring in Florida ... a home to fish and the occasional eel. Videography: Tom Cosgrove

RECAP: SEPTEMBER 4

Guest host: Jane Pauley

HEADLINES: Latest on Hermine (Video)
Eric Fisher, chief meteorologist at CBS’ Boston station WBZ, provides an update on the storm that is threatening Mid-Atlantic states and New England with fierce winds, dangerous surf and inland flooding.

       
COVER STORY:
 Up, up and away! | Watch Video
Lee Cowan takes us on a balloon ride.

For more info:

        
ALMANAC:
 The Ford Edsel | Watch Video
On September 4, 1957, Americans got their first look at the ignominious car.

     
For more info: 

       
ON THE TRAIL:
 Parks that inspire art | Watch Video
At Mesa Verde National Park in Colorado, ancient cliff dwellings not only arouse awe; they also fuel an artist-in-residence program. 

Conor Knighton continues his yearlong exploration of America’s National Park.

Watch Conor Knighton’s Sept. 4 Facebook chat, answering questions about his tour of America’s National Parks. 

For more info:

        
MUSIC:
 Rory Feel on mourning and life without Joey | Watch Video
Rory Feek spent 14 years on a farm in Pottsville, Tennessee, with his wife, Joey.  When their country music career took off, they converted their barn into a concert hall. But early this year, just as their album, “Hymns That Are Important to Us,” debuted atop the country chart, Joey lost a two-year battle with cancer.

For the past few months on the farm, Rory has been working on a new documentary: “To Joey, With Love,” the story of their relationship. Anthony Mason reports.

For more info: 

       
FOOD:
 Antoine’s: A French Quarter tradition | Watch Video
The restaurant, opened in 1840, is a family-run institution where the sense of family extends to its customers. Jamie Wax reports.

For more info:


DESIGN:
 Some not-so-grand old flags | Watch Video
A standard-bearer for good flag design points out city and state banners that are emblems of disaster. Mo Rocca reports.

  • HAVE A FLAG DESIGN FOR POCATELLO? Submit it here! (Deadline December 2, 2016.)

For more info:

      
BILL GEIST: 
Washing machine collectors awash with enthusiasm on laundry day (Video)
Most people consider doing laundry a chore. They obviously don’t belong to The Washing Machine Collectors Club. Founded in 1984, the group’s members collect old and rare washing machines dating back to the 1940s. And when they get together for what they call a “wash-in,” the agenda includes -- what else? -- washing their dirty laundry while marveling at the inner workings of their beloved antiques. Part collector’s club, part support group, but all fun, as only our Bill Geist can show you. (This story was originally broadcast on September 20, 2015.)

        
SUNDAY PROFILE: Jerry Lewis returns | Watch Video
The comic legend is back on screen in “Max Rose.” Tracy Smith reports.

For more info: 

       
TELEVISION:
 Now 50, “Star Trek” continues to live long and prosper | Watch Video
The sci-fi TV show that debuted in 1966 was saved from oblivion by passionate fans -- and became a multimedia phenomenon. Faith Salie talks to William Shatner, and to attendees at a recent “Star Trek” convention in Las Vegas.

For more info:

        
CALENDAR: Week of Sept. 5 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead.

       
NATURE:
 Otters (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday morning frolicking among the otters of Trout Lake, in Yellowstone National Park.  
      

RECAP: AUGUST 28

       
COVER STORY:
 Putting a face on rare, incurable diseases | Watch Video
Correspondent Jim Axelrod tells the inspiring story of how one man is using art to give hope to the families of children with rare, incurable diseases.

For more info:

          
ALMANAC:
 Roger Tory PetersonOn August 28, 1908, the writer, painter, naturalist, and creator of “Field Guide to Birds” was born. Charles Osgood reports.

FROM THE ARCHIVE: Bird-watcher Roger Tory Peterson (Video)
In this “Sunday Morning” feature originally broadcast October 19, 1980, host Charles Kuralt profiles the artist and naturalist Roger Tory Peterson, creator of the invaluable book series for bird fanciers, “Peterson Field Guide to Birds.”

For more info:

        
ART:
 An exhibition celebrates unfinished art | Watch Video
The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City is one of the world’s great museums. Now the Met is opening a satellite branch nearby to expand its public collection of modern art. Anna Werner takes us on a tour of the new Met Breuer.

For more info:

       
SCREEN:
 Meg Ryan: An accidental movie star returns | Watch Video
Meg Ryan earned the nickname “America’s Sweetheart” for her roles in such beloved films as “Sleepless in Seattle,” “When Harry Met Sally,” and many more. Now she’s out with a new film that she’s directing. Jane Pauley heads to Cape Cod for an at-home visit.

For more info:

       
PASSAGE:
 Are cord-cutters satisfied? (Video)
Will cable TV subscribers become extinct? Maybe not. A new J.D. Power survey finds that so-called “cord-cutters” - people who’ve abandoned cable and satellite TV in favor of streaming alone - have the lowest level of viewing satisfaction. Charles Osgood reports.


YULETIDE:
 Santa convention brings holiday cheer to summer (Video)
There are just about 120 days until Christmas, but who’s counting? Contributor Luke Burbank will tell you who: hundreds of Santas, who attended a convention in Branson, Mo. … in July!

For more info:

       
HARTMAN:
 WWII vet runs 3,000 miles across the U.S. (Video)
Ninety-three-year-old Navy veteran Ernie Andrus has just finished a three-year run across the country. His run from the Pacific to the Atlantic was to raise awareness about an unsung hero of the war. Steve Hartman met Ernie several times and Sunday Morning was there when he finished his journey.

        
MUSIC:
 Barbra Streisand’s “Encore” | Watch Video
“Legend” is a term much overused in the entertainment world, but it certainly befits Barbra Streisand. Anthony Mason catches up with the one-and-only actress and singer for a wide-ranging chat about her career, her new album, life in Malibu and more.

WEB EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: Barbra Streisand returns to herBroadway dressing room
The singer who became a superstar in the 1960s Broadway musical “Funny Girl” visited her old haunts at the Winter Garden Theatre in New York City, including the dressing room now occupied by “School of Rock” star Sierra Boggess.

WEB EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: Barbra Streisand’s caricature is back at Sardi’s
The legendary New York eatery Sardi’s is renowned for its caricatures of Broadway luminaries. Over the years two of its prized portraits have been stolen, including one of Barbra Streisand. In this web exclusive, the singer came back to Sardi’s on the occasion of a new portrait being installed in its rightful place.

WEB-EXTRA MUSIC VIDEOS: 

Barbra Streisand sings “You’re the Top”
The singer performs a Cole Porter classic, from her 2013 concert in Brooklyn, N.Y.

Barbra Streisand sings “Evergreen”

Barbra Streisand and Alec Baldwin duet: “The Best Thing That Has Ever Happened”

Barbra Streisand records with Anthony Newley

Barbra Streisand and Hugh Jackman duet: “Any Moment Now”

Barbra Streisand performs “Fifty Percent”

       
For more info:

      
      
EDUCATION:
 Music and the brain | Watch Video
It’s a music class that is more than just a piano lesson. Sparking the brain of a child is what motivated Lisha Lercari to create a course that’s now being taught in schools in New Orleans and New York City. Michelle Miller reports.

For more info:

       
CALENDAR:
 Week of August 29 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Charles Osgood reports.

      
NATURE:
 Cape Cod (Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning on a quiet beach in Old Cape Cod. Videographer: Doug Jensen.


RECAP: AUGUST 21

HEADLINES: Explosion strikes wedding in Turkey (Video)
A bomb went off during a wedding in Turkey on Saturday near the Syrian border. The death toll now up to 50, with dozens wounded. Holly Williams reports.

            
COVER STORY: 
Is moving to Canada a real option? |  Watch Video
Anxiety about the election results may lead some Americans to consider migrating North - and might lead Canadians to build themselves a wall. John Blackstone reports.

For more info:

       
ALMANAC:
  “Please, Mr. Postman”
On August 21, 1961, the pop classic by The Marvelettes became the Motown label’s first No. 1 hit. Charles Osgood reports.

For more info:

       
BOOKS:
 The unfolding history of paper | Watch Video
We wouldn’t have civilization without the invention of paper - nor would we have the thrill of paper airplanes. Martha Teichner reports.

For more info:

        
SPORTS:
 The long run | Watch Video
Lee Cowan profiles runner Meb Keflezighi, an emigre from Eritrea who, at age 41, will become the oldest American marathoner in Olympic history as he competes in the Rio Games. 

For more info: 

     
PASSAGE: John McLaughlin and Fyvush Finkel (Video)
This past week the world lost two remarkably talented men: TV host John McLaughlin, leader of the political roundtable “The McLaughlin Group” for 34 years; and veteran character actor Fyvush Finkel. Charles Osgood reports.

     
MUSIC:
 Jon Batiste: Making a joyful noise | Watch Video
Michelle Miller interviews the band leader from “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.”

For more info:

     
HARTMAN:
  Camping to mourn (Video)
Outside Milwaukee, Wisconsin, there’s a kids camp that has all the makings of a typical summer camp - except the kids who come here share one, exceptional bond. Steve Hartman reports.

      
SUNDAY PROFILE: 
Thank heaven for Leslie Caron |  Watch Video
She began her career as a ballet dancer, but Leslie Caron’s life changed forever when Gene Kelly saw her perform, and cast her in “An American in Paris.” Caron went on to dance opposite Fred Astaire in “Daddy Long Legs,” and became a sensation opposite Maurice Chevalier and Louis Jourdan in “Gigi.” “An American in Paris” is now a hit on the Broadway stage, where our Jane Pauley went recently for an intimate chat with the film legend. (This story was originally broadcast on January 17, 2016.)

GALLERY: Leslie Caron

WEB EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: How Leslie Caron rebelled against movie studio hairdressers 
An ingénue plucked for stardom in the 1951 classic, “An American in Paris,” French actress Leslie Caron was adamant that she not look like the typically-coiffed Hollywood starlets of the day. In this web extra, she tells correspondent Jane Pauley about how she took matters (and a pair of scissors) into her own hands.

For more info:

     
COMMENTARY: 
| Watch Video
The comedian says there is such a complete lack of respect for the truth -- and a belief that it doesn’t matter if caught -- that lying has become a reflexive, degraded art.

For more info:

       
ON THE TRAIL:
 Joshua Tree National Park | Watch Video
Conor Knighton continues his year-long exploration of America’s National Parks.

For more info: 

     
OPINION:
 David Edelstein on “Hell or High Water” | Watch Video

      
CALENDAR:
 Week of August 22 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead.    

NATURE: Harriman State Park (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning in Harriman State Park north of New York City ... where bees are busy buzzing, nesting and pollinating. Videographer: Joseph L. Frandino.


RECAP: AUGUST 14

A rebroadcast of our annual “Design Show,” devoted to the people, places and things that change our lives by design. Hosted by Charles Osgood, and brought to you from the scenic environs of Newport, Rhode Island. (This program originally aired on May 22, 2016.)

We’ll be broadcasting from The Breakers, the world-famous, 70-room, Italian Renaissance-style palazzo built in 1895 by Cornelius Vanderbilt II, which is the crown jewel of Newport; and the nearby Marble House, built by Cornelius’ younger brother, William.

History of the Breakers and Marble House | Watch Video

For more info:


COVER STORY:
Dressing down: The rise of athleisure | Watch Video
Martha Teichner looks at what’s behind the “athleisure” craze -- the exploding trend of wearing workout clothes to work as well as play.

For more info:


MEMENTO:
An homage to the matchbook (Video)
They come in different shapes, sizes and colors -- all concealing the fire within. While commonplace, matchbooks can be tiny works of art. Ben Tracy examines a collector’s treasured trove of incendiary designs

For more info:

TV: The couple behind “Fixer Upper” (Video)
Chip and Joanna Gaines are the rising stars of HGTV’s hit home renovation show, “Fixer Upper,” and they’ve turned, Waco, Texas into the Renovation Capital of the World. Jane Pauley talks with the couple who have become dynamo entrepreneurs.

For more info:


ICONS:
Susan Spencer highlights some everyday items that are so well-designed, they’re hard to improve upon, including:

SMALL WONDERS OF DESIGN: The Umbrella | Watch VideoWhen it comes to design, the case is open and shut: the umbrella is brilliant.

For more info:

FASHION: The House of Dior | Watch Video
Seth Doane travels to the French countryside, where Oscar-winner Charlize Theron gives us a tour of the newly-renovated House of Dior.

For more info:

URBAN ARCHITECTURE: Living the high life | Watch Video
Lee Cowan looks at vertical sprawl today, and at the latest ideas in both residential design and construction.

For more info:


DECOR:
Fiddle Leaf Fig, the favored plant for home design (Video)
Upon looking around her home, Nancy Giles noticed that it was missing something that would pop. When she went to New York’s flower district, she discovered a new favorite of home decorators: the Fiddle Leaf Fig.

For more info:

SMALL WONDERS OF DESIGN: The Chinese food take-out carton | Watch Video
Nothing quite says “Dig in!” like the unmistakable sight of the iconic take-out box that is a remarkable piece of origami -- and a completely American invention.

For more info:

GOLF: Jack Nicklaus stays the course | Watch Video
Jim Axelrod hits the links with a true living legend -- a golf great who continues to have a remarkable career designing golf courses around the world.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Jack Nicklaus on Trump: “He’s turning America upside-down”

For more info:

ARCHITECTURE: British designer Thomas Heatherwick’s brand of provocation | Watch Video
The man who never espouses a signature style says similarity in global design is the enemy of soulfulness. Anthony Mason reports from London.

GALLERY: The extraordinary designs of Thomas Weatherwick

For more info:

SMALL WONDERS OF DESIGN: Q-Tips | Watch Video
The Q-Tip hit the market in the 1920s as a tiny tool for baby care. Since then, it’s gone from wooden sticks to paper sticks, but one thing’s never changed: a warning never to stick it in your ear!

For more info:


SPORT:
The evolving challenge of the America’s Cup | Watch Video
Charles Osgood reports on the history of the sailing race, and how it continues to break with tradition.

For more info:


NATURE:
Topiary garden (Video)
We leave you this Sunday in Portsmouth, Rhode Island, at the Green Animals Topiary Garden -- a menagerie fashioned from living plants. Videographer: Henry Bautista.


Be sure to keep up-to-date: Follow “Sunday Morning” on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

Have a story idea? Write to us at cndsunstory@cbsnews.com.

Have a sun artwork? We’d love to see it. You can email image files (jpg or tif) to Jessica Frank at JAF@cbsnews.com.


RECAP: AUGUST 7


COVER STORY:
Senior athletes: Going the distance | Watch Video
Physical functions typically decline due to aging, but Lee Cowan introduces us to some senior runners for whom age is just a number.

For more info:


ALMANAC:
The Purple Heart | Watch Video
On August 7, 1782, Gen. George Washington created the Badge for Military Merit -- a Revolutionary War decoration which was reinstituted in the 1930s as the Purple Heart.

For more info:


ART:
The other Mapplethorpe | Watch Video
When you hear the name Mapplethorpe, it’s usually photographer Robert Mapplethorpe who comes to mind. But the late artist’s brother, Edward Mapplethorpe -- a photographer in his own right -- has reclaimed the family name for himself after many personal struggles, including conflicts with his sibling. Serena Altschul reports.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: How prescient is a baby photo?
Edward Mapplethorpe’s portrait of a baby girl named Daschiell, taken 20 years ago, appears on the cover of his new book of photographs, “One: Sons and Daughters” - timeless images of people taken on their first birthday. “Sunday Morning” met up with 21-year-old Dashiell Schulte, and her mother, Katie Carpenter, who talk about the child she was, preserved in black-and-white, and the young accounting major she’s since become.

Robert Mapplethorpe’s photographs © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation. Provided by The Mapplethorpe Foundation. Used by permission.

For more info:


ON BROADWAY:
Andrew Lloyd Webber’s golden touch | Watch Video
This past year the famed composer of such theatrical staples as “Phantom of the Opera” had a new, Tony-nominated hit with “School of Rock.” And now, his fabled musical “Cats” has returned to Broadway. Mo Rocca reports. (An earlier version of this story originally aired on December 13, 2015.)

For more info:

AUSTIN: Revisiting the UT Tower shooting | Watch Video
Anna Werner reports on the 50th anniversary of one of the most horrific mass shootings in U.S. history: Charles Whitman’s assault on the campus of the University of Texas at Austin, in which 14 people were killed, in addition to another who succumbed years later from his injuries.

For more info:


STEVE HARTMAN:
Indiana girl turns “runt” into championship horse (Video)
On a farm in Connersville, Indiana, a horse once considered the runt of the breeding stock was raised -- with the help of a little girl -- to become a champion. Steve Hartman has more.


MOVIES:
Hugh Grant, for real | Watch Video
Tracy Smith interviews the “Florence Foster Jenkins” star renowned for playing charming, elegant and lovable is also, he warns, a perfectionist: “Pretty much Barbra Streisand in trousers.”

TAKE OUR QUIZ: How well do you know Hugh?

For more info:


SPORTS:
Bhutan’s archers aim high for Olympic glory | Watch Video
Barry Petersen takes a close-up look at the national sport of Bhutan, and a tiny nation’s Olympic hopes.

For more info:


ON THE TRAIL: In the desert, a fish survives | Watch Video
Near Death Valley National Park is a hole in the ground, hundreds of feet deep, home to one of the rarest fish in the world. Conor Knighton continues his year-long exploration of America’s National Parks.

For more info:


CALENDAR:
Week of August 8 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead.


NATURE:
Maine moose (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning with the mighty moose of Maine’s North Woods. Videographer: Scot Miller.


RECAP: JULY 31, “GUNS AND AMERICA”

This rebroadcast of a special “Sunday Morning” program, with new segments and updates, looks at all aspects of the debate over our nation’s gun culture, from the traditions of gun ownership to the victims of violence; from our Second Amendment rights to the fastest-growing demographic taking up firearms - women. [Portions of this show were previously aired on March 13, 2016.]

Guest Host: Lee Cowan

CBS NEWS POLL: Will gun violence increase in the next decade?


COVER STORY:
How guns became a part of American culture | Watch Video
No other developed country embraces firearms the way the U.S. does, but how did the mystique over firearms become part of our cultural DNA? Lee Cowan reports.

For more info:


ACTIVISM:
Can “good guys with guns” stop gun violence? | Watch Video
While activists push for stronger gun control laws, the NRA says more well-armed citizens can protect themselves and stop criminals. Rita Braver reports.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Q&A: Gun rights advocate Sandy Froman
In a rare interview, National Rifle Association board member and past president Sandy Froman explains the organization’s opposition to many proposed gun control laws.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Q&A: Gun control advocate Colin GoddardIn 2007, Colin Goddard was in a French class at Virginia Tech when a gunman opened fire; he was shot four times but survived. He’s now a senior policy advocate for Everytown for Gun Safety pushing for stronger gun control laws.

For more info:


LAW: Parsing the Second Amendment | Watch Video
Constitutional scholars and the Supreme Court have weighed in on the Bill of Rights, but there appears to be no finality to an individual’s right to keep and bear arms. Anthony Mason reports.

For more info:


GUN OWNERS:
Girls with guns | Watch Video
More women than ever are taking up arms, and for some the shooting range is the new knitting circle. Tracy Smith reports.

For more info:

TECHNOLOGY: Stopping bullets dead | Watch Video
The quest to make cars and garments bullet-resistant has come a long way since a Chicago priest invented the first bullet-proof vest. Serena Altschul reports.

For more info:


CHICAGO: Urban Warriors: Stemming the tide of street violence | Watch Video
Eddie Bocanegra, who heads up a youth program called Urban Warriors, is determined to help Chicago teenagers build a bright future by using lessons from his own dark past. Michelle Miller reports.

For more info:


FALLOUT: The other victim of an accidental shooting | Watch Video
Sean Smith was 10 years old in 1989 when he found the gun his father had stashed in his dresser drawer. Thinking it was a toy, Sean played with it, accidentally killing his younger sister, Erin.

Martha Teichner talks with Sean, who describes what it took for him to finally, years later, forgive himself for her death.

For more info:


TRADITION:
Guns: A family affair | Watch Video
In Cody, Wyoming, shooting is a community tradition passed down through bloodlines. Ted Koppel reports.

For more info:


ENFORCEMENT:
ATF under the gun | Watch Video
Among its directives, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms targets illegal firearms. But the agency itself has been a target for decades. Gun rights activists have accused the bureau of being incompetent, negligent, and a threat to the 2nd Amendment.

Richard Schlesinger interviews the ATF’s Acting Director Thomas Brandon, who discusses how the Bureau is hamstrung by lawmakers; and Rep. James Sensenbrenner, a Member of Congress who wants to eliminate the risk of any more problems at the ATF by eliminating the ATF itself.

PREVIEW: ATF Head: Our job is not to take away people’s guns

For more info:


AUSTRALIA:
How Australia dealt with mass shootings | Watch Video
Twenty years ago, a mass shooting in Port Arthur, Australia that left 35 people dead prompted the country’s conservative prime minister to push through sweeping gun control legislation that would be unthinkable in America today: it banned the sale and import of all automatic and semi-automatic rifles; mandated a 28-day waiting period on all firearm purchases; and initiated a massive government buyback of guns. The upshot: There has not been another mass shooting since, and gun homicides are down nearly 60 percent. Seth Doane reports on Australia’s response to mass murder.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: A gun violence survivor’s missionNews anchor Chris Hurst, boyfriend of TV journalist Alison Parker (who with her cameraman, Adam Ward, was shot to death on air in Roanoke, Va., last year), tells correspondent Erin Moriarty about Parker, and what he sees as his duty to her following her murder. Moriarty reports on the aftermath of the Parker-Ward deaths in a special broadcast of “Sunday Morning,” called “Guns and America.”

For more info:


NATURE: Antelope Canyon (Extended Video)
We leave you this morning in the quiet of Lower Antelope Canyon near Page, Arizona. Videographer: Jamie McDonald,


RECAP: JULY 24

Guest host: Jane Pauley


COVER STORY:
The role of first gentleman | Watch Video
The spouses of America’s female governors talk about their function in a position usually defined by gender. Faith Salie reports.

For more info:


ALMANAC:
Gibraltar | Watch Video
On July 24, 1704, Britain and its Dutch allies seized the territory at the southern tip of Europe from Spain. Jane Pauley reports.

For more info:


DNC:
Philadelphians say: Love it or leave it | Watch Video
Mo Rocca finds the City of Brotherly Love, home to the Democratic National Convention, is proud of the chip on its shoulder.

For more info:

http://www.vudu.com/movies/#!content/135217/Veronica-Mars-Season-1

https://twitter.com/IMKristenBell


ART:
Philadelphia’s murals: The autobiography of a city | Watch Video
Since 1984 nearly 4,000 artworks have been displayed on walls of the city as part of the Mural Arts Program. Anthony Mason reports.

For more info:

https://29463.thankyou4caring.org/donate


PASSAGE:
Remembering Garry Marshall | Watch Video
The writer-actor-director was behind such TV hits as “The Odd Couple” and “Happy Days,” and the movies “Pretty Woman” and “The Princess Diaries.”


RNC:
The marriage between Trump and GOP: For better and for worse | Watch Video
Ted Koppel looks at the rise of an unlikely nominee, his unshakable supporters, and his critics

For more info:


THE NOMINEE:
Trump: “I feel I’m an honest person” | Watch Video
GOP nominee rails against “tremendous dishonesty” in media, telling Ted Koppel that he doesn’t mind criticism but adds, “I do want them to be straight about it.”

VIDEO PREVIEW: Ted Koppel on his interview with Trump


MILEPOST:
The death of VHS
Funai Electric of Japan, the world’s last remaining manufacturer of VCR equipment, says it will cease production on July 31. In 2005, it’s estimated that 90% of American households had a VCR.


AVIATION:
Sunlight powers an aviation milestone | Watch Video
Solar Impulse, a plane powered by the sun, is completing a round-the-world trip fueled without a single drop of gas. David Pogue of Yahoo Tech reports.

For more info:

SUNDAY PROFILE: Kristen Bell takes nothing for granted | Watch Video
The actress who broke through with “Veronica Mars” and stars in “Bad Moms” is definitely in a good place now. Tracy Smith reports.

For more info:


OPINION:
Bob Schieffer: A race of negatives | Watch Video
Says this year’s battle for the presidency is shaping up as one of the nastiest and dirtiest in American history.


CALENDAR:
Week of July 25 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead.


NATURE: Allegheny National Park (Video)
We leave you this Sunday at Allegheny National Forest near Pennsylvania’s northwest corner. Videographer: Carl Mrozek.


RECAP: JULY 17

Guest host: Jane Pauley

HEADLINES: Turkey restoring order after failed takeover bid (Video)
Nerves are still unsettled in Turkey where an attempted military coup appears to have been crushed. Holly Williams is in Istanbul with a report.


SUNDAY JOURNAL:
France’s days of mourning for Nice victims (Video)
France today is observing the second of three days of mourning for victims of Thursday’s truck attack in Nice. A total of seven suspects have been arrested since the deadly Bastille Day rampage. Elizabeth Palmer reports the latest.


COVER STORY:
Cleveland is back! | Watch Video
On the eve of this year’s Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Mo Rocca looks at the rise, fall and rise of the Midwestern city no longer the butt of jokes.

For more info:


ALMANAC:
Joe DiMaggio’s hitting streak
On July 17, 1941, the Yankee Clipper’s record-breaking run at the plate was halted by a Cleveland Indians third baseman. Jane Pauley reports.

For more info:


STAGE:
Celebrating the Cleveland Play House | Watch Video
The country’s first professional regional theater, founded in 1915, continues to foster the magic of live performance to new generations. Scott Simon of NPR reports.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Teaching your kids to love Shakespeare
Award-winning playwright Ken Ludwig, author of the book “How to Teach Your Children Shakespeare,” talks to NPR’s Scott Simon about helping shape a lifelong love of the Bard.

For more info:


MUSIC:
For Chicago there is no end in sight | Watch Video
Nearly half a century after seven young men from the Windy City formed “a rock band with horns,” the Rock & Roll Hall of Famers are making no concessions to age. John Blackstone reports.

For more info:


PASSAGE:
Ohio town’s civic pride comes in a giant basket (Video)
Several cities across the nation have signature landmarks that represent their city. Newark, Ohio has its own, and may be the most unique out of the bunch. Jane Pauley has report on the Longaberger Basket Building and why it’s up for sale.


THERAPY:
How parrots help veterans with PTSD | Watch Video
At Serenity Park Sanctuary in Los Angeles, neglected or abandoned birds forge connections with troubled humans. Tracy Smith reports.

For more info:


MOVIES:
Meryl Streep on playing the world’s worst singer | Watch Video
In “Florence Foster Jenkins,” the Oscar-winning actress depicts the uniquely cringeworthy vocal stylings of the fabled New York society figure. Anthony Mason reports.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Aspiring singers live their dreams at Carnegie Hall (VIDEO)
In an event to promote the new film “Florence Foster Jenkins,” about the real-life talentless soprano, a group of singers was invited to perform on stage at New York’s Carnegie Hall, to show off their very real talent.

For more info:


ON THE TRAIL:
The Virgin Island that remained virgin | Watch Video
Thanks to Laurance Rockefeller, Virgin Islands National Park contains a piece of paradise protected from over-development. Conor Knighton reports.

For more info:


OPINION:
What makes Tim Duncan’s retirement remarkable | Watch Video
Comedian Paul Mecurio on the NBA power forward whose departure from the court highlights the less-than-remarkable attitudes of other star athletes.

For more info:


CALENDAR:
Week of July 18 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead.


NATURE:
Cuyahoga Valley National Park (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday at Cuyahoga Valley National Park, a short distance outside Cleveland. Videographer: Jamie McDonald.


RECAP: JULY 10

HEADLINES: Dallas takes steps toward healing (Video)
We continue to learn more about the lone gunman who targeted police officers in Dallas Thursday night, killing five and wounding seven more. Now the community has begun to heal. Manuel Bojorquez has the latest from a city on edge.

COVER STORY: Black, white and blue | Watch Video
The horrific events of this past week -- the police shootings of black men in Baton Rouge and Minneapolis, followed by the killing of five police officers in Dallas -- are just the latest in a string of deadly encounters between civilians and those sworn to protect and serve. In our Cover Story Martha Teichner puts it all in perspective.

For more info:


ALMANAC:
Nikola Tesla | Watch Video
On July 10, 1856, the scientist and revolutionary electrical engineer was born in southeastern Europe. Charles Osgood reports.

For more info:


OPENINGS:
A new museum sings the blues
If every city has a soundtrack, then St. Louis, Missouri’s might just be the blues. And now it’s home to the brand-new National Blues Museum, honoring the tender laments of Bessie Smith, the swing of B.B. King, and the electricity of Muddy Waters. Michelle Miller visits the museum that traces the history of the blues and its influence on R&B, rock and roll and funk - all genres born from those stirring, soulful sounds. Michelle Miller reports.

For more info:


COMEDY: Robin Williams: An intimate portrait | Watch Video
For more than 30 years comedian Robin Williams kept us laughing, from “Mork and Mindy” and his standup routines, to “Mrs. Doubtfire” and “The Fisher King.” And for most of those 30 years photographer Arthur Grace was along for the ride, documenting the most public -- and most intimate -- moments of Williams’ life. Tracy Smith looks at the comic genius’ life in pictures.

GALLERY: Robin Williams, in private and public

For more info:

OUR MAN IN PARIS: Dispensing with words (Video)
Don’t have time to read any more? Residents in a town in southern France don’t have that problem. Thanks to the startup website short-editions.com, 10,000 short story authors have been matched with a community of 150,000 regular readers with time to kill while waiting on line. David Turecamo explains an innovative technology.

For more info:


LIFESTYLE:
Home grown: Moving next to the farm | Watch Video
You’ve heard of people buying homes next to a golf course or the ocean. But how about buying a home next to your own private farm? Mark Strassmann takes us on a tour of the newest thing in residential living: the “agrihood,” taking the farm-to-table movement to the extreme.

Originally broadcast November 22, 2015.

For more info:


PASSAGE: Noel Neill, John McMartin and Sydney Schanberg

MUSIC: Elton John’s joyous tone | Watch Video
The singer, who recently released his 33rd studio album, says family life has put everything in perspective. Anthony Mason pays a visit.

Originally broadcast on February 28, 2016.

For more info:


MOVIES:
Facing up to a divisive issue: Actresses and cosmetic surgery | Watch Video
David Edelstein on actors who get “work” done, and the critics who shame them.


SCIENCE:
Bill Nye the Science Guy: Here to change the world | Watch Video
If you were the parent or grandparent of a child growing up in the 1990s, chances are you’ve heard of Bill Nye the Science Guy. Nye brought his own infectious brand of wackiness to TV to make science fun. And since the show ended, Nye has continued educating kids (and adults as well) about why science matters. Rita Braver catches up with Nye to talk about everything from global warming to water conservation to ballroom dancing!

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Bill Nye the Science Guy on life beyond Earth
Is there life on other planets? Rita Braver asks the TV science show host.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Quick questions with Bill Nye the Science Guy
The TV science show host is asked his take on a number of science topics from correspondent Rita Braver.

For more info:


CALENDAR:
Week of July 11 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead.


NATURE:
Great Trinity Forest (Extended Video)
We end this week’s episode with a return to Dallas, this time at the Great Trinity Forest. Videographer: Scot Miller.


RECAP: July 3, 2016


COVER STORY:
Bill O’Reilly: How Donald Trump is like JFK | Watch Video
The Fox News host and former history teacher admits he is more cynical about politicians today. Mo Rocca reports.

For more info:


HISTORY:
A Fourth of July history lesson | Watch Video
Charles Osgood on the TRUE day of American Independence.


ART:
Artist Kadir Nelson’s illustrations of pride and soul (VIDEO)Kadir Nelson is an artist unknown to many. But you’ll find his work on magazines, albums, posters and postage stamps. Then there are the children’s books - more than two dozen of them. Ben Tracy meets the illustrator who counts Norman Rockwell and N.C. Wyeth among his influences - and who explains what happens when his paintbrush starts to sing.

For more info:


POSTCARD FROM SHANGHAI:
Harley-Davidsons hit the road in China (Video)
Members of the Harley Owners Group are hog wild about their favorite motorcycle - and enthusiasm for the Harley-Davidson extends far beyond our own shores. Seth Doane has a report on the iconic American motorcycle that’s tearing up the Far East.


ON THE TRAIL:
Trailblazers of our National Parks | Watch Video
The Civilian Conservation Corps was FDR’s most popular New Deal program -- and a new generation of parks workers is following in their footsteps. Conor Knighton reports.

For more info:


PASSAGE:
Elie Wiesel (Video)
orn in 1928 in what is now Romania, Elie Wiesel was just 15 years old when he and his family were seized by the Nazis and sent to Auschwitz. Allied forces freed him in 1945, but not before he lost both parents and one of his three sisters. The author who shed light on the atrocities connected to the Holocaust, fought intolerance and championed causes attached to Israel - and in the process won the Nobel Peace Prize - died early Saturday at the age of 87. Charles Osgood reports.


HARTMAN:
An unlikely urban planner (Video)
Shamayim Harris is a one-time school administrator who’s now leading a group of mostly volunteers in the redevelopment of her Detroit-area neighborhood. Steve Hartman went “On The Road” to see what kind of progress they’re making.


MUSIC:
The continuing weirdness of Weird Al Yankovic | Watch Video
Although he started out making fun of pop culture, the song parodist is now firmly a part of it. Lee Cowan reports.

WEB EXTRA: Weird Al Yankovic’s 16 best song parodies
Sample the satirist’s most enduring comic takes on Top 40 stalwarts.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Weird Al Yankovic plays the “Sunday Morning” theme
Hear the classical tune “Abblasen,” the signature theme of CBS’ long-running morning program, as you’ve never heard it before - played on the accordion by song parodist Weird Al Yankovic.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Weird Al Yankovic’s Hawaiian shirt collection
In this web exclusive, the song parodist shows off just a small part of his extensive collection of tacky Hawaiian shirts - the product, he said, of his single “unreasonable” contract demand while touring.

For more info:

https://www.youtube.com/user/alyankovic


MORNING:
A cereal cafe bowls over customers (Video)
New York City’s landscape of trendy restaurants has added a new eatery that taps into the childhood memories of most Americans. The Kellogg’s Cafe is offering bowls of cereal with a twist. Anna Werner reports.

For more info:


MUSIC:
Introducing country star Maren Morris (Video)
On the heels of her breakout hit single, “My Church,” Maren Morris’ album, “Hero” (which The New York Times called “an outstanding country music debut”) launched her to the top spot on Billboard’s country chart. Her success story has a happy ending, but Morris’ decisions nearly cost her the opportunity to write that story. Anthony Mason reports.

For more info:


MOVIES:
Holiday offerings at the multiplex | Watch Video
David Edelstein has the bad news.


NATURE:
Seals at San Simeon (Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning on the California coast near San Simeon, where elephant seals are enjoying a day at the beach. Videographer: Lance Milbrand.


RECAP: JUNE 26

Guest Host: Lee Cowan


COVER STORY:
The cost of miracles | Watch Video
For millions of Americans suffering from disease, a new generation of highly-effective prescription drugs seems like a miracle cure. But these recent advances in the fight against cancer, AIDS, debilitating arthritis and other afflictions often come at a price beyond the means of the average person. Erin Moriarty of “48 Hours” looks at the skyrocketing cost of prescription drugs.

For more info:


ALMANAC:
Teflon | Watch Video
June 26th, 1910 was the birthday of the accidental inventor of a remarkable non-stick substance. Lee Cowan reports.

For more info:


FASHION:
Fashion as art | Watch Video
The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s exhibition, “Manus x. Machina,” is the latest in which designer creations have moved from catwalk to gallery space. Serena Altschul reports.

For more info:


COMEDY:
Tig Notaro, the luckiest unlucky person | Watch Video
Comedian Tig Notaro was a rising Comedy Central star when life threw her a few major curve balls: in four really bad months in 2012, she was hospitalized with a life-threatening bacterial infection, her mother died unexpectedly, and she was diagnosed with bilateral breast cancer.

Correspondent Luke Burbank catches up with Notaro to find out how she found ways to still make comedy from such deep personal tragedy.

For more info:


PASSAGE:
Remembering bluegrass legend Ralph StanleyThis past week we learned of the death of Ralph Stanley. He is considered a founding father of modern bluegrass music. After decades of performing on the folk music circuit, Ralph Stanley broke through to a wider audience in the 2000 film “Oh Brother, Where Art Thou?” He was 89.


MO ROCCA: The night sky his canvas, pigeons his brush (Video)
For some city dwellers, pigeons have a bad reputation: “Rats with wings,” some non-bird lovers call them. But others, like Brooklyn-based artist Duke Riley, see pigeons in a whole different light -- as beautiful, smart, clean creatures who, in flight, make the sky their canvas.

With the help of LED lights, Riley and his flock of trained pigeons literally light up the night sky, and Mo Rocca gives you a front row seat.

For more info:


STEVE HARTMAN:
Alabama college student comes out after Orlando attacks (Video)
A young Alabama man made the most important decision of his life after the Orlando attack. No longer able to sit by quietly, he took to Facebook and announced who he really is to the world. Steve Hartman met him, “On the Road.”


RADIO:
Garrison Keillor signs off | Watch Video
On Saturday, July 2, the last “Prairie Home Companion” hosted by Garrison Keillor will be broadcast. After 42 years, Keillor is stepping away from the microphone. But before he does, he sits down with Jane Pauley at his home in St. Paul to talk about his past, and his future -- to tell some stories and a few jokes.

For more info:


OPINION:
Jim Gaffigan: Let’s pay people to attend school | Watch Video
The comedian goes one step further than proposals that merely pay for tuition.

For more info:


TV:
”Outlander”: A love story beyond time | Watch Video
If you’re in the mood for a steamy, action-packed, time-travel romance, then “Outlander” may be the show for you. Diana Gabaldon’s romantic fantasies of a woman caught between two eras have become a hit Starz series. Michelle Miller travels to the Scottish highlands to chat with the stars, and the author, about the “Outlander” phenomenon.

For more info:


CALENDAR:
Week of June 27 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead.


NATURE:
Georgia’s Tallulah Gorge (Watch Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning at Tallulah Gorge State Park in northeastern Georgia.


RECAP: JUNE 19

Guest host: Lee Cowan

HEADLINES: Orlando: A time for funerals (Video)
One week after the Orlando attacks, more memorials are being held for the victims of the worst mass shooting in American history. Jamie Yuccas reports.


COVER STORY:
Searching for our roots | Watch Video
Online genealogy resources help nurture the popular pastime of researching family trees. Tracy Smith reports.

QUIZ: Celebrity family trees
Test your knowledge of some red carpet favorites and their ancestors.

For more info:


ALMANAC:
The first automatic door | Watch Video
On June 19th, 1931, a Connecticut restaurant opened up a whole new world of technology. Lee Cowan reports.


PULSE:
Gun deaths
Since last weekend’s mass shooting in Orlando, 208 Americans have died in gun-related incidents.


ART:
How abstract art brought a father and daughter closer | Watch Video
A partnership between 76-year-old photographer William Eggleston and his daughter, textile designer Andra Eggleston, has changed the fabric of their relationship. Anthony Mason reports.

For more info:


SUMMER SCREEN:
Richard Gere shines a light on the forgotten | Watch Video
The actor continues advocating for the disadvantaged, from the homeless of New York City to Syrian refugees in Europe. Seth Doane reports from Rome.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Richard Gere on bringing social issues into focus
The actor and activist talks with Seth Doane about the value of using celebrity to shepherd a media spotlight onto social issues, such as the refugee crisis currently embroiling southern Europe.

GALLERY: Richard Gere: Actor, humanitarian

For more info:


FASHION:
Socks appeal | Watch Video
In honor of Father’s Day, Mo Rocca goes shopping for something every Dad needs: socks! Forget ties -- socks have become the hottest male fashion statement around.

For more info:

HARTMAN: How many mass shootings must we endure? (Video)
It seems like after every mass shooting, Americans mourn, but then go back to business-as-usual. One year after the shooting at a church in Charleston, South Carolina, one victim’s brother tells Steve Hartman he’ll never stop fighting for change.

SUNDAY PROFILE: Tim Daly’s most important role: Father | Watch Video
Actor Tim Daly first made a name for himself in the early 1990s on the hit TV comedy “Wings.” He went on to acclaimed roles in “The Sopranos,” “Private Practice,” and now as husband to Tea Leoni’s Secretary of State in “Madam Secretary.” But he has a personal stake in something else: a YouTube project called “The Daly Show,” in which he shares some laughs with his son, aspiring actor Sam Daly. Anna Werner sits down for a Q&A with an actor and very involved father.

For more info:


BEAUTY:
Letting one’s hair WAY down | Watch Video
Luke Burbank combs the country to try to explain a growing trend: beards. They’re back, but they’re not always welcome.

For more info:


COMMENTARY:
Jim Gaffigan: Grateful to be a father | Watch Video
The comedian and father-of-five shares a few thoughts about Dad’s big day.

For more info:


ORLANDO:
The sameness of tragedy | Watch Video
Once again, a nation finds itself struggling to separate strands of anger, sorrow, shame and anguish in the wake of all-too-familiar gun violence. Lee Cowan reports.

SPECIAL REPORT: Forty-Nine

COMPLETE CBSNEWS.COM COVERAGE: Orlando nightclub massacre


CALENDAR:
Week of June 20 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Lee Cowan reports.


NATURE:
Monument Valley (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning in Monument Valley. It straddles the Utah-Arizona border, and was a familiar setting for John Ford, one of the Founding Fathers of the Hollywood Western. Videographer: Phil Giriodi.

GALLERY: Monument Valley in the movies


RECAP: JUNE 12

HEADLINES: Gunfire erupts inside Fla. gay nightclub (VIDEO)Police say a mass shooting at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida, has resulted in at least 20 people dead, with dozens more wounded. Local law enforcement officials say the shootings could be classified as an act of domestic terrorism. Erik Sandoval of CBS affiliate WKMG has the latest.


HEADLINES:
No metal detectors at Christina Grimmie concert (Video)
Christina Grimmie was a rising music star before her life was cut short by a gunman outside an Orlando concert venue Friday night. The gunman shot the singer before fatally shooting himself. Marlie Hall has the latest details surrounding the tragic violence that ended Grimmie’s life.


COVER STORY:
Remembering the Titanic of shark attacks | Watch Video
In 1916 five people were killed by one or more sharks along the Jersey Shore, setting off a frenzy of shark hunting. Anna Werner reports.

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ON THE TRAIL:
Great Sand Dunes National Park | Watch Video
The Colorado landscape -- one of the quietest places in the U.S. -- is the background for an incredible soundscape of heightened acoustics. Conor Knighton continues his year-long exploration of our National Parks.

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ALMANAC:
Loving v. Virginia | Watch Video
On June 12, 1967, the Supreme Court struck down state laws banning interracial marriage. Charles Osgood reports.

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ON BROADWAY: ”Hamilton”: A revolutionary musical | Watch Video
A hip-hop musical about Alexander Hamilton may sound like a tough sell at the box office, but “Hamilton” is nothing short of a smash hit, and now it has another distinction: It has been nominated for an astonishing 16 Tony Awards, more than any production in Broadway history. Mo Rocca chats with the star and guiding force behind the musical, Lin-Manuel Miranda, about how it all came together.

(An earlier version of this story was originally broadcast on March 8, 2015.)

For more info:


ON BROADWAY:
Sean Hayes on his heavenly role | Watch Video
He became a household name as the scene-stealer on the hit comedy “Will & Grace.” Sean Hayes has now taken on what you might say is the role of a lifetime, playing none other than the Almighty in the Broadway comedy, “An Act of God.” Lee Cowan has a Sunday Profile.

WEB EXCLUSIVE VIDEOS:

Sean Hayes tickles the ivories
The Emmy-winning actor demonstrates his talent for classical piano.

Sean Hayes on “The Three Stooges”
The “Will & Grace” star talks about his experience shooting the Farrelly Brothers’ 2012 film, “The Three Stooges”: “We slapped the crap out of each other!”

For more info:


ON BROADWAY:
What’s my line? Actors on memorization | Watch Video
Rita Braver talks with “Modern Family” actor Jesse Tyler Ferguson (now on Broadway in “Fully Committed”) and Tony nominee Danny Burstein (“Fiddler on the Roof”) about how they remember all their lines!

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: How Bill Nighy learns his lines
In this web exclusive acclaimed film and stage actor Bill Nighy discusses with Rita Braver his tricks for memorizing dialogue, and his superstitions about the process.

For more info:

STEVE HARTMAN: Louisville residents tell their Muhammad Ali stories (Video)
More than 600,000 people call Louisville home. If you ever go there, you might get the idea that everyone of them has a story about an encounter with Muhammad Ali. Steve Hartman went on the road to the home of sluggers to hear a few of them.


A SUMMER SONG:
The Dead rise again: Dead & Company on tour | Watch Video
The Grateful Dead first took to the stage in 1965, and quickly became one of the most influential and enduring bands in history. When Jerry Garcia died in 1995, the band “retired,” but they’ve since come back in various incarnations. This year remaining members Bob Weir, Bill Kreutzmann and Mickey Hart are back on tour, joined by new bandmates touring as Dead & Company. Anthony Mason hits the road for a fond look at the Dead’s past, present and future.

WEB EXCLUSIVE VIDEOS:

Why John Mayer wanted to play with the Dead

The Grateful Dead’s musical heritage

The Grateful Dead’s Mickey Hart and Bill Kreutzmann

Bob Weir and John Mayer on Dead & Company

John Mayer on being a deadhead

For more info:


THE ACTOR’S LIFE:
The casting director: The actor’s lifeline | Watch Video
Veterans of Broadway, films and TV discuss the importance of auditions, and of being in the room where it happens. Jamie Wax reports.

For more info:


CALENDAR:
Week of June 13
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Charles Osgood reports.


NATURE:
Yellowstone National Park (Extended Video)
We leave you this Tony Awards Sunday at Yellowstone National Park, where a mother grizzly bear and her cubs are the stars of the show. Videographer: Judy Lehmberg.


NATURE UP CLOSE:
Yellowstone’s grizzly bearsVideographer Judy Lehmberg on one of the most formidable denizens of the National Park.


RECAP: JUNE 5


IN MEMORIAM:
The life of “The Greatest” | Watch Video
Jim Axelrod reports on the life and death of the three-time world heavyweight boxing champion, named by Sports Illustrated as the Sportsman of the Century.

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MUHAMMAD ALI:
The poetry of Muhammad Ali | Watch Video
The pugilistic master was also a wordsmith who made language float and sting. Anna Werner reports.

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COVER STORY:
Setting an epic world record | Watch Video
Despite doctors telling Colin O’Brady he would likely never walk normally again, the adventurer set out to conquer the world’s “Seven Summits” - and the North and South Poles to boot. Lee Cowan reports.

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MO ROCCA: Happy 125th birthday, Carnegie Hall! | Watch Video
You’ve probably heard the old joke: “How do you get to Carnegie Hall?” Answer: “Practice, practice, practice.” For 125 years now, New York’s Carnegie Hall has set the gold standard for live entertainment, featuring everyone from Tchaikovsky to The Beatles, Booker T. Washington to Judy Garland, as well as Carol Burnett, Benny Goodman, Julie Andrews, Lionel Hampton ... the list is endless. Our Mo Rocca gets a backstage pass for an amazing sesquicentennial walk through music history.

For more info:

https://www.carnegiehall.org/Calendar/

REMEMBRANCE: The courage of Muhammad Ali | Watch Video
James Brown on how the boxing champion’s stand on principle convinced us all what it took to be “The Greatest.”


OPENING:
An exhibition of bad breakups | Watch Video
Have you ever had a broken heart? Tracy Smith reports on how that emotion is turned into art in a new Los Angeles museum commemorating painful memories.

For more info:


STEVE HARTMAN:
Symphony of survival (Video)
For years, residents of a Chicago apartment building have heard the music - what everyone assumed was someone seducing a song out of a baby grand with two remarkable hands. Steve Hartman introduces us to Norman Malone, and shows us how that assumption was only half-right.

MOVIES: The story behind “Free State of Jones” | Watch Video
The Oscar-winning actor has built his career playing unforgettable characters, and he does so again in his new film, “Free State of Jones.” McConaughey plays Newt Knight, a real-life Southern soldier who deserted the Confederate army in 1863, allied himself with runaway slaves, took over a county in Mississippi and declared it a “free state,” unaligned with the North or the South. Michelle Miller goes behind the scenes with McConaughey for a look at this provocative historical drama.

For more info:


BOOKS:
James Patterson’s reading revolution | Watch Video
James Patterson is without question one of the most prolific and most popular authors in the world. His “Alex Cross Mysteries” and the “Maximum Ride” series have sold an astonishing 350 million books worldwide, and earned him 73 #1 bestsellers. He also has a popular summer TV series, “Zoo,” on CBS. Now he’s set out to revolutionize the book publishing industry, and Anthony Mason tells us how.

For more info:


REMEMBRANCE:
How Muhammad Ali helped Tavis Smiley heal a father-son rift | Watch Video
The TV host says the boxing great served as a bridge to his estranged dad.


CALENDAR:
Week of June 6 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. reports.


NATURE:
Arizona’s Sonoran Desert (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning among flowers in bloom in Arizona’s Sonoran Desert, near Pinnacle Peak. Videographer: Phil Giriodi.



WEB EXCLUSIVE:

ALMANAC: The Marshall Plan | Watch Video
On June 5, 1947, Secretary of State George C. Marshall announced an economic assistance plan to help Europe as it struggled to recover from World War II. Charles Osgood reports.


RECAP: MAY 29


GALLERY:
Memorial Day 2016 - America honors the fallen


COVER STORY: Trying to put the brakes on road rage
With fatal road rage incidents are up more than 30% since 2010, experts discuss why drivers become so heated and emotional while behind the wheel. Kris Van Cleave reports.

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ON THE TRAIL:
The big crush | Watch Video
2015 was record-setting in termsof visitors to our National Parks -- and Utah’s “Mighty 5” are bracing for an even bigger year. Conor Knighton reports.

For more info:

http://visitutah.comAlso in Utah:


ALMANAC:
The sinking of the Empress of Ireland | Watch Video
On May 29, 1914, an ocean liner sank in the St. Lawrence River, claiming 1,012 lives in just 14 minutes. Charles Osgood reports.

For more info:


ON BROADWAY:
Second banana Jane Krakowski | Watch Video
With a hit Netflix series,”Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt,” and a Tony nomination for the musical “She Loves Me,” the actress’ career gives her plenty to sing about. Rita Braver reports.

For more info:


MILEPOST:
A tribute to lifeguards (Video)
Scores of Americans hit the beaches this holiday weekend to frolic in oceans and lakes - and standing watch over them are the nation’s lifeguards. Charles Osgood reports on the life-saving sentinels.


IN MEMORIAM:
The flags of their fathers | Watch Video
The families of American WWII vets connect with Japanese families through the return of precious mementos acquired during the war. Lee Cowan reports.

For more info:


HARTMAN:
How a tagged-and-bagged soldier was saved from the dead (Video)
John Colone’s “mixed blessing” of a nightmare began on February 19, 1968, when his Army Airborne platoon came under intense enemy fire near the Ca Ty River in Vietnam. Mistaken for dead, Colone emerged from a body bag -- and has since paid tribute to the eight men from his platoon who were not so fortunate. Steve Hartman reports.

For more info:


FOR THE RECORD:
Hey, hey, The Monkees are back! | Watch Video
The ‘60s TV phenoms are back with a 50th anniversary album, featuring newly-recorded songs, and a track with the late Davy Jones. Anthony Mason talks with Micky Dolenz, Mike Nesmith and Peter Tork.

GALLERY: The Monkees

For more info:


POLITICS:
Mitch McConnell on Trump and divisiveness in politics | Watch Video
The Senate Majority Leader talks with Jan Crawford about President Obama, Donald Trump, Merrick Garland, and a lifetime of second opportunities.

For more info:

MOVIES: David Edelstein on “amazing” documentary “Weiner” | Watch Video
Our critic says the riveting behind-the-scenes look at a disgraced politico’s imploding bid for a comeback will also make you feel creepy.

For more info:


CALENDAR:
Week of May 30 | Watch Video
Charles Osgood takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead.


NATURE:
Marietta National Cemetery (Video)
We leave you this Memorial Day weekend at Marietta National Cemetery in Georgia, a final resting place for thousands of veterans of the Civil War and other conflicts. Videographer: Darrall Johnson.


RECAP: MAY 22, “By Design”

Charles Osgood goes on location to the scenic shores of Newport, Rhode Island, to host our annual broadcast devoted to the people, places and things that change our lives by design!

We’ll be broadcasting from The Breakers, the world-famous, 70-room, Italian Renaissance-style palazzo built in 1895 by Cornelius Vanderbilt II, which is the crown jewel of Newport; and the nearby Marble House, built by Cornelius’ younger brother, William.

History of the Breakers and Marble House | Watch Video

For more info:


COVER STORY: Dressing down: The rise of athleisure | Watch Video
Martha Teichner looks at what’s behind the “athleisure” craze -- the exploding trend of wearing workout clothes to work as well as play.

For more info:


MEMENTO:
An homage to the matchbook (Video)
They come in different shapes, sizes and colors -- all concealing the fire within. While commonplace, matchbooks can be tiny works of art. Ben Tracy examines a collector’s treasured trove of incendiary designs

For more info:


TV:
The couple behind “Fixer Upper” (Video)
Chip and Joanna Gaines are the rising stars of HGTV’s hit home renovation show, “Fixer Upper,” and they’ve turned, Waco, Texas into the Renovation Capital of the World. Jane Pauley talks with the couple who have become dynamo entrepreneurs.

For more info:


ICONS:
Susan Spencer highlights some everyday items that are so well-designed, they’re hard to improve upon, including:

SMALL WONDERS OF DESIGN: The Umbrella | Watch VideoWhen it comes to design, the case is open and shut: the umbrella is brilliant.

For more info:

FASHION: The House of Dior | Watch Video
Seth Doane travels to the French countryside, where Oscar-winner Charlize Theron gives us a tour of the newly-renovated House of Dior.

For more info:

URBAN ARCHITECTURE: Living the high life | Watch Video
Lee Cowan looks at vertical sprawl today, and at the latest ideas in both residential design and construction.

For more info:


DECOR:
Fiddle Leaf Fig, the favored plant for home design (Video)
Upon looking around her home, Nancy Giles noticed that it was missing something that would pop. When she went to New York’s flower district, she discovered a new favorite of home decorators: the Fiddle Leaf Fig.

For more info:

SMALL WONDERS OF DESIGN: The Chinese food take-out carton | Watch Video
Nothing quite says “Dig in!” like the unmistakable sight of the iconic take-out box that is a remarkable piece of origami -- and a completely American invention.

For more info:

GOLF: Jack Nicklaus stays the course | Watch Video
Jim Axelrod hits the links with a true living legend -- a golf great who continues to have a remarkable career designing golf courses around the world.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Jack Nicklaus on Trump: “He’s turning America upside-down”

For more info:

ARCHITECTURE: British designer Thomas Heatherwick’s brand of provocation | Watch Video
The man who never espouses a signature style says similarlity in global design is the enemy of soulfulness. Anthony Mason reports from London.

GALLERY: The extraordinary designs of Thomas Weatherwick

For more info:

SMALL WONDERS OF DESIGN: Q-Tips | Watch Video
The Q-Tip hit the market in the 1920s as a tiny tool for baby care. Since then, it’s gone from wooden sticks to paper sticks, but one thing’s never changed: a warning never to stick it in your ear!

For more info:


SPORT:
The evolving challenge of the America’s Cup | Watch Video
Charles Osgood reports on the history of the sailing race, and how it continues to break with tradition.

For more info:


NATURE:
Sachuest Point National Wildlife Refuge (Video)
We leave you this Sunday morning at the Sachuest Point National Wildlife Refuge in Middletown, Rhode Island. Videographer: Richard Boghosian.


RECAP: MAY 15


COVER STORY:
The latest frontier in America’s civil rights battle: restrooms | Watch Video
Critics blast state laws against transgendered individuals, but backers of anti-LGBTQ bills say religious opponents of same sex marriage are the real parties being discriminated against. Marks Strassmann reports.

For more info:


ALMANAC:
Listerine | Watch Video
On May 15, 1923, a trademark was awarded for the first over-the-counter mouthwash. Charles Osgood reports.

For more info:


POSTCARD FROM MOROCCO:
Why are there goats in the trees? (Video)
The nut of the argan tree, which grows in the Moroccan countryside of Essaouira, contains a valuable oil known for its anti-aging properties, that is popping up in everything from shampoo and body lotion to food products. But nowhere on the labels will you find the remarkable story behind how this oil was born - and the role goats’ digestive tracts play in its harvesting. Jonathan Vigliotti reports.

For more info:


ON THE RADIO:
Mouthing off: Radio sound FX man Fred Newman (Video)
Creating sound effects for movies and TV is big business, often involving state-of-the-art technology and teams of sound engineers. But Jane Pauley has the story of a one-man sound effects machine: Effects wizard Fred Newman, a star of Garrison Keillor’s radio show, “A Prairie Home Companion.”

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Fred Newman’s sound demonstrations

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: What Fred Newman taught Meryl Streep about radio acting

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: How sound FX man Fred Newman dramatized the Rapture

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Fred Newman’s followup to “Prairie Home Companion”

For more info:


PASSAGE:
In memoriam (Video)
“Sunday Morning” remembers four noted personalities who departed this week: actor William Schallert, star of “The Patty Duke Show”; costume designer Ret Turner; conspiracy theorist Mark Lane, author of the JFK assassination book, “Rush to Judgment”; and Susannah Mushatt Jones, the world’s oldest person, who died Thursday in New York at age 116.


RECOVERY:
Just keep going | Watch Video
A horrific car crash left 19-year-old Dylan Rizzo in a deep coma. After months without improvement, doctors feared the former track star would remain in a vegetative state for life. Fast-forward to today, when Dylan is walking, talking, even bowling with friends. Lee Cowan reports on this real-life medical miracle.

For more info:


HARTMAN:
Dads on the front lines of style (Video)
Phil Morgese, of Daytona Beach, Fla., has always been good with his hands on “guy stuff.” But when it came to styling his daughter’s hair, he struggled to keep up. He watched videos and practiced, eventually mastering his skills, and is now sharing his new braiding knowledge with other dads. Steve Hartman reports.


SUNDAY PROFILE:
Rachel Maddow, storyteller | Watch Video
The MSNBC anchor says creating context offers her greater influence than simply reading the news. Rita Braver reports.

For more info:


MO ROCCA:
Where in the world? The National Geographic Bee (Video)
The annual national spelling bee has become an American institution; winners make front-page news, movies and documentaries have been made about it. Our Mo Rocca reports on the “other” big bee -- The National Geographic Bee -- and the incredible kids who make it a can’t-miss competition.

For more info:


MILEPOST:
Morley Safer on art (Video)
After a half-century at CBS News, legendary reporter Morley Safer is retiring. Somehow in the whirlwind of doing 919 reports for “60 Minutes,” Morley found time to contribute dozens of pieces to “Sunday Morning” over the years, most of them about the masters of art. We look back at a few.

“Sunday Morning” art features from Morley Safer:


CALENDAR:
Week of May 16 | Watch Video
With celebrations of Irish culture and “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off,” “Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Charles Osgood reports.


NATURE:
New York woods (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning at the Reinstein Woods Nature Preserve in western New York - a safe home for beavers, ducks, and geese with their goslings. Videographer Carl Mrozek.


RECAP: MAY 8


CBS NEWS POLL:
How often should you call your mother?
According to a new poll, Americans (especially moms) think more often is better.


COVER STORY:
For first-time moms, 40 is the new 30 | Watch Video
The number of U.S. babies born to women 45 and older has more than tripled in the past two decades. Serena Altschul reports.

For more info:


ALMANAC:
The Gary Hart scandal | Watch Video
On May 8, 1987, the front-runner in the Democratic race for president quit after news reports of a possible affair. Charles Osgood reports.


BOOKS:
The trip back home to “Bettyville” | Watch Video
Mo Rocca has the touching story of George Hodgman’s bestselling memoir about a son returning to his hometown to care for his aging mother.

For more info:


FOR THE RECORD:
Keith Urban in the moment | Watch Video
To some of his many fans, Keith Urban is known as one of the stars of the hit TV show “American Idol.” But after nearly 30 years in country music, he’s hitting his stride as one of the biggest country music stars around. With a new album out this week, he’s heading out on tour, with wife Nicole Kidman and their two little girls at his side, and John Blackstone has a backstage pass.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Keith Urban: From Down Under to Nashville
Singer-songwriter Keith Urban came from Queensland, Australia, to the home of country music in 1992. In this web exclusive he talked to John Blackstone about what it was like adjusting to the Nashville scene.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Keith Urban on small clubs and record execs
Keith Urban shares stories with correspondent John Blackstone from his days starting out at Nashville’s famed venue 12th & Porter, where many music acts have been through the “grindstone” of performing, hoping for their big break.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Keith Urban on getting the details right
Keith Urban explains to correspondent John Blackstone about his passion for recording and producing. “I’ll grab anything that’s got strings on it, or that I can hit and make stuff happen.”

For more info:


ANIMATION:
”The Present” (Video)
This heart-tugging short film about a young boy and a very special puppy, based on a comic strip by Brazilian artist Fabio Coala Cavalcanti and animated by Jacob Frey and Markus Kranzler while they were film students at Filmakademie Baden-Wuerttemberg in Germany, has won dozens of international awards -- and earned the young animators jobs with Pixar and Disney.


ANIMALS:
Saving the giant pandas | Watch Video
The National Zoo in Washington, D.C., made headlines around the world with the birth of the male giant panda named Bei Bei. Videos of the cuddly cub’s every move are instant Internet hits, and crowds have been flocking to seem him, so much so that now every zoo wants a panda. Rita Braver visits with Bei Bei for an up-close-and-personal look at this growing panda-monium.

For more info:


STEVE HARTMAN:
Barista learns sign language for customer (Video)
It’s pretty easy to have your order messed up when you’re ordering from Starbucks; it’s even easier if you’re deaf. Steve Hartman went “On the Road” to show how one barista in Virginia is going above and beyond to change that for one of their regulars.


SUNDAY PROFILE:
For Allison Janney, laughter is key | Watch Video
The seven-time Emmy-winner’s sitcom “Mom” is a funny take on a serious subject: addiction and recovery. Lee Cowan reports.

For more info:


ON THE TRAIL:
Petrified Forest National Park | Watch Video
Conor Knighton continues his year-long trek through America’s National Parks.

For more info:


OPINION:
America trails the world on paid maternity leave | Watch Video
YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki says paid leave for new moms -- still not the law in the U.S. -- is good for mothers, families and business.

For more info:


CALENDAR:
Week of May 9 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Charles Osgood reports.


NATURE:
Mustangs and their foals (Extended Video)
We leave you this Mother’s Day with a look at mustangs, mares and foals in the Pine Nut Mountains of Nevada.


RECAP: MAY 1

Guest Host: Jane Pauley


COVER STORY:
Seniors and marijuana | Watch Video
A growing number of senior citizens and baby boomers are using marijuana in states where it is legal. Barry Petersen tells us why cannabis use is on the rise and what it might mean for future legislation.

For more info:


ALMANAC:
The Empire State Building | Watch Video
On May 1, 1931, the sky-high New York City icon raised during the depths of the Depression opened for business. Jane Pauley reports.

GALLERY: The Empire State Building

For more info:


TRAVELS:
Minnesota’s Northwest Angle, an American geographic oddity | Watch Video
Lee Cowan visits one of the most remote corners of America: Northwest Angle, Minnesota -- a place you can only get to by traveling through Canada.


ADVOCATES:
Christ or a Glock? | Watch Video
For more than 20 years Rev. Robert Schenck has been a leading opponent of abortion. But recently he had a revelation -- that evangelicals could not be pro-life AND pro-gun. Mo Rocca reports.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Was Walt Disney’s body frozen?In this web exclusive, documentary filmmaker Abigail Disney (“The Armor of Light”) talks to Mo Rocca about some of the perks of being the grand-niece of the legendary Walt Disney - and speaks to one of the legends about the innovative animator.

For more info:


PASSAGE:
Honoring America’s Bison | Watch Video
Both the House and Senate approved legislation this week designating the buffalo as the National Mammal of the United States. Jane Pauley reports.

For more info:


NEW YORK CITY:
A view from the streets of New York City (all of them) | Watch Video
Bill Helmreich has traversed 6,048 miles in all five boroughs on foot, as documented in his book, “The New York Nobody Knows.” He’s joined on his travels by correspondent Anthony Mason.

For more info:


STEVE HARTMAN:
Judge spends night in jail with man he sentenced (Video)
A North Carolina judge felt he had to hold a man accountable for lying about a urine test, although there were special circumstances for this probation offender. Steve Hartman went “On the Road” to find out what happened next.


FOR THE RECORD:
Marc Anthony: Speaking his mind | Watch Video
The highest-selling salsa artist in history talks about the sacrifices he’s made - and his willingness to speak up for the “dreamers.” Tracy Smith reports.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Marc Anthony on his ritual before going on stage
In this web exclusive, the bestselling salsa singer tells correspondent Tracy Smith how he customarily begins each performance.

GALLERY: Marc Anthony

For more info:


MILEPOST:
The May Pole tradition (Video)
Spring tradition, the history of the May Pole spans centuries and continents, with its origins as varied as the costumes. Jane Pauley reports.


VETERANS:
A Medal of Honor recipient’s ongoing burden | Watch Video
In his book, “Red Platoon,” Sgt. Clinton Romesha writes of how “exceptionally ordinary men” were put to an extraordinary test when their outpost in Afghanistan came under fire from the Taliban. He talks about his experience with David Martin.

For more info:


CALENDAR:
Week of May 2 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Jane Pauley reports.


NATURE:
Olympic National Park (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday morning in the Hoh Rain Forest at Olympic National Park in Washington State which gets up to 14 feet of rain every year. Videographer: Jamie McDonald.

RECAP: APRIL 24


COVER STORY:
When disaster relief brings anything but relief | Watch Video
When natural or man-made disasters strike, such as last week’s flooding in Houston and the earthquakes in Japan and Ecuador, well-meaning people often rush to send bottled water, household goods, clothing -- literally the shirts off their backs. But sometimes the vast amounts of good that people send do more harm than good, clogging airport runways and causing unnecessary logistical hardships for relief workers. NPR’s Scott Simon joins us for a look at disaster relief that might be no relief at all.

For more info:


ALMANAC:
Hubble Space Telescope | Watch Video
On April 24, 1990, a revolutionary eyepiece to the heavens was lifted into orbit on board the space shuttle Discovery. Charles Osgood reports.

For more info:

MUSIC: Prince: An appreciation | Watch Video
This week we learned of the untimely passing of Prince Rogers Nelson. An artist of prodigious talents, Prince forever changed the course of rock music. “Sunday Morning” contributor and former MTV head Bill Flanagan looks back at his influence.


MILEPOST:
The changing face of U.S. currency (Video)
The Treasury Department this past week announced Andrew Jackson’s face on the front of the $20 bill will be replaced by that of escaped slave-turned-abolitionist Harriet Tubman. When it comes to the green that’s been printed over the years, not all our currency has stayed current. Charles Osgood reports.


TV:
Larry Wilmore: Relishing the role of underdog | Watch Video
Next Saturday some of our nation’s best and brightest gather in Washington, D.C., to join President and Mrs. Obama for the star-studded White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner. It is Washington’s big night, and Jim Axelrod catches up with the very funny man tapped to be master of ceremonies: comedian Larry Wilmore, host of Comedy Central’s “The Nightly Show.”

For more info:


ON BROADWAY: ”Broadway babies” join the cast of “Shuffle Along” (Video)
The talented Broadway veterans behind the re-imagined 1921 musical “Shuffle Along,” which opens on April 28 in New York City, are all Tony Award-winners: Director-writer George C. Wolfe, choreographer Savion Glover, and actors Audra McDonald, Billy Porter, and Brian Stokes Mitchell have 15 Tonys among them.

Singing and dancing on stage just a few feet away are two ensemble members making their Broadway debuts: Karissa Royster and Curtis Holland. The two newcomers talk to correspondent Maurice DuBois about what it means to be part of a huge Broadway production.

GALLERY: Backstage at the Broadway musical “Shuffle Along”

For more info:


BILL GEIST:
A convention of carnival delights (Video)
Bill Geist visits the annual pre-season trade show of carnival rides, games and attractions, held in Gibsonton, Florida, by the 4,500-member International Independent Showmen’s Association. It’s one-stop shopping for operators who want to satisfy carnival-goers’ desire for scary rides -- and pretty frightening carnival food, too.

For more info:


STEVE HARTMAN:
Seeking: NYC tortoise walker (Video)
Amanda Green doesn’t have enough time to walk her pet, and she feels guilty because it’s not getting the exercise it needs. So she’s looking for a walker. The only problem is it takes a bit longer to walk her pet than most. Steve Hartman reports on an unusual help wanted ad, and the response it received.


SUNDAY PROFILE:
Nike’s fiercely competitive Phil Knight | Watch Video
Lee Cowan heads to the sprawling 350-acre “campus” of Nike, the sportswear company that employs 44,000 people worldwide, for a visit with Phil Knight, the innovator who co-founded Nike in 1952. He’s one of the richest men in the world, and he plans to give most of his fortune away.

For more info:


COMMENTARY:
Jim Gaffigan’s mea culpa on “Fairygate” | Watch Video
The comedian addresses the reaction to his commentary two weeks ago that took aim at a sacred subject: The Tooth Fairy.

For more info:

BOOKS: A 400-year-old Shakespearean mystery | Watch Video
William Shakespeare -- without question one of the greatest writers who ever lived -- died 400 years ago this week, and recently a group of researchers announced they had found what they believe is the Bard’s personal dictionary, complete with comments written in Shakespeare’s own hand. But some experts question the book’s authenticity. Martha Teichner looks into this mystery four centuries in the making.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: The blessing and curse at Shakespeare’s grave
In this web exclusive, The Reverend Patrick Taylor explains the unusual inscriptions at the burial place of William Shakespeare, at Holy Trinity Church in Stratford-Upon-Avon, England.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: William Shakespeare’s “rich, juicy” vocabulary
In this web exclusive, Michael Witmore and Heather Wolfe, of the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C., explain to Martha Teichner how the Bard of Avon found and borrowed the language he made immortal.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO: Director Dominic Dromgoole on Shakespeare’s theatre
In this web extra, theatre director Dominic Dromgoole talks to Martha Teichner about the relationship between actors and their audience in the theatre of William Shakespeare’s day.

For more info:


CALENDAR:
Week of April 25 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Charles Osgood reports.


NATURE:
Hawaii’s Kona Coast (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday under the sea, off the Kona Coast of Hawaii’s Big Island. Videographer: Ziggy Livnat.


RECAP: APRIL 17


HEADLINES:
Massive Ecuador quake leads to widespread damage (Video)
A very powerful 7.8 earthquake shook large portions of Ecuador Saturday. Nearly 80 are reported dead. Reporter Stephan Kufner has the latest from Quito.


HEADLINES:
The Vatican rolls out the welcome mat for refugees (Video)
t’s the first day in a new country for 12 Syrian refugees taken in by Pope Francis after he visited a migrant camp on the Greek island of Lesbos. Charlie D’Agata reports.


COVER STORY:
Bhutan’s secret of happiness | Watch Video
Bhutan is a tiny country hidden in the remote Himalayas. Rather than embrace the 21st century, like its powerful neighbors India and China, Bhutan remains the “Forbidden Kingdom.” Barry Petersen offers a rare glimpse inside the exotic country where, instead of measuring “gross national product,” they officially measure “gross national happiness.”

For more info:


ALMANAC:
Daffy Duck | Watch Video
On April 17, 1937, a most unusual bird made his debut in the Warner Brothers cartoon, “Porky’s Duck Hunt.” Charles Osgood reports

For more info:


SPORTS:
Quidditch, the sport of wizards | Watch Video
Millions of Harry Potter fans are familiar with the fictional game of Quidditch, played by wizards flying around on broomsticks. But an inspired group of college students have transported the game from the page to the playing field. Anna Werner attends the Quidditch World Cup for a look at one of the fastest growing sports around.

RULES:A how-to guide to Quidditch

For more info:

http://www.harrypotterwizardscollection.com/
MUSIC:
Bonnie Raitt: No slowing down | Watch Video
For more than 40 years Bonnie Raitt has been performing her unique blend of blues/rock to adoring audiences around the world. Tracy Smith hits the road with Raitt to talk about her new album and the joys and sorrows of a lifetime in music.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO:Bonnie Raitt: You don’t go into rock and roll to get a lot of sleep
The multiple-Grammy-winning singer-songwriter talks about her start in the music business, and how she sold her parents on the idea of a music career as a gateway to social activism.

For more info:


PROGRAM NOTE:
The truth about the Tooth Fairy (Video)
Charles Osgood addresses viewers’ comments over a recent segment in which comedian Jim Gaffigan took issue with the Tooth Fairy, and shares some thoughts for those that may have felt a little discouraged about putting a tooth under their pillow, expecting a surprise.


SUNDAY PROFILE:
Eric Bana: A driven actor | Watch Video
He’s an actor known for his stand-out performances in “Troy,” “The Hulk,” “Star Trek,” and for his new comedy collaboration with Ricky Gervais, “Special Correspondents.” But aside from acting, Eric Bana has another abiding passion: his high-performance cars. Seth Doane heads down under to Australia for an at-home visit with the movie star (and his beloved 1974 Ford X-B Falcon Coupe).

For more info:


HARTMAN:
Crooked cop pairs up with man he framed (Video)
Jameel McGee and former police officer Andrew Collins’ lives became intertwined when Collins put McGee in jail for a crime he didn’t commit. So what happened when the two wound up working in the same place years later? Steve Hartman reports.


SUNDAY PROFILE:
Kathy Bates on her bravest role yet | Watch Video
From “Fried Green Tomatoes” to her Oscar-winning performance in “Misery,” Kathy Bates has long been one of Hollywood’s most versatile actresses. But now she’s struggling with a rare illness and trying to spread the word to help others. Lee Cowan has her harrowing and inspiring story.

For more info:


ON THE TRAIL:
Biscayne National Park | Watch Video
Conor Knighton continues his year-long exploration of our nation’s national park with a tour of Florida’s stunning Biscayne National Park, where most of the scenery is under water.

For more info:


COMMENTARY:
Confessions of an approval junkie | Watch Video
We live in a culture where it’s cool to say, “I don’t care what other people think.” But contributor Faith Salie admits to being an “approval junkie” -- someone who lives for the approval of others. She’s written a new book about this malady, and talks about what it’s like to live off the approval (and disapproval) of others.

READ A BOOK EXCERPT:Faith Salie’s “Approval Junkie”

For more info:


CALENDAR:
Week of April 18 | Watch Video
From tax deadlines to National Look-Alike Day, Charles Osgood takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead.


NATURE:
Yosemite (Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning in Yosemite National Park in California ...amidst towering cliffs and roaring waterfalls. Videographer: Lance Milbrand.


RECAP: APRIL 10, “THE MONEY ISSUE”

Guest Host: Anthony Mason


COVER STORY:
Iceland: Not too big to jail | Watch Video
Unlike in the U.S., prosecutors reacted to the collapse of the nation’s three biggest banks as criminal matters, with nearly 30 bankers convicted so far. Martha Teichner reports.

For more info:


TREASURE:On the hunt with high-tech treasure hunters (Video)
Metal detectors are a must for modern-day treasure hunters. Luke Burbank recently tagged along with a pair of treasure hunters in the Sierra Nevada mountains to see how their efforts are paying off.


YOU DO WHAT?!? #1:
Taking the dog biscuit taste test | Watch Video
At Bocce’s Bakery in New York City, employees happily sample their all-natural, no-preservative, gourmet dog treats. Susan Spencer tries them, too.

For more info:


BREW:
Samuel Adams’ Jim Koch continues to brew success | Watch Video
Today, there are more than 4,000 craft brewers in the United States. But in the 1980s, Jim Koch was a trailblazer when he gave up his corporate job to start the Samuel Adams Brewery in Boston, incorporating his great-great-grandfather’s recipe. Not only has to built his label to one of the country’s most popular beers, he’s also helped entrepreneurs starting up breweries of their own. Serena Altschul reports.

For more info:


SILICON VALLEY:
Skipping school to become tech giants | Watch Video
Five years ago, Peter Thiel, one of the billionaire founders of PayPal, began offering $100,000 to kids who quit college to “build new things.” The Thiel Fellowship distributes the money to 20 new dropouts each year -- and there is no shortage of young people willing to ditch college, or even high school, to get in on the 21st century Gold Rush in Silicon Valley. John Blackstone reports.

For more info:


ADVERTISING:
TV commercial spokespeople tell all (Video)
In today’s highly competitive marketplace an ad exec’s “pitch” needs to be pitch perfect - creating characters that consumers come to know and trust. Nancy Giles reports on the actors who play the characters we take to heart when they’re selling their wares.

GALLERY:10 iconic TV commercial characters
Here are some of the most memorable ad mascots, and the actors who made them immortal.


OPT-IN:
Opting out of that very, very fine print | Watch Video
Faith Salie will tell us whether or not we need to worry about the “fine print” in all those online contracts we click “agree” to just about every day.


YOU DO WHAT?!? #2:
Who ya gonna call? GumBusters, for removal of gum | Watch Video
Anthony Mule’s passion is to vaporize gum stuck on city sidewalks. Susan Spencer of “48 Hours” reports.

For more info:


GEMS:
Living underground in the Australian Outback (Video)
There’s a treasure hunt going on in Coober Pedy, in Australia’s Outback, where opal was discovered a hundred years ago. As much as 80 percent of the world’s opal supply comes from Coober Pedy’s mines.

But with summertime temperatures soaring to 120 degrees, the town features hundreds of “dug out” homes, burrowed into the rock and naturally cooled. Seth Doane explores the underground town, complete with bar, beauty salon, bookstore and hotel.

For more info:


SUNDAY PROFILE:
Hugh Jackman: Changing lives, one cup of coffee at a time | Watch Video
The Tony- and Emmy Award-winning actor, best known for playing the Marvel superhero Wolverine, created Laughing Man Coffee to help fair trade coffee growers. Lee Cowan reports.

For more info:


POSTCARD FROM ITALY:
American house hunters buy up an Italian village (Video)
Hundreds of years after an Italian bumped into America, Americans are now traveling to the tiny Italian village of Guardia Sanframondi, where they are snatching up houses for as little as $15,000 - and the locals are rolling out the welcome mat. Allen Pizzey reports.


COMMENTARY:
Inflation and the Tooth Fairy | Watch Video
Comedian Jim Gaffigan -- who went to school for finance -- questions the lack of agreed-upon exchange value for a child’s tooth.

For more info:


YOU DO WHAT?!? #3:
Human mannequins: The life of a fitting model | Watch Video
Tailor-made for testing Banana Republic’s garment designs, Michael Prata plays dress-up for a living.

For more info:


MONEY MATTERS:
Mellody Hobson: To save money, skip the plastic | Watch Video
Forget the “cashless society”: Financial advisor says limiting yourself to cash expenditures will prevent you from overspending.

For more info:


NATURE:
Bucks in Wyoming (Video)
We end this broadcast of our “Money Issue” with a couple of bucks - male mule deer - and a few females, too, near Wilson, Wyoming. Videographer: Carl Mrozek.


RECAP: APRIL 3

COVER STORY:Megyn Kelly and the question that changed her life forever | Watch Video
Fox News Anchor Megyn Kelly made headlines herself when GOP candidate Donald Trump criticized her during the first GOP presidential debate. Charlie Rose of CBS This Morning sits down with Kelly for a wide-ranging chat about Trump, the election, and her hard-fought rise to the top of cable news.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO:Megyn Kelly on Trump and the “bullying of the press”
In this web exclusive clip, the Fox News anchor reacts to the Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump’s “obsessed” attacks on her, and the news media’s reaction. “It’s not about me,” she tells Charlie Rose.

For more info:


ALMANAC:
The Unabomber | Watch Video
On April 3, 1996, the FBI arrested Theodore Kaczynski, the suspect in a series of mail bombings that killed 3 and wounded nearly two dozen others. Charles Osgood reports.

GENERATIONS:Boomer grandparents play mom and dad part-time (Video)
With the high cost of child care, grandparents are spending more time than ever with their grandkids, pushing a growing number of Baby Boomer grandparents into the child-rearing driver’s seat while mom and dad work. Lesley Stahl of “60 Minutes” reports on the growing role of “granny nannies.”

For more info:


ON THE TRAIL:
Big Bend National Park | Watch Video
Conor Knighton continues his year-long tour of America’s National Parks with a visit to Big Bend National Park in Texas.

For more info:


PASSAGE:
Patty Duke | Watch Video
We remember the actress who illuminated the life of Helen Keller -- and her real-life struggle with bipolar disorder.


MUSIC:
Chris Stapleton: A blazing star | Watch Video
Chris Stapleton is the hottest thing in country music, winning Best Male Vocalist in advance of tonight’s Academy of Country Music Awards ceremony (he’s up for five more ACM Awards). Mark Strassmann catches up with the songwriter who’s composed music for everyone from Adele to Kenny Chesney.

Listen to the title track from the Chris Stapleton album “Traveller”:


For more info:


HARTMAN:
Married couple commit to finding cure for wife’s disease (Video)
When Sonia Vallabh was diagnosed five years ago with a rare, incurable disease, she and her husband decided to take matters into their own hands. The catch: neither of them knew anything about medicine. Steve Hartman explains what happened next.


SUNDAY PROFILE:
Mother and son: Anderson Cooper and Gloria Vanderbilt | Watch Video
The name “Vanderbilt” has long evoked images of America’s golden age. Gloria Vanderbilt made a name for herself in fashion, and her son, Anderson Cooper, has carved his own path as a news anchor. Our Rita Braver sits down with Gloria Vanderbilt and her son Anderson Cooper for a family portrait.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO:Anderson Cooper talks to his mom about sex
In this web exclusive clip, CNN anchor Anderson Cooper and his mother, heiress Gloria Vanderbilt, talk about the difficult conversations they had about her love life. Rita Braver reports.

EXCERPT:”The Rainbow Comes and Goes”
Read the introduction from Gloria Vanderbilt and Anderson Cooper’s touching mother-and-son memoir.

For more info:


ART:
Corita Kent: An overshadowed pop art icon | Watch Video
Faith Salie re-introduces us to one of the most formative American pop-artists of the 1960s and ‘70s.

GALLERY:The pop art of Corita Kent

For more info:


OPINION:
Breaking the unwritten rules, of baseball and politics | Watch Video
N.Y. Times Magazine reporter Mark Leibovich on how the traditions of the playing field and the presidential field are being tested by brash upstarts.


CALENDAR:
Week of April 4 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Charles Osgood reports.


NATURE:
Great Trinity Forest (Extended Web Video)
We leave you this Sunday Morning among the flowers that bloom in spring at Dallas’ Great Trinity Forest. Videographer: Scot Miller.


RECAP: MARCH 27

Guest host: Jane Pauley


COVER STORY:
The real story of the Easter Bunny (Video)
The legacy of the Easter Bunny (or Easter Hare) is rich in history. Martha Teichner hops into a history of the furry holiday tradition, and visits with enthusiasts to take raising rabbits to show-stopping extremes.

For more info:


ALMANAC:
Rolls-Royce | Watch Video
On March 27, 1863, Henry Royce -- who helped found the legendary luxury automaker -- was born. Jane Pauley reports.

GALLERY:Rolls-Royce through the years

For more info:


ART:
Eye candy: The art of jelly beans | Watch Video
Anna Werner meets an artist who loves jelly beans -- as the raw material for making art.

GALLERY:Art made with jelly beans

For more info:


SPECTACLE:The women behind Wrestlemania | Watch Video
The annual “Wrestlemania” has become the Super Bowl of the wrestling world -- an event watched by millions across the country. Rita Braver catches up with Stephanie McMahon and Charlotte Jones Anderson, the women behind the extravaganza.

For more info:


PASSAGE:Preserving audio history with the National Recording Registry (Video)
This past week the Library of Congress announced its latest additions to the National Recording Registry, chosen for preservation because of their cultural, aesthetic or historic significance. Jane Pauley introduces a few of the 25 inductees, including Gloria Gaynor’s disco hit, “I Will Survive,” and a 1911 pop hit, “Let Me Call You Sweetheart.”

AUDIO GALLERY:Additions to the National Recording RegistryListen to excerpts from landmark music and spoken word recordings to be preserved by the Library of Congress.


FOOD:
General Mills at 150 | Watch Video
One hundred and fifty years ago a man named Cadwallader Washburn bought a flour mill that we now know as General Mills. Anthony Mason delves into the archives to tell the delectable tale of the rise of a food giant.

For more info:


HARTMAN:
Ohio boy honored for generosity to U.S. military (Video)
very year, past Medal of Honor recipients get together to recognize civilians who have gone above and beyond the call of duty. One of those Citizen Honors went for the first time to a child -- one who Steve Hartman first met “On The Road” back in 2014.


SUNDAY PROFILE:
The positivity of Joel Osteen | Watch Video
The Houston mega-church pastor’s motivational sermons have made him one of the most-watched preachers on television. Tracy Smith reports.

For more info:


MOVIES:
David Edelstein on “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice” | Watch Video
Our film critic offers his take on the superhero battle bursting into theatres this weekend.

WATCH DAVID EDELSTEIN ANSWER VIEWER QUESTIONS ON HIS LIVE FACEBOOK CHAT!

For more info:


CALENDAR:
Week of March 28 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Jane Pauley reports.


TV:
Jane Pauley gets her close-up with “Madame Secretary” (Video)
Sunday Morning”’s Jane Pauley is no rookie in front of the camera, so it’s no surprise she’s been tapped to show off her acting chops in two television series. She plays herself alongside Bill Murray in the Amazon show, “Alpha House,” and shares the screen with Tea Leoni on “Madame Secretary.”


NATURE:
Geese and goslings (Extended Video)
We leave you on Easter Sunday in the company of geese and their goslings at Los Gatos Creek Park n California’s Silicon Valley. Videographer: Lance Milbrand.


RECAP: MARCH 20

Guest host: Mo Rocca


COVER STORY:
Gawker and testing the limits of free speech | Watch Video
Nick Denton’s Internet media company found success by feeding on sensational stories and celebrity - but the trial over a Hulk Hogan sex tape has put Gawker on the ropes

For more info:


ALMANAC:
The Scarsdale Diet Doctor murder trial | Watch Video
On March 20, 1981, the verdict came in for headmistress Jean Harris, regarding the death of Dr. Herman Tarnower. Mo Rocca reports.


ART:
Reappraising the art of Norman Lewis | Watch Video
A Philadelphia museum mounts the first major retrospective of the African-American abstract expressionist artist, a key figure of the Harlem Renaissance. Jim Axelrod reports.

GALLERY:Abstract artist Norman Lewis

For more info:


ON BROADWAY:
Steve Martin and Edie Brickell: Behind the scenes of “Bright Star” | Watch Video
The new musical Bright Star,” opening in New York City this week, is in part about a young man on the brink of discovering his own surprising history. And the people who wrote the musical are bright stars themselves. Rita Braver reports.

For more info:


PASSAGE:
International Day of Happiness | Watch Video
Echoing our Declaration of Independence, the U.N. General Assembly resolution proclaims “the pursuit of happiness is a fundamental human goal.” Mo Rocca reports.


ON THE TRAIL:
Everglades National Park | Watch Video
More than 1.5 million acres in size, Florida’s unique ecosystem in the only place in the world where crocodiles and alligators co-exist. Conor Knighton continues his year-long exploration of America’s National Parks.

CHAT:Watch Conor Knighton’s Facebook chat answering viewers’ questions about the “On The Trail” series

For more info:

MO ROCCA:A tour of the CBS Broadcast Center (Video)
Mo Rocca gives our viewers a tour of the “Sunday Morning” studio, and the storied CBS Broadcast Center, where there are secrets deep beneath the streets of Manhattan.


HARTMAN:
Patient and nurse (Video)
Lynn Bartos has been a nurse at the Froedtert Hospital in Milwaukee for the past 44 years. However, after developing an illness, she became a patient in the hospital, and is being treated by a former patient. Steve Hartman has more.


SUNDAY PROFILE:
Gwen Stefani: Writing from the heart | Watch Video
In her new album, “This Is What the Truth Feels Like,” the singer-songwriter -- shattered by a broken marriage -- overcame writer’s block to create deeply personal songs of pain and a new-found love. Lee Cowan reports.

PREVIEW:Music got me through heartbreak of broken marriage

For more info:


COMMENTARY:
The vast divide between America and its military | Watch Video
Veteran Michael Gallagher says as a nation we cheer candidates promising military actions -- as long as they involve others’ sons and daughters.


CALENDAR:
Week of March 21 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Mo Rocca reports.


ADDENDUM:
Updates from “Sunday Morning” (Video)Mo Rocco offers viewers the latest news on Charles Osgood’s knee replacement surgery, and a special honor for Bill Geist.


NATURE:
Spring’s arrival at Yellowstone (Extended Video)We leave you this first day of spring at our oldest National Park, Yellowstone, where the ice on Yellowstone Lake is breaking up ... an ice-out, they call it. Videographer: Judith Lehmberg.


RECAP: MARCH 13, “GUNS AND AMERICA”

This special broadcast of “Sunday Morning” looks at all aspects of the debate over our nation’s gun culture, from the traditions of gun ownership to the victims of violence; from our Second Amendment rights to the fastest-growing demographic taking up firearms - women.

Guest Host: Lee Cowan

CBS NEWS POLL:Will gun violence increase in the next decade?


COVER STORY:
How guns became a part of American culture | Watch Video
No other developed country embraces firearms the way the U.S. does, but how did the mystique over firearms become part of our cultural DNA? Lee Cowan reports.

For more info:


ACTIVISM:
Can “good guys with guns” stop gun violence? | Watch Video
While activists push for stronger gun control laws, the NRA says more well-armed citizens can protect themselves and stop criminals. Rita Braver reports.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO:Q&A: Gun rights advocate Sandy FromanIn a rare interview, National Rifle Association board member and past president Sandy Froman explains the organization’s opposition to many proposed gun control laws.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO:Q&A: Gun control advocate Colin GoddardIn 2007, Colin Goddard was in a French class at Virginia Tech when a gunman opened fire; he was shot four times but survived. He’s now a senior policy advocate for Everytown for Gun Safety pushing for stronger gun control laws.

For more info:


LAW:Parsing the Second Amendment | Watch Video
Constitutional scholars and the Supreme Court have weighed in on the Bill of Rights, but there appears to be no finality to an individual’s right to keep and bear arms. Anthony Mason reports.

For more info:


GUN OWNERS:
Girls with guns | Watch Video
More women than ever are taking up arms, and for some the shooting range is the new knitting circle. Tracy Smith reports.

For more info:

TECHNOLOGY:Stopping bullets dead | Watch Video
The quest to make cars and garments bullet-resistant has come a long way since a Chicago priest invented the first bullet-proof vest. Serena Altschul reports.

For more info:


CHICAGO:Urban Warriors: Stemming the tide of street violence | Watch Video
Eddie Bocanegra, who heads up a youth program called Urban Warriors, is determined to help Chicago teenagers build a bright future by using lessons from his own dark past. Michelle Miller reports.

For more info:


MILITARY:
The M4: The Marines’ new weapon of choice | Watch Video
A weapon is only as good as the Marine using it ... and members of the Marine Corps take their guns very seriously. David Martin reports.

For more info:


FALLOUT:The other victim of an accidental shooting | Watch Video
Sean Smith was 10 years old in 1989 when he found the gun his father had stashed in his dresser drawer. Thinking it was a toy, Sean played with it, accidentally killing his younger sister, Erin.

Martha Teichner talks with Sean, who describes what it took for him to finally, years later, forgive himself for her death.

For more info:


TRADITION:
Guns: A family affair | Watch Video
In Cody, Wyoming, shooting is a community tradition passed down through bloodlines. Ted Koppel reports.

For more info:


AUSTRALIA:
How Australia dealt with mass shootings | Watch Video
Twenty years ago, a mass shooting in Port Arthur, Australia that left 35 people dead prompted the country’s conservative prime minister to push through sweeping gun control legislation that would be unthinkable in America today: it banned the sale and import of all automatic and semi-automatic rifles; mandated a 28-day waiting period on all firearm purchases; and initiated a massive government buyback of guns.

The upshot: There has not been another mass shooting since, and gun homicides are down nearly 60 percent.

Seth Doane reports on Australia’s response to mass murder.


SURVIVORS:
After a shooting, turning grief into action | Watch Video
TV journalist Alison Parker was doing a live report in Roanoke, Va., last August 29, when she and her cameraman, Adam Ward, were shot and killed by a disturbed former colleague, who later took his own life.

Like parents of other shooting victims, Alison’s mother and father immediately changed the course of their lives, and are now taking on the NRA in advocating for stronger gun control legislation. Erin Moriarty reports.

WEB EXTRA VIDEO:A gun violence survivor’s missionNews anchor Chris Hurst, boyfriend of TV journalist Alison Parker (who with her cameraman, Adam Ward, was shot to death on air in Roanoke, Va., last year), tells correspondent Erin Moriarty about Parker, and what he sees as his duty to her following her murder. Moriarty reports on the aftermath of the Parker-Ward deaths in a special broadcast of “Sunday Morning,” called “Guns and America.”

For more info:


NATURE:Antelope Canyon (Extended Video)We leave you this Sunday morning with the quiet landscape of Antelope Canyon, Arizona. Videographer: Jamie McDonald.


RECAP: MARCH 6

Guest Host: Lee Cowan


COVER STORY:
Anticipating the next mega-quake | Watch Video
Seismologists say the Pacific Northwest is overdue for a devastating earthquake and tsunami that could kill tens of thousands (under the best-case scenario), but only some communities are preparing. Don Dahler reports.

For more info:


ALMANAC:
The Weather Underground blast | Watch Video
On March 6, 1970, a bomb-making terror group accidentally blew up a townhouse in New York’s Greenwich Village. Lee Cowan reports.

For more info:


ART:
Jackson Pollock’s black period
A rare exhibition at the Dallas Museum of Art focuses on a little-known series of paintings by the abstract artist. Rita Braver reports.

GALLERY:The art of Jackson Pollock

For more info:


INTRODUCING:
Meghan Trainor: More than just the bass | Watch Video
Tracy Smith visits with this year’s Grammy-winner for Best New Artist.

PREVIEW:Meghan Trainor: I believed I had the talent for stardom, but not the right look

For more info:


BILL GEIST:
Salt & pepper shaker collectors add spice to life | Watch Video
Normal is “boring,” when normal means NOT amassing thousands of novelty salt & pepper shakers.

For more info:

PASSAGE:Three oversized talents | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” remembers a trio of personalities who passed away this past week: Academy Award-winning actor George Kennedy, tennis commentator Bud Collins, and bestselling author Pat Conroy.

ON THE TRAIL:Hot Springs National Park | Watch Video
First protected by President Andrew Jackson for its therapeutic waters, the Arkansas landmark known as the “Valley of the Vapors” today serves up history (and beer). Conor Knighton continues his series exploring America’s National Parks with a visit to the Great Indoors.

For more info:

HARTMAN:Rancher’s vegan wife sets out to save cattle (Video)What good is a cow to a cattle rancher if it can’t eventually be eaten? Tommy Sonnen found himself with this problem after his wife came out as vegan. Steve Hartman went to find out what happened next.


SUNDAY PROFILE:
Holly Hunter: Portraying lives less ordinary | Watch Video
Jane Pauley sits down with the Oscar-winning actress, who meet up with one of the inspirations for Hunter’s character in “Broadcast News,” veteran CBS news producer Susan Zirinsky.

GALLERY:Holly Hunter

For more info:


OPINION:
Death by selfie | Watch Video
Commentator Faith Salie says our willingness to capture ourselves on camera in all situations (including accidental deaths) means we are killing our experience of life.

For more info:


CALENDAR:
Week of March 7 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Lee Cowan reports.


NATURE:
Grand Teton National Park (Extended Video)We leave you this Sunday in Nature’s winter wonderland, amid a display of snow-capped mountains at Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming. Videographer: Scott Miller.

RECAP: February 28, The Oscar Issue

Guest Host: Jane Pauley

COVER STORY:Reel life: When movies are “based on a true story” | Watch Video
This year a particularly large number of Oscar-nominated films are to some extent based on real people and events, from “Spotlight,” “The Big Short,” “Bridge of Spies,” and “The Revenant,” to “Joy,” “The Danish Girl,” “Steve Jobs,” “Trumbo” and “Straight Outta Compton,” history has long provided filmmakers with some of their best material.

But how “true” are these supposedly true stories? Martha Teichner has a reality check.


MILEPOST:
Leap Year Day | Watch Video
Jane Pauley with the history of why get an extra day every four years -- sometimes.


ONLINE:
The man behind IMDb | Watch Video
Elizabeth Palmer introduces us to the man behind the Internet Movie Database -- the go-to place for everything you ever wanted to know about the movies.

For more info:


BY THE NUMBERS:
Oscar swag bag | Watch Video
We’ll take a peek inside this year’s $230,000 gift bag to Oscar nominees.


THE ENVELOPE, PLEASE...”:
Saoirse Ronan is in “a bit of a dream” | Watch Video
The experience of an Irish immigrant coming to America and finding love, as told in the film “Brooklyn,” is surely a story millions can relate to. The film has been nominated for three Oscars, including Best Picture, and Saoirse Ronan -- stunning as a young Irish girl torn between two countries and two loves -- is up for Best Actress. It’s a role the 21-year-old has been preparing for all her life, from “Atonement” to “The Lovely Bones,” to now, on Broadway, “The Crucible.”

Jane Pauley catches up with the very talented Ronan -- and you’ll even learn how to properly pronounce her name!

WEB EXTRA VIDEO:Saoirse Ronan runs lines with Jane Pauley
The Academy Award-nominated star of “Brooklyn,” preparing to make her Broadway debut in Arthur Miller’s “The Crucible,” runs through a scene with the help of correspondent Jane Pauley (who acts out all the other parts).

For more info:


COMING ATTRACTIONS:
The art of movie trailers | Watch Video
When you go to the movies, before the feature film even begins, audiences are treated to (or subjected to!) a long line of movie trailers. They’re teasers designed to make you want to buy a ticket to ANOTHER movie, and so the studios try to pack a lot of plot into a short time span. But some say they pack in too much -- a common refrain is, “Well, now we don’t have to see THAT film, we’ve already seen it!”

Lee Cowan goes behind the scenes on the production of trailers to see what goes into making these mini-movies.

GALLERY:Watch: 15 great movie trailersHere are some of the MOST INNOVATIVE! UNFORGETTABLE! examples of Hollywood’s coming attractions!

CBS NEWS POLL:Do movie trailers work?

For more info:


HARTMAN:
A girl and her duck (Video)A 5-year-old in Maine has an inseparable bond with her duck. Not a toy duck -- a real, live duck. She believes she is the duck’s mom, and vice versa. Steve Hartman went “On the Road” to meet this dynamic duck duo.


SUNDAY PROFILE:
Elton John celebrates his wonderful life with song | Watch Video
Sir Elton won an Oscar back in 1994 for his work on “The Lion King,” and along with his golden statue he’s won just about every other award there is. But beyond nominations, Sir Elton has a central role in the Oscars: his swanky, star-studded Oscar party, benefiting his AIDS Foundation, is one of the hottest tickets in Hollywood.

Anthony Mason pays a visit to talk about Oscars, music and more.

For more info:


OPINION:
Tavis Smiley: Hollywood is getting it wrong

|

Watch Video

The host and commentator reflects on the lack of diversity in this year’s Oscar nominations.

For more info:


MOVIES:
For Robert Osborne, movies are life, only better | Watch Video
Mo Rocca catches up with a man every film buff is familiar with: the actor, historian, and host of Turner Classic Movies, who looks back on a life in film.

For more info:


OSCARS:
David Edelstein’s Oscar picks | Watch Video
Our film critic handicaps this year’s Academy Award race.


NATURE:
Death Valley flowers (Extended Video)
We leave you this Oscar Sunday well outside Hollywood, in California’s Death Valley, livened up by what’s known as a “Super Bloom” of flowers. Videographer: Derek Reich.


RECAP: February 21

HEADLINES:Donald Trump starts a winning streak (Video)Donald Trump secured back-to-back primary wins with his Republican victory in South Carolina, while Jeb Bush’s bid for the nomination came to an end. Major Garrett has a report on what’s up next on the campaign trail.


COVER STORY:Dying wish: Arguing the right to die | Watch Video
Last year California became the fifth state in the nation to legalize physician-assisted suicide, and across the country the movement is gaining momentum. A recent Gallup poll shows nearly 7 in 10 Americans support laws giving terminally-ill individuals more say over how, and when, to end their own lives.

The right-to-die movement has come a long way since Dr. Jack Kevorkian first made headlines and went to jail for his actions. Rita Braver reports on the ongoing efforts of the movement, and why some activists oppose making such end-of-life actions legal.

For more info:


ALMANAC:
The burglar alarm | Watch Video
On February 21, 1858, Edwin Holmes of Boston installed the very first electrical device to warn of intruders. Charles Osgood reports.

For more info:

  • Photo courtesy of Stanley and Susan Oppenheim Revocable Trust


LITERATURE:
A celebration of fake books (Video)A first-of-its-kind exhibit in New York City is drawing crowds of book enthusiasts. Ironically, none of the books featured are real. People who judge these so-called “Blooks” by their covers will have a surprise in store when they discover what’s inside these rare, novelty items. Lee Cowan reports.

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HUMOR:B.J. Novak on the comical voices in his head | Watch Video
For the millions of fans of the hit TV comedy, “The Office,” B.J. Novak will forever be remembered for his hilarious portrayal of Ryan the Temp. What many may not know is that Novak also served as a writer for that show, as well as an executive producer and occasional director. The multi-talented Novak has also appeared in such feature films as Quentin Tarantino’s “Inglourious Basterds” with Brad Pitt, and “Saving Mr. Banks” with Tom Hanks.

Now Novak has found success as an author, including of a bestselling book that has both children and their parents laughing out loud. Ben Tracy catches up with the very funny, and very busy, Novak.

For more info:


PASSAGE:
A remembrance of Harper Lee | Watch Video
The acclaimed author of “To Kill a Mockingbird” died this week at the age of 89. Anna Werner reports.

For more info:


POSTCARD FROM NAGANO:
Japan’s snow monkeys in the viewfinder | Watch Video
Photography buffs travel to the steaming hot springs of Nagano, where macaques bask in the warm baths. Seth Doane reports.

For more info:


HARTMAN:
11-year-old throws “Thank You” party for police (Video)A young boy in Michigan helped coordinate an appreciation event for his heroes: the men in blue. Steve Hartman went to the party, where more than 250 showed up to support their police officers - and to say “thank you” to their young fan.


THE ENVELOPE, PLEASE...:Jennifer Jason Leigh looks ahead | Watch Video
Jennifer Jason Leigh began her career as a child actor in the 1970s, and made her first big splash in “Fast Times at Ridgemont High.” But Hollywood was in her blood from the very start; her mother, Barbara Turner, is a screenwriter, and her father is the late actor Vic Morrow. After her breakthrough, Leigh appeared in a string of films, including “Last Exit to Brooklyn,” “Miami Blues,” “Backdraft” and “Road to Perdition.”

This year she received critical acclaim for her vocal performance in the stop-motion animated feature, “Anomalisa,” and an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress for Quentin Tarantino’s “The Hateful Eight.” Tracy Smith catches up with Leigh for a wide-ranging chat about growing up and making it in Hollywood.

For more info:


ON THE TRAIL:Mammoth Cave National Park (Video)Conor Knighton continues a year-long celebration of National Park Service’s 100th birthday with a trip underground, to Mammoth Cave National Park, Kentucky’s massive cave system with an unusual history.

For more info:


INTELLIGENCE:Former intel head Michael Hayden on stealing others’ secrets | Watch Video
When it comes to our nation’s top secrets, few people know more of them than Michael Hayden. A retired Air Force four-star general, Hayden is a former director of the National Security Agency, as well as former Director of the CIA. As director of the NSA, Hayden oversaw the controversial surveillance of telephone communications between people in the U.S. and alleged foreign terrorist groups, leading to a huge public outcry.

Hayden sits down with CBS News national security correspondent David Martin for an inside look at America’s most secretive organizations.


CALENDAR:
Week of February 22 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Charles Osgood reports.

NATURE:N.J. Pine Barrens (Extended Video)We leave you this “Sunday Morning” in the mid-winter snows of the New Jersey Pine Barrens. Videographer: Jeff Reisly.

ACADEMY AWARDS:Watch Oscar-nominated documentaries online
A guide to viewing non-fiction features vying for this year’s Academy Award via streaming, VOD.


CBS NEWS POLL:
Should U.S. Presidents be “Natural Born”?While there is disagreement over the definition of “natural born” citizen, there is huge agreement over whether naturalized citizens should be allowed to serve in the Oval Office.


RECAP: FEBRUARY 14


HEADLINES:
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia dies (Video)Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia died Saturday at the age of 79. His passing marks the end of a remarkable career, and it portends a contentious fight to replace him. Martha Teichner reports.

GALLERY:Antonin Scalia 1936-2016


COVER STORY:
The polar bear capital of the world | Watch Video
The tiny town of Churchill, Manitoba, is a forbidding frozen expanse. But this frontier town is also where thousands of tourists flock to every year to get up-close-and-personal with the magnificent polar bear.

As the bears wait on land for the ice to freeze over and allow then to hunt for the seals and fish they need to survive, scientists and nature photographers alike gather to study and photograph these amazing creatures. Our Lee Cowan made the chilly trek up North to tell the story.

GALLERY:A gathering of polar bears

For more info:


WEB EXCLUSIVE:Almanac: Jack Benny
On February 14, 1894, the comedian beloved for playing a comically petty miser was born. Charles Osgood reports.

For more info:


MO ROCCA:
First families: A reunion of presidential relatives | Watch Video
The Missouri Cherry Blossom Festival has become an annual meeting place for progeny of our nation’s chief executives.

For more info:


ON THE RECORD:
Chris Isaak sings his heart out | Watch Video
In 1990 Chris Isaak had a huge hit with “Wicked Game.” It was the heyday of MTV, and the music video - depicting a bare-chested Isaak rolling in the Hawaiian surf with stunning model Helena Christensen - became a sensation.

How he became a music sensation is a story in itself: the son of a blue-collar worker, Isaak was high school class president and a boxer who merged his rugged, tough-guy appeal with sultry, smoky love songs. Tracy Smith catches up with the always fascinating crooner.

For more info:


OPINION:
Paul Reiser on “irritating” Valentine’s Day | Watch Video
The comedian, author and stars of “Mad About You” gives his thoughts on the romantic holiday.

For more info:


VALENTINE’S DAY:
XOXO: Is writing love letters a lost art? | Watch Video
Romantic messages may not die out as long as there are romantics, but text messaging and email are definitely game-changers. Serena Altschul reports.

For more info:

  • ”Love Letters” starring Ryan O’Neal and Ali MacGraw - Tour dates and tickets (Hartford, Conn., Feb. 14; Fort Myers, Fla., Feb. 23-28; Dallas, March 22-April 3; Detroit, April 12-17; Buffalo, N.Y., May 11-22; and Baltimore, June 7-12.


STEVE HARTMAN:
One man’s museum of love (Video)We celebrate love in any number of ways. Steve Hartman travels to Starkville, Mississippi, where retired mail carrier Charles Evans has built a museum devoted to love.


SUNDAY PROFILE:
The tenacious Diane Warren and Lady Gaga | Watch Video
Speaking of hits, even if you don’t know the name Diane Warren, chances are you know the words to some of her songs by heart! Warren has written 57 songs that were top 10 hits, including “How Do I Live Without You,” “Unbreak My Heart”, Aerosmith’s “I Don’t Want to Miss A Thing,” and Cher’s “If I Could Turn Back Time.”

She has 12 Grammy nominations, and nine Academy Award nominations for Best Original Song, including one this year for “’Til it Happens to You,” sung by none other than Lady Gaga. Ben Tracy sits down with Warren and Gaga to talk about their song, and the long road that brought these two music powerhouses together.

For more info:


VALENTINE’S DAY:
Eat your heart out with these sexy desserts (Video)Could dessert possibly be better than sex? Anna Werner has visited a couple whose Key West, Florida restaurant answers that question.

RECIPE:Sex Addict (White Chocolate & Strawberry Bread Pudding)

For more info:


MOVIES:
Three classic romantic films for Valentine’s Day | Watch Video
Critic David Edelstein suggests three films about having to jump through a lot of hoops to learn the meaning of love.

GALLERY:Passions and longingsTo celebrate Valentine’s Day, a collection of images from memorable romantic films.


WEB EXCLUSIVE:Calendar: Week of February 15
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Charles Osgood reports.


NATURE:
Preening wild turkeys (Video)
On this Valentine’s Day, “Sunday Morning” visits Pinnacles National Park in California, where wild male turkeys are looking for love.


RECAP: FEBRUARY 7


HEADLINES: Kim Jong Un orders rocket launch (Video)
Defying international warnings, North Korea has launched a long-range rocket. Jonathan Vigliotti reports from London.

COVER STORY: What drives die-hard sports fans? | Watch VideoFor these football fanatics, their tribal instincts (and the rising or falling fortunes of their teams) can spell winning biological benefits, or depressive psychological problems, Susan Spencer reports.

For more info:


CBS NEWS POLL: 
Obsessive sports fans


ALMANAC: 
The inventor of the Taser | Watch Video
On February 7, 2009, aerospace scientist Jack Cover, whose sci-fi-inspired weapon used electricity to incapacitate the target, died at age 88. Charles Osgood reports.


ADVERTISING:
The making of a Super Bowl commercial | Watch Video
Multi-million-dollar ad agencies and aspiring filmmakers alike are major players in advertising’s biggest night. Anna Werner reports.

For more info:


THE ENVELOPE, PLEASE...:
”Spotlight” director Tom McCarthy’s investigative reporting | Watch Video
Lesley Stahl of “60 Minutes” goes behind the scenes of “Spotlight” with the film’s visionary director and co-writer Tom McCarthy.

For more info:


ON THE TRAIL:
Maine’s Acadia National Park | Watch Video
In March of 1872, Yellowstone National Park became the world’s first National Park. More parks and monuments followed, and in 1916 the National Park Service was created. This year our nation celebrates 100 years of what some call “America’s best idea.”

To honor this milestone we are sending our contributor Conor Knighton on an amazing cross-country journey: He’ll visit each of the 59 National Parks, and report to us on a regular basis throughout the year. This week he begins his travels at Acadia National Park in Maine.

For more info:


POSTCARD FROM JAPAN: 
Bowled over by high-tech toilets (Video)Japan is known for robots, sushi and cherry blossoms. But there’s a new attraction: a futuristic museum devoted to high-tech toilets. Seth Doane visits the Toto Museum, and the factory of Japan’s largest toilet manufacturer, to learn about the latest in commode design.

For more info:


STEVE HARTMAN: 
Life lessons from a Super Bowl coach (Video)A Carolina Panthers coach gave “Sunday Morning” a peek into his playbook for dealing with whatever life throws at you. Steve Hartman reports on the guide to life one coach is giving his players.


ON BROADWAY: 
Jeff Daniels: Almost everywhere, and now on Broadway | Watch VideoThe actor who’s shined in recent films “The Martian” and “Steve Jobs” now stars on stage alongside Michelle Williams in “Blackbird.” Anthony Mason heads to the Great White Way for a chat.

For more info:


MO ROCCA:
Broncos vs. Panthers: Which would win nature’s Super Bowl? (Video)One has stamina and agility, the other speed and claws. Who would come out on top in a contest between broncos and panthers? Mo Rocca checks in with the experts.


VIRAL VIDEO:
Speaking about the TED effect | Watch Video
Videos from the Technology, Entertainment and Design Conference are viral favorites -- and their influence has spread beyond the ideas being shared. David Pogue reports.

For more info:


TAKE NOTE: 
SS United States & Maurice White | Watch Video
News this week of a legend of the sea, and a legend of music. Charles Osgood reports.


SUPER BOWL 50: 
Big Game preview (Video)
James Brown, Boomer, Dan Marino and the gang from CBS Sports give us their insight into this year’s NFL championship matchup.

For more info:


NATURE:
California’s Moss Landing State Beach (Extended Video)
We leave you this Super Bowl Sunday a few miles south of the big game, at California’s Moss Landing State Beach. No Panthers and Broncos here ... just sea lions, otters and pelicans.


WEB EXCLUSIVE:

CALENDAR:Week of February 8
From Chinese New Year to a Jimi Hendrix milestone, “Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead.


RECAP: JANUARY 31


COVER STORY: 
The downsides of cheap oil | Watch VideoWhat’s the economic fallout when the world pumps a million and a half more barrels of oil a day than it needs? Martha Teichner explains.

For more info:


ALMANAC: 
A chimpanzee in space | Watch Video
On January 31, 1961, Ham the chimp rode a Mercury capsule into sub-orbit. Charles Osgood reports.


CAMPAIGN 2016: 
The truth behind fake political ads | Watch Video
Represent Us, a grassroots organization with a bogus presidential candidate, wants YOU to help fight the influence of money in politics. Dean Reynolds reports.

For more info:

WORTH NOTING: Barbie gets a makeover (Video)More than a half-century after the Barbie doll’s slim-and-trim debut, toymaker Mattel says it’s now about to offer the doll in three additional new body types: curvy, tall and petite, and in seven different skin tones, in response to criticism that the original Barbie doesn’t look like a lot of little girls these days. Charles Osgood reports.


TV: 
Samantha Bee joins the late-night boys’ club | Watch VideoThe “Daily Show” veteran brings a rare dose of estrogen to the TV landscape with her new satirical series, “Full Frontal.” Serena Altschul reports.

For more info:


PASSAGE: 
Buddy Cianci and Abe Vigoda | Watch Video
We mourn the loss of the R.I. politician, and the “Godfather” actor who cheerfully, and hilariously, refuted years of death rumors. Charles Osgood reports.


TV: 
Why Bob Odenkirk answered the call | Watch VideoThe writer-comedian, who vaulted from improv comedy and sketches to “Breaking Bad” and its spin-off, “Better Call Saul,” muses, “There’s a real actor somewhere who is not working.” Lee Cowan reports.

For more info:


HOLIDAY: 
The history of Groundhog Day (Video)
Charles Osgood offers the story of how a holiday marking the coming of Spring, featuring a hibernating animal, first made its appearance, and how often the prognosticating Punxsutawney Phil gets it right.


STEVE HARTMAN: 
Runaway groundhog leaves Wis. town looking for replacement (Video)
When you think of Groundhog Day, most Americans don’t think of Sun Prairie, Wisconsin. There’s as much passion for the holiday there as in Punxsutawney, Pa., but in this town, finding a groundhog for the festive day is a lot harder than you would think. Steve Hartman reports.

For more info:


MUSIC: 
Coldplay in the adventure of a lifetime | Watch VideoThe British alt rock group -- the best-selling band of this century -- prepares for its biggest gig ever: The halftime show of Super Bowl 50. Anthony Mason goes backstage.

For more info:

OPINION: Faith Salie: On a first-name basis | Watch Video
Titles like Mr. or Mrs. used to mean you had come of age, but now suggest you are out-of-step with an increasingly informal society.


CAMPAIGN 2016: 
Old rules no longer apply (Video)With just one day to go until the Iowa caucuses, CBS News chief White House correspondent Major Garrett, who has been tracking the presidential campaigns from the very start, reports on how this year’s race for the Oval Office continues to confound expectations.


CALENDAR: 
Week of February 1 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Charles Osgood reports.


NATURE: 
Blue sharks (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday swimming among blue sharks off the coast of Rhode Island. Videographer: Mauricio Handler.


RECAP: JANUARY 24


HEADLINES: 
Reports from along the East Coast

Massive winter storm slams Big Apple (Video) A huge blizzard shut down most of the Northeast this weekend, closing New York City to drivers. Marlie Hall has the latest on the storm’s aftermath.

More than two feet of snow blanket D.C. (Video) More than 30 inches of snow piled up in the nation’s capital and surrounding areas during the first blizzard of 2016. The region surpassed its yearly snowfall average in one day. Kris Van Cleave reports.

Winter Nor’Easter puts Jersey shore residents in peril (Video) The storm has passed, but New Jersey officials still don’t know the effects of the first blizzard in 2016. The winter storm, which produced high tides along with strong winds, put hundreds of homes at risk of flooding in south Jersey and caused power outages in 45,000 homes. Jerricka Duncan reports.


COVER STORY: 
Addressing football’s culture of violence
As the star running back for the Dallas Cowboys for 11 years, Tony Dorsett was unstoppable - one of the fastest, most talented, most graceful players ever to take the field. But after he retired, Dorsett began to struggle in his daily life with memory loss and anger issues at home. He was diagnosed with CTE -- Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy, the result, he says, of years of brutal hits on the gridiron.

Mo Rocca heads to San Antonio, Texas, to talk with Dorsett about his off-the-field struggles, and also with fellow football legend Archie Manning (father of Eli and Peyton Manning) about the brutal sport they both love, and what the league is doing to protect its players.

For more info:


ALMANAC: 
The Macintosh | Watch Video
On January 24, 1984, Apple founder Steve Jobs introduced the company’s revolutionary personal computer. Charles Osgood reports.

For more info:


AVIATION: 
Flying high: Remembering Pan Am (Video)It was an aviation pioneer, and became a symbol of America during the Golden Age of air travel. But while Pan Am no longer flies the friendly skies, many of the women who proudly wore the Pan Am uniform talked with Connor Knighton about the glory days - when flying was glamorous, complete with gourmet food on board.

GALLERY: Pan Am: An aviation trailblazer

For more info:


THE ENVELOPE, PLEASE...: 
The resurgent Charlotte Rampling | Watch VideoAlmost 70, the actress -- nominated for an Oscar for “45 Years” -- has moved beyond the paralysis of depression. Anthony Mason talks with Rampling about her remarkable career.

For more info:

PSA: Organ donation
Here’s a government statistic worth noting: Nearly 122,000 Americans are on the waiting list for an organ donation.

Also worth noting: this Public Service Announcement, from Argentina, which makes the best case we’ve ever seen for adding your name to the donor list:

For more info:


STEVE HARTMAN: 
Recipe for a perfect love story (Video)Until recently, Tim Harris, of Albuquerque, New Mexico, was the only restaurant owner in the country with Down syndrome. But what drives a restaurateur who has lived for his business to close up shop? A girl he loves more than anything. Steve Hartman reports.


Q&A: 
President Obama looks back upon his presidency, and beyond | Watch Video
One year from now his successor will be moving into the White House, and with the clock ticking President Barack Obama visited Detroit this week, where he sat down with Lee Cowan for a wide-ranging chat about the economy, his regrets, and what he’ll miss LEAST about being President.

For more info:

ART: The tragedy of avant garde artist Ernst Kirchner | Watch Video
The German painter who was a pioneer of Expressionism was also a victim of Nazi attacks on Modern Art. Margaret Brennan reports.

GALLERY: Expressionist master Ernst Kirchner

For more info:


OPINION: 
Do away with Constitution’s “natural born citizen” clause | Watch Video
Scott Simon, the host of NPR’s “Weekend Edition,” says the Constitution is preventing many of our most talented citizens from serving as president.

For more info:


CALENDAR: 
Week of January 25 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Charles Osgood reports.


NATURE: 
North Dakota winter (Video) We leave you this Sunday in frosty Lansford, North Dakota. Videographer: Jim Olson.



RECAP: JANUARY 17

HEADLINES: Nuclear agreement moves U.S.-Iran relations into new era (Video) The landmark accord governing Iran’s nuclear program took effect this weekend. Charlie D’Agata reports on the latest developments.

HEADLINES: Iran completes prisoner swap with U.S. (Video) The United States and Iran began a new chapter of international relations Saturday following the implementation of a landmark agreement, part of which called for the release of five Americans held prisoner in Tehran. Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian was one of the five. Elizabeth Palmer has the latest.


ALMANAC: 
Mack Sennett | Watch Video
On January 17, 1880, the pioneering producer of slapstick comedies was born. Charles Osgood reports.


COVER STORY: 
Digging for seeds of truth in GMO debate | Watch VideoGenetically-modified plants can be a boon to farmers (and corporations), but skeptical consumers want more answers about food safety. Barry Petersen looks into this food fight.

For more info:


MUSIC: 
Chanting monks become bestselling recording artists (Video) The sound of Gregorian chants filled the valley and town of Norcia, Italy, until 1810. That’s when the 9th century Basilica went silent because of laws imposed on the monks under the new Napoleonic code. It took several hundred years, but an American has brought music back to this sacred place in Italy - and music lovers around the world have responded. Allen Pizzey reports.

For more info:


ART: 
The marvelous life of Stan LeeThe 93-year-old creator of such superheroes as Spider-Man, The Avengers and The Fantastic Four is a superhero himself to legions of comic book fans. Lee Cowan visits.

For more info:


CONFECTIONS: 
Aussie cake decorators hit the Big Apple (Video) A crew of cake aficionados recently made a sweet trip to New York City. Traveling from Down Under, the Australian Cake Decorating Network -- lovers of beautifully-crafted baked goods -- embarked on a three-day cake crawl, meeting stars of the confectionery firmament. Martha Teichner tagged along.

For more info:


STEVE HARTMAN: Fallen K-9 cop honored by hundreds (Video)When police officer Ryan Davis lost his partner, Jethro, in the line of duty, it left a huge hole; his partner also doubled as the beloved family dog. The city of Canton, Ohio, tried its best to fill that hole this week, and Steve Hartman was there.


SUNDAY PROFILE: 
Thank heaven for Leslie Caron | Watch Video
She began her career as a ballet dancer, but Leslie Caron’s life changed forever when Gene Kelly saw her perform, and cast her in “An American in Paris.” Caron went on to dance opposite Fred Astaire in “Daddy Long Legs,” and became a sensation opposite Maurice Chevalier and Louis Jourdan in “Gigi.”

“An American in Paris” is now a hit on the Broadway stage, where our Jane Pauley went recently for an intimate chat with the film legend.

GALLERY: Leslie Caron

WEB EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: How Leslie Caron rebelled against movie studio hairdressers An ingénue plucked for stardom in the 1951 classic, “An American in Paris,” French actress Leslie Caron was adamant that she not look like the typically-coiffed Hollywood starlets of the day. In this web extra, she tells correspondent Jane Pauley about how she took matters (and a pair of scissors) into her own hands.

For more info:


BILL GEIST: Ode to Joy | Watch Video
Joy Mangano always had a genius for invention. As a teenager working at an animal shelter, she came up with the idea of glow-in-the-dark flea collars to keep pets safe at night. That was just the beginning of a string of hit products. The true miracle happened when she invented the “Miracle Mop,” which sold millions.

Now her rags-to-riches story has gone Hollywood, with none other than Jennifer Lawrence in the starring role. Bill Geist pays Mangano an at-home visit to hear her amazing story - and to try out her inventions.

For more info:


PASSAGE: The artistry of David Bowie | Watch Video
Bill Flanagan on the most influential post-’60s figure in rock music.

GALLERY: A David Bowie discographyAn exploration of studio and live albums by the incomparable musician - stylized permutations of rock, pop, ballads, electronic, soul, R&B and jazz.


CALENDAR: Week of January 18 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Charles Osgood reports.


NATURE: 
Parrots in Peru (Extended Video)
“Sunday Morning” takes us to a rain forest in Peru, where parrots are part of the local color. Videography: Nathan Dappen and Neil Losin.

For more info:


WEB EXCLUSIVE: 
A tribute to Alan Rickman | Watch Video
Critic David Edelstein on the actor whose performances in roles villainous or romantic were soulful and sublime.



RECAP: JANUARY 10

HEADLINES: The bizarre capture of El Chapo | Watch Video
Authorities say they were led to the drug cartel leader, who escaped from a Mexican prison, in part by the fugitive’s secret interview with actor Sean Penn


COVER STORY: 
One sperm donor’s extended family | Watch Video
Louise Brown will go down in history as the first “test tube baby,” her birth in 1978 ushering in a brave new world. But science has played an important role in childbirth long before that; the first recorded birth from sperm donation dates all the way back to 1884 in Philadelphia.

These days sperm donation is a widely-accepted practice to the point that some donor fathers may have 10, 20, even as many as 200 biological children living today! And now, as Mark Strassmann reports, some of those children are seeking out their fathers, leading to some very interesting family reunions.

For more info:


ALMANAC: 
The 45 RPM record
On January 10, 1949, RCA Victor unveiled a new breed of phonograph record, which became the standard for Top 40 hits and the ubiquitous jukebox. Charles Osgood reports.

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BOOKS: 
The life and times of Ernest Hemingway | Watch Video
The author of such classics as “The Old Man and the Sea,” “The Sun Also Rises” and “For Whom the Bell Tolls,” Ernest Hemingway is widely considered one of the most influential writers of the 20th century. Since his death more than 50 years ago, this larger-than-life personality has been an object of countless biographies, and now, a revealing new exhibit at New York City’s Morgan Library.

Rita Braver sits down with Hemingway’s grandson, Sean Hemingway, and biographer A.E. Hotchner for a fascinating look back at a controversial genius.

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MUSIC: 
The roots of Rhiannon Giddens | Watch Video
Martha Teichner profiles the Grammy-nominated singer whose roots run deep in the folk traditions of North Carolina.

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UP IN THE SKY: 
The next generation of Goodyear blimps | Watch Video
Ever since the launch of the first Goodyear blimp in 1925, the huge, egg-shaped airships have become a welcome and familiar sight in the skies above America. With the advent of the jet age, blimps harkened back to a more leisurely age gone by.

But the Goodyear Blimp is about the get a modern makeover as a new generation of semi-rigid airships -- longer and faster -- is ready to be launched. Lee Cowan takes us up, up and away on an exhilarating ride into the past, and the future, of the Goodyear blimp.

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STEVE HARTMAN: 
Teenage weightlifter dreams of lifting gold medal (Video)
In Beaufort, South Carolina, C.J. Cummings looks just another kid. In fact, everyone thought he was just another kid - until three years ago, when he walked into his first national men’s weightlifting tournament at the age of 15. Steve Hartman reports on the young man dubbed “the LeBron James of U.S. weightlifting.”


SUNDAY PROFILE: 
Norman Lear wants to know: Where are the old people on TV? | Watch Video
When the history of the Golden Age of Television Comedy is written, there will certainly be a chapter devoted to the impact of writer and producer Norman Lear. His groundbreaking shows (including “All in the Family,” “Sanford and Son,” “One Day at a Time,” “Maude” and others) changed the tone and importance of television forever.

Now at age 93, this pioneering broadcaster is still at it, working on yet another show he hopes will further push the envelope of TV sitcoms. Mo Rocca reports.

WEB EXCLUSIVE VIDEO: A reading of Norman Lear’s latest comedy, “Guess Who Died?” Last November, during the Austin Film Festival, TV legend Norman Lear brought together a group of actors for a reading of his newest comedy. “Guess Who Died?,” set in a senior living community. The comedy pokes fun at Lear’s contemporaries.

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WHAT’S NEXT: 
Stocks, Oregon standoff, and No Pants Subway Ride (Video)
As we begin this new week, “Sunday Morning” asked our reporters to look back, and ahead, to some developing stories. Senior Business Analyst Jill Schlesinger looks at Wall Street’s wild week; Cole Miller reports on the armed militia members occupying a Federal wildlife refuge; and Vinita Nair previews an annual stunt on mass transit in which riders bare legs.

GALLERY: No Pants Subway Ride 2016


OPINION: 
Trump and the media, like an addict and heroin | Watch Video
New York Times journalist Mark Leibovich says the press and the GOP frontrunner have been exhibiting hazardous signs of codependency.


CALENDAR: 
Week of January 11 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Charles Osgood reports.


NATURE: 
Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve (Extended Video)
Home to the tallest dunes in North America, Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve in Colorado, also features a wide array of landscapes, such as grasslands, wetlands, and aspen forests. Videographer: Valerie D’Eli.



RECAP: JANUARY 3


COVER STORY: The quiet power of meditation | Watch Video
What if there were something you could do to accomplish those New Year’s resolutions and maybe even help you lose weight, lower your blood pressure, or sleep better? In our “Sunday Morning” Cover Story, Mo Rocca considers the practice and power of meditation.

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DAY BY DAY: 
The week’s top stories | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning” takes a look at notable events of the past week. Charles Osgood reports.


ARCHITECTS: 
Chicago launches its first Architecture Biennial | Watch Video
The city celebrates both old and new, with the latest designs of leading architects redefining space, function and community. Anna Werner reports.

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MOVIES: 
Kate Winslet: Not for appearances’ sake
Kate Winslet became famous for her role in “Titanic,” and won an Academy Award for her performance in “The Reader” -- one of her six Oscar nominations. But it’s a very different role she plays in the film “Steve Jobs,” a role she got in a very unusual way. Jim Axelrod catches up with the English actress.

GALLERY: Kate Winslet

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POSTCARD FROM JAPAN: 
Cats take over Japanese island (Video)There is a tiny fishing village off Japan’s west coast, where humans are outnumbered by a burgeoning population of felines. The locals call it Cat Island. Seth Doane reports on the scenic spot where scores of cats are proving to be a potent tourist draw.

HARTMAN: ”World’s ugliest Christmas tree” lives on (Video)It’s the time of year when Christmas trees are normally being tossed to the curb, but in Reading, Pennsylvania, one tree has become immortal. It’s not for the tree’s beauty, though. Steve Hartman returns to Reading to find out what became of the “World’s ugliest Christmas tree.”


AN APPRECIATION: 
Natalie Cole and Nat King Cole sing
Singer Natalie Cole died this past Thursday at the age of 65. Beloved for her solo work, she likely will be best remembered for her 1991 album that melded her voice with that of her father, the great Nat King Cole. “Sunday Morning” pays homage to Natalie at her best, with her Grammy Award ceremony performance of “Unforgettable,” in which she and her father created an inseparable union.


SUNDAY PROFILE: 
Becoming Lily Tomlin
Lee Cowan talks with an actress and comedienne who has been making us laugh and think for more than half a century: Lily Tomlin, who is now getting some of the best reviews of her career for her role in the dramedy, “Grandma.”

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OPINION: 
Resolved: To make easy promises I can keep | Watch Video
Comedian Michael Ian Black says there is a downside to trying to improve yourself with New Year’s resolutions.

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HISTORY: 
The Lusitania disaster: A “maritime grassy knoll” | Watch Video
A century after the liner was sunk by a German U-boat, historians debate the events that led to the tragic loss of 1,198 lives. Martha Teichner reports.

GALLERY: The Lusitania disaster

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CALENDAR: 
Week of January 4 | Watch Video
“Sunday Morning’ takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Charles Osgood reports.


NATURE: 
Yellowstone National Park (Extended Video) “Sunday Morning” marks the start of the National Park Service’s 2016 centennial year with a view of a national treasure: Yellowstone National Park. Videographer: Mike Hernandez.


WEB EXCLUSIVE: 
Passage: Ellsworth Kelly | Watch Video The artist won fame for the geometric shapes and bold colors of his works. Charles Osgood reports.


WEB EXCLUSIVE REVIEWS: 
”The Revenant” and “The Hateful Eight” | Watch Video David Edelstein on two of the most hellishly violent films you’ll ever see.


For links to features broadcast in 2015, click here.

For links to features broadcast in 2014, click here.

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