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- 1979–9.5 (7)TV EpisodeCBS's telecast of Vladimir Horowitz's historic live 1986 concert in Moscow, broadcast as a special episode of the series "CBS Sunday Morning".
- 1979–9.5 (11)TV EpisodeCharles Osgood is honored as he steps down from anchoring the program, after 22 years. Included: highlights from Osgood's career on TV and radio and in music; a look at his love of poetry; the story behind his bow tie collection; tales from his childhood; a visit with his family at their seaside retreat in France.
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- Interviewed: Megyn Kelly; country artist Chris Stapleton; Anderson Cooper and his mother, Gloria Vanderbilt. Also: the relationship between grandparents and their grandchildren; Conor Knighton's tour of America's national parks; and the artwork of Corita Kent.
- The Young People's Chorus of New York sings Christmas carols with the Cavemen Chorus on Christmas Eve. David Pogue examines the Webb telescope's discoveries since launching. Leavenworth, Washington celebrates the holidays.
- Susan Spencer on people considering returning to the office; the 50th anniversary of National Public Radio; Ted Koppel on the cancel culture; Tracy Smith interview actors Billy Crystal and Tiffany Haddish (Here Today (2021)); a dog that can communicate; artist Sarah Sze; comic Jim Gaffigan; a concert by The Flaming Lips;
- David Pogue covers love songs; Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School mass shooting survivor David Hogg; Mo Rocca on the life and legacy of songwriter Burt Bacharach; Michigan's Mackinac Island; Dog Mountain in Vermont; Mo Rocca interviews reality-TV personalities Nick and Vanessa Lachey;
- Margaret Teichner on the Derek Chauvin verdict; author Jim Campbell; Tracy Smith on the movie theater industry; Lee Cowan interviews Merry Clarkson, one of the stars of the documentary, "Twenty Feet From Stardom"; Cameo, the business that connects fans with celebrities; Ben Mankiewicz interviews actor Jon Voight; Mo Rocca interviews actor Russ Tamblyn;
- Happy Mother's Day; emoji art; actor Andrew McCarthy ("St. Elmo's Fire", "Condor", "Class", and "Pretty in Pink"); Lee Cowan covers fraternity hazing; Tracy Smith interviews actress Allison Janney ("Mom" and "Breaking News in Yuba County"); Erin Moriarty interviews voting rights activist Stacey Abrams; tap dancing filmmaker Josh Seftel ("How to Fix a Primary" and "War Inc");
- 1979–7.8 (6)TV EpisodeTracy Smith interviews singer Linda Ronstadt; Luke Burbank covers cannabis cuisine; restaurants in Kyle, Ukraine, where residents still flock in the midst of war; how climate change is impacting how and where fruit can be grown; chef Eric Ripert; baby carrots, mini-melons, and micro-greens;
- Sen. John Fetterman (D-Penn); Tracy Smith is backstage at the Broadway musical, "Shucked"; Anthony Mason interviews singer/songwriter Neil Diamond; David Pogue covers TikTok; kids who help seniors with computer questions; a book of recipes saved from the Holocaust; The Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum;
- Happy Father's Day; Tracy Smith looks at the history and legacy of entertainment legend Ed Sullivan, who launched on CBS 75 years ago; Jane Pauley sits down with friend and journalist Tom Brokaw, who looks back at his childhood; Anthony Mason interviews musician Paul McCartney of The Beatles; the life and legacy of pioneering Black architect Paul Revere Williams; author Laura Carney; human composting; photographer Stanley Forman;
- David Pogue covers UFOs; Chip Reid on the emergence of the Breed X cicadas; the United States Secret Service; retired reporter Michael Blowen; Ted Koppel interviews attorney Benjamin Crump; Tracy Smith interviews actor Ewan McGregor ("Halston", "Pinocchio", "The Birthday Cake", "Obi-Wan Kenobi");
- 1979– 1h 2mTV-PG7.5 (9)TV EpisodeAmericans becoming Italian citizens and moving there; Santa Maria Novella Pharmacy; Utfizi Gallery; artist Clet; popular foods from Italy; musician Sting and his wife, Trudie Styler; the true tale of Pinocchio; author Frances Mayes (book, "Under the Tuscan Sun");
- Jim Axelrod on the changing attitudes about crying, especially regarding men; Lee Cowan interviews actor Sylvester Stallon (TV series, "Tulsa King"); Lesley Stahl interviews director Steven Spielberg, who discusses his new semi-autobiographical film, "The Fabelmans"; filmmaker Cameron Crowe discusses the Broadway musical, "Almost Famous"; The Museum of Broadway; the Lumberjack World Championships; Daylight Savings Time; author Jon Meacham; one woman's crusade to honor forgotten victims of hate;
- The Entertainment Nation exhibit; actor Brenda Fraser (movie, "The Whale"); the child welfare system; Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md); journalist David Remick; filmmaker Guillermo del Toro (movies "Pinocchio" and "The Haunted Mansion"); food additive MSG; Rabbi Steve Leder; comic Jim Gaffigan;
- 1979–7.4 (5)TV EpisodeThe Dominion Voting vs. Fox News lawsuit; adventurer Carl Allen; Cindy McCain, widow of the late Sen. John McCain, head of the United Nations World Food Program; the recent surge of shoplifting; the founders of RIP Medical Debt, a charity that pays off medical bills for people in need; actress Jennifer Garner and author Laura Dave (TV series, "The Last Thing He Told Me"); the history of general stores;
- 1979– Not Rated7.3 (7)TV EpisodeA farewell to those who died in 2020; overshadowed bright spots of the past year; medical professionals who have come face to face with COVID-19; how the pandemic changed how one plans; the life and legacy of Sy Sperling, Hair Club for Men founder;
- An increase in avalanches on an Idaho mountain; Tracy Smith interviews actress Ellen Pompeo ("Grey's Anatomy"); Lee Cowan covers an interest in the late painter and television host Bob Ross; the science of masks used in the battle against the COVID-19 pandemic; TV host Levar Burton ("Reading Rainbow" and "This Is My Story");
- Susan Spencer searches for the secrets of happiness; entrepreneur Mark Cuban; actress Michelle Yeoh;
- The presidency of Herbert Hoover and the Wall Street crash of 1929; CBS News correspondent Lee Cowan interviews actors Robert De Niro and Al Pacino and director Martin Scorsese; civil rights pioneer Harriet Tubman; the life of Janis Joplin; escape rooms; artist Helen Frankenthaler;
- Happy Easter; Susan Spencer on conflict resolution; guest host Tracy Smith interviews Hunter Biden, son of President Joe Biden; Michelle Miller interviews singer Carrie Underwood; Elizabeth Palmer on Faberge eggs; Lesley Stahl interviews journalist Marty Baron, Washington Post executive editor; veterinarians rush to vaccinate rabbits against the deadly RHDV2 Rabbit Hemorrhagic Disease virus;
- Happy Halloween; Tracy Smith covers nightmares; photographer Josh Rossi; Norah O'Donnell interviews Huma Abedin (author, "Both/And: A Life in Many Worlds"), Hillary Clinton's former aide; photographer Bryan Sansivero (author, "American Decay"); Seth Doane interviews Swedish super group ABBA (album, "Voyage"); actor Kal Penn (author, "You Can't Be Serious"); magician Shin Lim; dads who act as peacekeepers at their local public school.
- David Pogue on the challenges Facebook faces in weeding out misinformation; activist Roberto Lugo; Ben Mankiewitz interviews actor Daniel Craig ("No Time to Die"); author Kelefa Sanneh ("Major Labels") the history of popular music; author Anthony Doerr ("Cloud Cuckoo Land") ; Jim Axelrod interviews The Doobie Brothers; a woman who was saved six Marines, when her car was stuck in a flash flood;
- Jim Axelrod on the enduring love for "I Love Lucy"; Mo Rocca interviews actors Nicole Kidman, Javier Bardem, J.K. Simmons, and Nina Arianda (movie, "Being the Ricardos"); Tracy Smith interviews actors Meryl Streep and Leonardo DiCaprio and director Adam McKay (movie, "Don't Look Up"); Josephine Baker's induction into the Pantheon; author Sarah Ransome; Elizabeth Hartman interviews author Candace Bushnell (TV series, "And Just Like That..." and "Sex and the City 2").
- Rita Braver on two landmark cases before the U.S. Supreme Court challenge affirmative action in college admissions; husband-and-wife photographers Kahran and Regis Bethencourt, who traveled in Africa, Europe, and the Americas; "The Book of Charlie"; architect Jeanne Gang; Fred Smith, Fed Ex CEO; Jodie Comer; Tracy Smith interviews Mark Hamil; Robert Rubin;
- Dr. Jon Pook covers a long COVID-19; author Jason Reynolds; the pop band The B-52s; looking back at the lives of actor Paul Newman and actress Joanne Woodward; former Rep. Gabby Giffords (D-Ariz.) and her husband, Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.); retired Army Maj. John Duffy; artist Sean Scully;
- The midterm elections; gerrymandering; actor Adam Sandler (Netflix movie, "Hustle"); filmmaker Ava Duverney; journalist Judy Woodruff; Susan Spencer reports on the issues with ageism; a new Van Gogh exhibit; the tale of a military transport plane that crashed 70 years ago; historian Douglas Brinkley;
- Lee Cowan interviews Dani Izzie, a quadriplegic mother of twins; Mo Rocca covers the Broadway revival of "Camelot"; Seth Doane interviews composer Andrew Lloyd Webber; Tracy Smith interviews author Bonnie Gamus; a behind-the-scenes look at sitcom, "Ghosts"; photographer Stanley Forman and educator Ted Landsmark; actor Joel Grey;
- The recent cybersecurity breach; comic Chris Rock; what's in store for lawmakers in 2021; musician Barry Gibbs; author Dr. Sanjay Gupta; a look back at 2020 and a look forward to 2021; the life and legacy of late Viacom/CBS chairman Summer Redstone;
- Ben Tracy on plant-based alternatives to meat; Walker Hayes; T-Pain; a search for the perfect cup of coffee; California's Mitla Cafe; food delivery services; Mo Rocca on the automatic cafeteria called the Automat; a man who treats water like wine; a handmade pasta;
- Sean Doane on the world after a year into the COVID-19 pandemic; theories of where the novel Coronavirus began; right-wing group Oath Keepers; actress/director Regina King ("One Night in Miami"); CRISPR, a revolutionary genetic process; Tracy Smith reports on the life and legacy of actor Bob Hope; author Dana Perino (book, "Everything Will Be Okay");
- Potential ways in which the war in Ukraine might end; political strategist Valerie Biden Owens; the legal implications when two songs sound the same; musician Jon Batiste and his partner, Suleika Jaouad; singer Maren Morris; actress Ann-Margret;
- Ted Koppel on the growing use of artificial intelligence in national security and war; author Hernan Daz; Tracy Smith interviews singer-songwriter Joan Baez; author Marty Baron; the cast of the revival of Stephen Sondheim's "Merrily We Roll Along"; Conor Knighton on a CSI crime lab dedicated to animals; Lee Cowan on the bill passed to keep the federal government open;
- Ted Koppel visits Mount Airy, N.C., the birthplace of actor Andy Griffin; The Arc de Triomphe in Paris; language coaches help actors; Tracy Smith interviews actor James Brolin ("Sweet Tooth"); what's coming up in the world of art, museums, music, and movies; Mo Rocca interviews journalist Anderson Cooper ("Anderson Cooper 360");
- Michelle Miller on the subject of "passing", a term describing when a light-skinned Black person can pass for white; Anthony Mason interviews Barack Obama and Bruce Springsteen; David Pogue on the fight against mosquitoes; Tracy Smith on murals in Toledo, Ohio; Lee Cowan interviews Wayne Gretzky, Jane Goodall; Martha Stewart; fish restocking;
- Erin Moriarty looks at the world of consultants McKinsey and Company; Tracy Smith interviews actor Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson; Jane Pauley interviews actress Julia Roberts; actor John David Washington; the newly renovated David Geffen Hall at Lincoln Center; the life of singer John Denver; musician Billy Strings;
- Filmmaker Martin Scorsese; actors Al Pacino and Ellen Burstyn; actress/director Eva Longoria; director John Waters; the Broadway adaptation of the classic movie, "Some Like It Hot"; the popularity of boring video games; filmmaker Josh Seftel (movie, "Stranger at the Gate");
- Photographer Brandon Tandon; musician Jose Feliciano; actors Denzel Washington, Viola Davis, George C. Wolfe, and Constanza Romero ("Giving Voice"); the popularity and controversy surrounding "The Crown"; celebrating the Festival of Lights;
- Susan Spencer covers sleep difficulties; David Pouge interviews Melissa and Doug Bernstein, Melissa and Doug founders; the fallout from Oprah Winfrey's interview with Prince Harry and Meghan Markle; author Julia Sweig; schools considering teaching outdoors; music artists Swizz Beatz and Timbaland;
- Russia's invasion of Ukraine; David Martin on the charges of war crimes by Russia made by Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy; author Bill Browder (book, "Freezing Order"); Mo Rocca interviews actress Beanie Feldstein, who will portray Barbara Streisand; Lesley Stahl interviews actresses Michelle Pfeiffer, Viola Davis, and Gillian Anderson (TV series, "The First Lady"); David Pogue on cryptocurrency;
- The life and legacy of Queen Elizabeth II (1926-2022); the ascension of King Charles III; Queen Elizabeth II's image, as portrayed on television and in the movies; Tina Brown; Rita Braver interviews Bill Clinton; a program that provides affordable housing; sound artist Nikki Lindt;
- Divisions created by social media and the internet; the impact of talk radio; looking back at past times of division in the U.S.; singer/songwriter John Legend; Wyoming's struggles with vast differences in wealth between rich and poor; Ted Koppel interviews Noman Lear;
- Sean Doane interviews artist Banksy; Luke Burbank interviews rock group Depeche Mode; David Martin interviews actor Morgan Freeman (documentary, "761st Tank Battalion: The Original Black Panthers"); author Tess Gunty (book, "The Rabbit Hutch"); Happywhale, an organization that encourages people to identify individual animals; nonalcoholic cocktails; the Opal Awards; a man restores a car for a friend with ALS;
- Susan Spencer reports on how electrodes in the brain that could restore mobility in stroke patients; Faith Salie reports on pockets; an enormous fungus; actress Candice Bergen and author Mark Harris (book, "Mike Nichols: A Life") talk about Mike Nichols; actor Stanley Tucci ("Supernova"); comic Jim Gaffigan; Tracy Smith interviews singer Andra Day; remembering actress Cicely Tyson;
- Debt ceiling controversy; David Martin covers U.S. military bases are being renamed due to concerns over racism and ties to the Confederacy; remembering music icon Tina Turner (1939-2023); actress Lillias White; Tracy Smith interviews actor Arnold Schwarzenegger; Ted Koppel interviews jazz clarinetist Doreen Ketchens; author Isabel Allende;
- DNA tests; singer/songwriter David Byrne; architect Bill Bensley; singer Tanya Tucker; tablescaping competition; endangered species;
- Journalist Bob Woodward; actor Ralph Fiennes; comic Gabriel 'Fluffy' Iglesias; singer/songwriter Nathaniel Rateliff; Lewis Hamilton prepares for the United States Grand Prix; author John Irving; photo exhibit features Berrd and Hilla Becher's work;
- Rita Braver interviews historians as they assess the presidency of Donald Trump; Lesley Stahl on remembering actor Sidney Poitier (1927-2022); Mo Rocca interviews singer/songwriter Sonny Curtis; reporter Carl Bernstein; filmmaker Peter Bogdanovich; a new monument of President John F. Kennedy; comics using smartphone apps; ancient gems; journalist Steve Hartman.
- The history, the traditions, and the design of the U.S. Capitol; New York Times columnist Charles Blow shares his thoughts on protests and justice; Scholastic CEO Dick Robinson; the origins of the term "lame duck"; filmmaker Joshua Seftel ("How to Fix a Primary");
- Tracy Smith interviews author Cassidy Hutchinson (book, "Enough"); Lee Cowan interviews model Gisele Bundchen; behind the scenes at Consumer Reports; 50 years of hip-hop in St. Louis, Mo; musical group Talking Heads; fall TV; two former schoolmates who had reconnected, decades after graduating; filmmaker Josh Seltel (movie, "How to Fix a Primary");
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- 1979–TV EpisodeThe John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Awards; L.A. Clippers owner Steve Ballmer; actress Emilia Clarke (Game of Thrones (2011)); actor Sam Rockwell (The Best of Enemies (2019) and Fosse/Verdon (2019)); Charlotte Clymer's thoughts on being a transgender military veteran; the art of Bill Traylor; the reconstruction era;
- This week's edition of "Sunday Morning", hosted by Jane Pauley, features Allison Aubrey reporting on hamburgers that are made from plants instead of beef. Plus: Serena Altschul reports on "Beyond the Streets", the largest exhibition of graffiti and street art ever produced, and curator and ex-graffiti artist Roger Gastman; Luke Burbank attends Monster Jam University; Michelle Miller reports on fashion designer Dapper Dan's saga, that's been three quarters of a century in the making; Steve Hartman reports on a 97-year-old, who loves a hard day's work; John Blackstone reports on what America, the rock band, is up to; the history of the 1969 Apollo 11 moon landing; Jim Gaffigan says cheeseburgers are in "grave danger"; and Mo Rocca takes a trip down the Mississippi River;
- Happy Easter; actress Chrissy Metz ("Breakthrough" and "This Is Us"); Bishop T.D. Jakes; actor Jeff Daniels; Korean boy band BTS; Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg; a choir made up of people who all have family members who have gone missing; the fire at Notre Dame cathedral;
- PostSecret, a community that shares secrets by putting them on postcards; the work of artist Frida Kahlo; a true crime manuscript worked on by author Harper Lee; actor Bryan Cranston ("The Upside", "Super Mansion" and "Family Guy"); author Joan Collins; playwright Taylor Mac;
- Quitting work; TV personality Kris Jenner; CBD oil products; vacation cruises; how Sweden is moving towards a cashless society; the pizza business; the inventor of the karaoke machine; the lost art of safe cracking; what happens to returned products;
- The measles outbreak and controversy surrounding vaccinating children; radio host/author Howard Stern (book, "Howard Stern Comes Again"); the Statue of Liberty Museum on Liberty Island; TV host Alex Trebek ("Jeopardy"); the new TWA Hotel at New York's JFK Airport; the "Central Park Five" thirty years later; U.S. Navy Admiral William McRaven;
- People who forego permanent homes to live in converted school buses and vans to travel the country; a movement to honor women with statues; conductor Teddy Abrams; photographer Barbara Van Cleve; actress Annette Bening ("Georgetown" and "Hope Gap"); musician Michael Trotter;
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- A group restores a World War II C-47 transport plane; the Jonas Brothers; the nation's bail system; actress Mindy Kaling ("Late Night"); journalist George Will; the history and legacy of the Tiananmen Square massacre 30 years later;
- Guest host Mo Rocca; "The Lavender Scare"; singer Gloria Gaynor; actor Kevin Bacon ("City on a Hill" and "Tremors"); author David Eisenhower; actor Andrew Rannells ("Black Monday" and "Invincible"); journalist Jim Acosta;
- The history of Father's Day; firefighters face increasing cases of cancer; Minecraft; actor Tim Allen ("Toy Story 4"); entrepreneurs Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss; the 150th anniversary of the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad; comic Jim Gaffigan ("Above the Shadows" and "The Day Shall Come");
- The preparations and planning underway for travel to Mars; Jazzercise founder Judi Sheppard Missett; streetwear trends; Doonesbury cartoonist Gary Trudeau, host Jane Pauley's husband; former film studio executive Sherry Lansing; surprise weddings; author Dave Barry;
- The story of asylum seeker Andy Damus; the Museum of the American Revolution in Philadelphia; singer Tina Turner; actor Stephen Lang ("Avatar"); a traveling art exhibit called "Monsters and Myths"; the enduring popularity of frozen custard;
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- The seamstresses who sewed the suits for Apollo 11; author Colson Whitehead (book, "The Nickel Boys"); how breakfast has evolved; astronaut Michael Collins; an exhibition explores how black people have been depicted in art; Walter Cronkite's reporting on the 1969 Apollo 11 moon landing;
- A look back at the life and legacy of "60 Minutes" correspondent Mike Wallace; comic Hannah Gadsby; the Endangered Species Act; Elon Musk, CEO of SpaceX; rock band ZZ Top; personal pronouns; the popularity of sparkling water and seltzer;
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- Innovations in hearing aids; New Mexico immersive art exhibit, Meow Wolf; actress Angela Bassett (Otherhood (2019)); the impact of Woodstock; the creation of the Peanuts characters; tie-dye; Bill Flanagan's thoughts on 50 years, since the Woodstock music festival;
- An investigation into a college campus sexual assault; the famous Alvin Ailey Dance Company; the artistry being performed on fingernails; hearing loss and hearing aids; regular vs. decaf coffee; the world of mermaids; actress Julianne Moore ("After the Wedding"); actor Common ("The Kitchen", "The Lion Guard" and "The Informer");
- 1979– 1h 2mTV-PGTV EpisodeThis week's "Sunday Morning" hosted by Jane Pauley, takes us to Tuscany, with stories on all things Italian - art and design, traditions and culture, fashion, food, music and entertainment, history and culture. Featuring: Mark Phillips' report on reverse emigration, in which Americans are returning to the Old Country; Lee Cowan on the birthplace of Pinocchio; Rita Braver sits down with author Frances Mayes at her villa made famous in "Under the Tuscan Sun"; Alina Cho visits Sting and Trudie Styler at their 400-year-old house; Tracy Smith interviews fashion designer Brunello Cucinelli; and Seth Doane samples some delicious local fare. (Originally broadcast May 19, 2019.)
- 1979–TV EpisodeThe prevalence of reading disorder dyslexia; singer Taylor Swift; photographer Barbara Van Cleve, who focuses her lens on "cowgirls"; author Eddie Huang (book, "Fresh Off the Boat"); Argentina's large Italian population; largely unknown tennis players who are not in the spotlight but still chasing a dream;
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- 1979–TV EpisodeApparel entrepreneur Bayard Winthrop, founder and CEO of San Francisco-based apparel manufacturer American Giant; Association of Flight Attendants president Sara Nelson; former U.S. Secretary of Defense James Mattis; singer Dolly Parton (Dolly Parton's Heartstrings (2019), Christmas on the Square (2020) and Christmas at Dollywood (2019)) ; comic Jim Gaffigan (Above the Shadows (2019) and Playmobil: The Movie (2019));
- 1979–TV EpisodeAuthor Margaret Atwood (books, "The Handmaid's Tale" and "The Testaments"); professional football player Russell Wilson, Seattle Seahawks quarterback; correspondent Lee Cowan interviews singers Donny and Marie Osmond; New York Times journalists/authors Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey (book, "She Said: Breaking the Sexual Harassment Story That Helped Ignite a Movement"); ongoing protests in Hong Kong;
- Challenges facing teachers; Leroy Graves, master upholsterer at Colonial Williamsburg; The Backstreet Boys; the history and impact of New York magazine; actress Angie Dickinson; film producer Irwin Winkler ("Rocky", "New York, New York", "Raging Bull", "The Right Stuff", "Creed II"); Jim Gaffigan on back to school;
- Behind the scenes of "God Unfriended Me"; actress Renee Zellweger ("Judy"); the "Downton Abbey" castle; Patagonia National Park in Chile; composer John Williams ("Star Wars", "Superman", "Jurassic Park", "Time Tunnel", "Lost in Space", "Land of the Giants"); singer/songwriter Mark Knopfler;
- The boom in electric 2-wheel scooters; Gayle King interviews singer Olivia Newton-John, who discusses her career and her cancer battle; host Jane Pauley interviews authors Hillary Rodham Clinton and her daughter, Chelsea Clinton (book, "The Book of Gutsy Women"); Dr. Lonnie Bunch, secretary of the Smithsonian Institution; comic Jim Gaffigan and his wife, Jeannie Gaffigan; glass artist Marlene Rose;
- 1979–TV EpisodeCBS Sunday Morning correspondent Richard Schlesinger interviews Liza Minnelli about her life, career and her future.
- Author and newspaper columnist Pete Hamill; correspondent Tracey Smith interviews singer Lizzo; singer Mitzi Gaynor; businesses and corporations taking a stand on selling guns; Museum of Modern Art; a spiraling walkway above the treetops in Denmark;
- Transgender kids; Chicago White Sox announcer; singer Elton John; actress Mariska Hargitay (Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (1999)); a tiny, forested park in the middle of a crowded highway; 2020 Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang; Jim Gaffigan shares thoughts on in-laws;
- Tyrannosaurus Rex; the science behind scary music; stone gargoyles; the Mars-Wrigley candy factory; musician Prince's home; a look at history for lessons about current affairs; a town in Japan fights to stay alive despite its aging population;
- 1979– 1h 3mTV-PGTV EpisodeCorrespondent Lee Cowan interviews world champion archer Matt Stutzman; musician Jeff Lynne of Electric Light Orchestra; the students of an Ohio college accuse a local bakery of racism; author Mitch Alborn; the Meow Wolf art exhibit in New Mexico; a conference for obituary writers;
- Exploring grief; actors Matt Damon and Christian Bale ("Ford v Ferrari"); Norah O'Donnell interviews former U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley (book, "With All Due Respect: Defending America with Grit and Grace"); artist Mary Whyte; the upcoming season of "The Crown"; the story behind the new "Joy of Cooking"; actor Michael Conner Humphreys ("Forrest Gump");
- Art restoration; correspondent Rita Braver is birdwatching with ornithologist David Sibley; women's boxing; author John le Carre; hostess Jane Pauley reunites with her former "Today" co-host, journalist Tom Brokaw; Reince Priebus discusses presidential impeachment; golfer Renee Powell;
- 1979–TV EpisodeHow diets may impact well-being; musician Jon Bon Jovi; Frieda Caplan, who has introduced the country to more than 200 fruits and vegetable; breadfruit; actor Danny Trejo and his taco restaurants; food halls; chef Jacques Pepin; a unique truck stop in Wyoming; mukbang;
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- A woman inherits 262 cemetery plots and uses the gift to help others; Alec Cabacungan discusses the Shiners Hospitals for Children; Alanis Morissette; a family that works as models for catalogs; actors Jonathan Pryce and Anthony Hopkins ("The Two Popes"); GPS;
- The controversy over "dollar stores"; Shangri La Museum of Islamic Art; singer Billie Eilish; correspondent Rita Braver interviews musician Eugenia Zukerman; correspondent Ben Mankiewicz interviews filmmaker Mel Brooks about his career and his late wife, Anne Bancroft; former professional football player Ron Gronkowski;
- Package delivery methods; artists paint Christmas cards using their mouths and feet; actor Harvey Keitel ("The Irishman"); correspondent Rita Braver interviews director Greta Gerwig and actress Saoirse Ronan ("Little Women"); gift ideas; correspondent Tracy Smith reports on the department chain Nordstrom; author Thomas Friedman and journalist Eliana Johnson (National Review) debate other;
- Crowdsourcing website GoFundMe; actress Jennifer Lopez ("Hustlers"); correspondent Mo Rocca reports on the life of composer Irving Berlin; nativity scenes; correspondent Nikki Battiste reports on the history of a Hanukkah favorite -- latkes; comic Jim Gaffigan; the Young People's Chorus of New York City and Jon Batiste perform;
- Guest host Lee Cowan; the world's best and worst airports; actor Eddie Murphy ("Dolemite Is My Name"); experimental spirits distilled in Copenhagen; bidding farewell to those who died in the past year; Chinese President Xi Jinping and North Korean Dictator Kim Jong Un; looking ahead;
- Workplace discrimination against pregnant women; the works of Monet at the Denver Art Museum; musician Gary Clark Jr.; a profile of Arthur Godfrey; a close look at the octopus; correspondent Mo Rocca interviews actress Kim Novak; a woman who introduced the country to more than 200 fruits and vegetables;
- Evidence that sending follow-up notes to patients in mental distress can significantly improve outcomes; actress Laura Dern ("Marriage Story" and "Little Women"); the paintings and life of Claude Monet; band Mumford and Sons; the cross-cultural culinary appeal of dumplings;
- What goes into making a hit song; singer/songwriter Raffi; children perform in Madagascar; conductor Gustavo Dudamel; singer/songwriter Huey Lewis talks about his hearing loss; DJ Khaled; remembering songwriter Allee Willis ("Beverly Hills Cop" and "Friends");
- The presidential campaign; singer/songwriter James Taylor; searching for antiques with TV personality Mike Wolfe; correspondent Holly Williams interviews actor Mandy Patinkin; correspondent Tony Dokoupil interviews the trophy creators at Tiffany; director Taika Waititi and actress Scarlett Johansson ("Jojo Rabbit");
- Correspondent Rita Braver reports on intimacy coaching; correspondent Tracy Smith reports on the history and artistry of Hollywood backdrops; singer and choreographer Toni Basil; a man who has devoted his life to bringing movies to a small Washington town; actress Tataum O'Neal; "Hair Love"; Oscar nominations;
- Migraine headaches; rock band Air Supply; the Moulin Rouge in Paris, France; actor Harrison Ford ("The Call of the Wild"); Holocaust survivors mark the 75th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz's death camp; Yad Vashem, Israel's memorial to the victims of the Holocaust; chocolate;
- Correspondent Lee Cowan reports on a Wisconsin company that changes the way medical records are kept; correspondent Faith Salie interviews artist Betye Saar; Bob Moore, founder of Bob's Red Mill; architect Rem Koolhass; actor Richard Dreyfuss ("Jaws", "Close Encounters of the Third Kind", "The Goodbye Girl"); George Washington's life after he left the presidency;
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- Non-disclosure agreements in the workplace; Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas; model Paulina Porizkova; Mo Rocca interviews TV personalities Vanna White and Pat Sajak ("Wheel of Fortune"); the quilling capital of the world; the spread of the coronavirus across the world;
- The latest on the coronavirus; the trend of napping on the job; poets use social media sites to post their work; a look at Ireland's "Riverdale"; lessons learned from past pandemics; country and pop group Dixie Chicks; singer and actress Mandy Moore ("This Is Us");
- 1979– 1h 2mTV-PGTV EpisodeIn this special encore presentation of our 40th anniversary broadcast (originally aired on January 27, 2019), "Sunday Morning" host Jane Pauley looks back at the many roads traveled, the memorable personalities we have met, and some of the fun and unusual stories we have told. Plus: Serena Altschul introduces viewers to the "Sun Queen," our associate director Jessica Frank, who is responsible for the suns that grace our show; Nancy Giles explores the history of the "Sunday Morning" theme music; and Conor Knighton meets some of our team of videographers that brings the beauty and sounds of nature to our broadcast each week.
- 1979– 1h 2mTV-PGTV EpisodeIn this broadcast hosted by Lee Cowan, David Pogue looks at why irrational fear can make people respond to a crisis (such as the coronavirus pandemic) in dangerous ways. Plus: Tracy Smith sits down with singer Alicia Keys; Jill Schlesinger examines the economic fallout of the pandemic; Ted Koppel explores the terrible choices that hospitals with shortages of medical equipment may soon face; Seth Doane chronicles his first-hand experience being quarantined in Rome for COVID-19; Mo Rocca looks at the history of New York's Bellevue Hospital Center; chef Bobby Flay talks about finding comfort in preparing comfort food; and film critic David Edelstein offers movie suggestions for people climbing the walls at home.
- 1979– 1h 2mTV-PGTV EpisodeThe latest on the COVID-19 virus; what it takes to be a good leader; Jane Pauley interviews actress Sarah Jessica Parker and actor Matthew Broderick; the U.S. Census; TV critic Daniel Fierberg; book critic Ron Charles; Mo Rocca discusses jigsaw puzzles; comic Jim Gaffigan.
- The makings of the Guinness World Records; Mo Rocca looks at the life of Carl Reiner; the 1852 speech given by Frederick Douglass; musician Gary Clark Jr; the impact of COVID-19 on cab drivers; drive-through naturalization ceremonies; Tracy Smith interviews Jim Carrey; Jim Gaffigan.
- The latest information about the potential spread of COVID-19 through the air; a tour of Martha Stewart's Garden; chef Dominque Crenn; TV host Trevor Noah ("The Daily Show"); actress Melissa Gilbert ("When We Last Spoke"); COVID-19's effect on tourism in Italy.
- Broadband internet in the U.S.; actress Linda Lavin; author David Sibley; the boom in the sales of vanilla; comic Jim Gaffigan ("Jim Gaffigan: The Pale Tourist"); hugging during the COVID-19 pandemic; a look back at the career of CBS's George Schweitzer; singer/songwriter Tanya Tucker.
- How colleges are handling back-to-school time in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic; Dr. Jill Biden, wife of 2020 Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden; why more Americans are hitting the road in recreational vehicles; an artist who works with bubble wrap; photographer David Hume Kennerly.
- Ted Koppel reports on the presidential powers; Erin Moriarty reports on the history of the popsicle; Lee Cowan reports on how the nation's COVID-19 quarantines have slowly given way to expanding social bubbles; failed Iran hostage rescue mission Desert One; Mark Strassman interviews Sheryl Crow at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee; dealing with depression.
- Returning to school during the pandemic; statues of suffrage pioneers; the history of the watermelon; world champion archer Matt Stutzman; the 100th anniversary of women winning the right to vote; author Ta-Nehisi Coates; TV personality Vanna White ("Wheel of Fortune");
- Drive-in theaters; professional basketball player Stephen Curry; newly restored dioramas, recovered from the 1940 Black World's Fair; police tactics that are considered non-lethal force; Gayle King interviews actress/singer Olivia Newton-John; author John Meacham ("His Truth is Marching On"); remembering actor Chadwick Boseman (1976-2020);
- Income inequality in the age of COVID-19; baseball broadcaster Vin Scully; sharing a smile while wearing a mask; former reality-TV star Paris Hilton; Netflix's co-CEOs Reed Hastings and Ted Sarandos; former FBI special agent Peter Strzok; lawncare.
- Tracy Smith interviews singer/songwriter Keith Urban; the new Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial; a woman is helped by a group of home repairers; Lee Cowan interviews actress Drew Barrymore; stargazers worry about pollution; comic Jim Galligan; the history and tradition of presidential portraits;
- Correspondent Erin Moriarty reports on the death of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg; correspondent Lee Cowan interviews singer/songwriter Lady Gaga, who discusses her album "Chromatica", her battles with depression and anxiety, her friendship with Elton John, and her new book "Channel Kindness"; the debate over law enforcement's doctrine of "qualified immunity"; TV hosts/authors Desus Nice and The Kid Mero (Desus & Mero (2019), book "God-Level Knowledge Darts: Life Lessons from the Bronx"); what's new at museums; highlights of upcoming music, theater, TV, streaming, movies, and books; chef Bobby Flay;
- The legal doctrine of "qualified immunity"; nominees for the U.S. Supreme Court vacancy; host Jane Pauley interviews singer/songwriter Mariah Carey; the return of roller-skating; actor Jim Belushi; journalist Jonathan Alter; a preview of the upcoming presidential debate; filmmaker Josh Seftel ("How to Fix a Primary");
- Speaking with Trump supporters in West Virginia about the President's Coronavirus diagnosis; the medical and political implications of President Trump's diagnosis of COVID-19; "The Trial of the Chicago 7"; the history of the "October Surprise"; an interview of Lenny Kravitz;
- Repairing or replacing broken items; Mo Rocca reports on the controversy over statues and monuments; Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D-NY) and his daughters talk about life during the pandemic; China and the COVID-19 outbreak; comic Jim Gaffigan; Lee Cowan interviews singer/songwriter Jon Bon Jovi;
- Climate change; musician David Lee Roth; Alicia Garza, coiner of the phrase, "Black Lives Matter"; comic Jim Gaffigan; singer/songwriter Christopher Cross; statues depicting women's suffrage pioneers; actor Elliot Gould; the 2020 presidential election;
- Impatience in the United States; singer/songwriter Stevie Nicks; drive-through haunted houses; fireworks; the film Mank (2020); Mo Rocca reports on the presidential election of 1876; a toddler's best friend is a toy skeleton; how other countries view the U.S. presidential election;
- Susan Spencer reports on mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic; learning about hibernation from grizzly bears; Ben Mankiewicz interviews comic Bob Newhart; Mo Rocca reports on First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt; voting with a 104-year-old; Lee Cowan reports on the death of Sir Sean Connery (1930-2020); the popularity of chess; what to look for on election night;
- The aftermath of election night; New York's Strand bookstore; Sean Doane interviews actress Sophia Loren; 100-year-old French artist Pierre Soulages; the family that makes the highly sought-after Pappy Van Winkle whiskey; Mo Rocca interviews actor Steve Martin and cartoonist Harry Bliss;
- Former U.S. President Barack Obama (memoir, "A Promised Land"); an artful pie maker; philanthropist Leonard Lauder; actors Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell ("The Christmas Chronicles" and "The Christmas Chronicles 2"); a woman, watching a livestream of two pregnant pigs, notices that their barn is on fire and she manages to save them;
- How Hollywood will manage to keep the movie-making machine going in the age of COVID-19; Paul Davidson, architect at the National Park Service's heritage documentation programs; correspondent Tracy Smith interviews singer Josh Groban; actor Patrick Stewart; SpaceX space launch;
- Big and small ways that COVID-19 could permanently change life; Mark Phillips explore the history and controversy of wearing masks during a pandemic; documentary filmmaker Ken Burns; Lee Cowan pays a virtual visit with Jon Bon Jovi, Jewel, and other music makers, who discuss writing songs during quarantine; stationary bike fitness craze;
- Correspondent Martha Teichner looks at the events of the past week; race, racism, and being black in America; CBS This Morning co-host Tony Dokoupil interviews actor Pete Davidson (The King of Staten Island (2020)); Mo Rocca looks at the prospects for Broadway in a time of a pandemic; author Chris Wallace (book, "Countdown 1945: The Extraordinary Story of the Atomic Bomb and the 116 Days That Changed the World"); recent events in the United States from the perspective of other nations;
- The timeline of the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic; New York's Hart Island, the temporary burial site for some victims of COVID-19; grooming and coloring hair in isolation; dressing fashionably in quarantine; a farmer's market re-opening in Seattle.
- Correspondent Jill Schlesinger reports on how COVID-19 has gone from a health pandemic to a financial crisis; David Pogue reports on the impact of social distancing on the internet; Martha Teichner visits author Celeste Ng (book, "Little Fires Everywhere"); correspondent Tracy Smith reports on tele-therapy; Mo Rocca reports on the toilet paper shortage of 1973; filmmakers Carl Reiner and Mel Brooks; actor George Takei.
- The latest in the ongoing battle against COVID-19; Conor Knighton on trips to U.S. national parks; Ted Koppel explores the role of leadership during a crisis; Madeline Albright, former U.S. secretary of state; actor Nathan Lane; online museum exhibits; comic Jim Gaffigan;
- Using smartphones to track the spread of COVID-19; food banks struggling during the economic downturn; drive-throughs; COVID-19 in the prison system; singer Randy Newman; author Jason Rosenthal; video conferencing; the cast of "Mrs. America".
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- 1979–TV Episode
- 1979–TV EpisodeSocial Security as a campaign issue; profile of St, Louis Symphony conductor Leonard Slatkin; interview with choreographer Geoffrey Holder.
- The latest advances in fighting COVID-19; the future of malls and department stores; Rita Braver reports on how America won the fight against polio; actor Henry Winkler; media personality Phil Donohue and actress Marlo Thomas; Martha Stewart prepares a favorite recipe.
- Singer/songwriter Graham Nash; the Coronavirus pandemic's effect on people's dreams; the graduating class of 2020 during the pandemic; balconies; the effects of living in isolation; the Farce Islands; Mount Saint Helens; comic Jerry Seinfeld ("Jerry Seinfeld: 23 Hours to Kill").
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- Tracy Smith talks with author Mary Jordan about her book on First Lady Melania Trump; Conor Knighton talks to photographer Erin Sullivan; Erin Moriarty reports on medical examiners; The Long Distance Movie Club; New York Times opinion writer Charles M. Blow; director Bryce Dallas Howard and her father, filmmaker Ron Howard (Dads (2019)); Nicholas Thompson, Wired editor; author John Dickerson (book, "The Hardest Job in the World: The American Presidency");
- Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D-NY); Tony Dokoupil interviews Apple CEO Tim Cook; the Compton Cowboys; small businesses navigating a changing world; singer/songwriter Yusuf Islam (aka Cat Stevens); graphic designer Jim Bachor; Jim Gaffigan reflects on Father's Day; policing in America;
- The race for a Coronavirus vaccine; Rita Braver interviews artist Jim Bachor; housekeeping during the pandemic; theater owners adapt during the pandemic; chef Guy Fieri; comic Jim Gaffigan; a woman inherits 262 cemetery plots; documentarian Ken Burns ("Ken Burns Presents: The Gene"); singer Lizzo.
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- Lee Cowan reports on the death of Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga); John Blackstone reports on the future of "office work" in the age of the COVID-19 pandemic; Luke Burbank explores how one town has turned to making its own money out of wood; Michelle Miller interviews actor Louis Gossett Jr; Mo Rocca interviews actress Kim Novak; retired CBS marketing chief George Schweizer; income inequality; a one-of-a-kind online choir with a cast of thousands.
- Honoring Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga) (1940-2020); murder hornets; the deployment of federal troops in Portland, Oregon; Lee Cowan reports on the water crisis in the U.S.; how bathrooms are being made safer; singer/songwriter Jimmy Buffett; comic Jim Gaffigan; restaurateur Danny Meyer; remembering Regis Philbin (1931-2020);
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- 1979–TV Episode
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- Food insecurity; a consultant who helps make the world make the perfect bagels; chef Marcus Samuelsson; an exhibit of tureens; tortellini en brodo; mint, the importance of snacks; actress Kate Hudson discusses her work with the World Food Program;
- 1979– 1h 2mTV-PGTV EpisodeCOVID-19 vaccines; raccoons; photographer Leah Denbok; Tracy Smith interviews actor George Clooney ("The Midnight Sky"); an island refuge where sea birds rule; comic Jim Gaffigan; Rita Braver interviews actresses Meryl Streep, Candice Bergen, and Dianne Wiest ("Let Them All Talk"); activist Colman McCarthy; author Charlie Mackesy;
- Happy Mother's Day; the effects of pandemics on relationships; a potential medical treatment for victims of COVID-19; chef Bobby Flay; actress Reese Witherspoon ("The Morning Show" and "Little Fires Everywhere"); teaching children over the Internet; former President Franklin Delano Roosevelt; comic Jim Gaffigan; the deaths of singer Little Richard and magician Roy Horn;
- Millions of Americans may face eviction if the government doesn't take action; a company seeking approval to produce home test kids for COVID-19; the history and impact of PBS on its 50th anniversary; Rita Braver interviews singer/actress Leslie Uggams; singer Du Lipa; the art of sushi; Mo Rocca covers the life of artist Titus Kaphar;
- Three people who have built kindness into their jobs; Sir Paul McCartney; the Young@Heart chorus; comic Jim Gaffigan; chef Bobby Flay prepares a dish; Elsy; toy company Fisher-Price celebrates its 90th anniversary; the Young People's Chorus of New York City and Jose Feliciano perform.
- The legacy of President Donald Trump; Vice President-elect Kamala Harris and her husband, Douglas Emhoff; the impeachment proceedings; the legality and implications of tech companies blocking President Donald Trump from the social media platforms;
- How climate change impacts where Americans choose to live; working from home during the pandemic; Lt. Gov. John Fetterman (D-Penn); Dr. Anthony Fauci, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases director; a report on the week's historic events in Washington; artisans in Italy; actress Ellen Burstyn ("Pieces of a Woman"); remembering TV and radio legend Larry King (1933-2021) and baseball legend Hank Aaron (1934-2021);
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- 1979–TV Episode
- 1979–TV Episode
- Rita Braver covers astrology and football; football stadiums used as COVID-19 vaccination sites; chef Eddie Jackson; Tracy Smith interviews actor Steven Yeun ("Minari", "Invincible" and "The Humans"); Lee Cowan interviews actress/director Robin Wright ("Land"); Super Bowl preview; a fungus that's taken over more than three square miles of wilderness in Oregon; remembering Christopher Plummer ("The Sound of Music") and boxing great Leon Spinks;
- Happy Valentine's Day; author Suleika Jaouad (book, "Between Two Kingdom: A Memoir of a Life Interrupted"); Mark Phillip interviews actress Kate Winslet ("Titanic"); the mysterious death of a hiker and the two-and-a-half-year search to identify him; French toast; David Pogue covers diamonds; the first transgender state senator, Sarah McBride; unique stories about U.S. presidents; remembering singer Mary Wilson;
- Ted Koppel on getting the COVID-19 vaccine to under-served communities; Lee Cowan interviews businesswoman Cindy McCain; Seth Doane interviews Italian piano maker Paolo Fazioli; Nancy Giles interviews actress Ellen Burstyn ("Pieces of a Woman"); the mysterious death of a hiker and the two-and-a-half-year search to identify him; remembering Rush Limbaugh.
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- David Pogue covers MasterClass; Greek and Roman marble statues; Tracy Smith interviews singer Demi Lovato; Ben Mankiewicz interviews actress Ali MacGraw and actor Ryan O'Neal on the 50th anniversary of "Love Story; Rita Braver covers adoptions that took place after World War II; looking at how some species, listed as extinct, have returned from the dead; sports betting;
- Palm Sunday; actor Leslie Odom Jr. ("Music" and "One Night in Miami"); a look back at the pop culture of the '70s; Seth Doane on the prevalence of gay priests in the Catholic church; Tracy Smith on the history and medicinal values of chicken soup; Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill); Mo Rocca interviews actress Brenda Vaccaro; comic Jim Gaffigan;
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- 1979–TV Episode
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- 1979–TV Episode
- Journalist Bob Woodward; remembering Burt Reynolds; the trend of unusual names being given to children; a look back at songwriting team Rodgers and Hammerstein; the life and work of artist Alberto Giacometti; a 9/11 memorial in Shanksville, Pa., to those lost on Flight 93;
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- 1979–TV Episode
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- 1979–TV Episode
- Erin Moriarty on the increasing scrutiny of the Sackler family, due to its links to the pharmaceutical industry; John Dickerson interviews former Rep. John Boehner (R-Ohio); Lesley Stahl on new insight into former first lady Nancy Reagan's role in her husband's presidency; Michelle Miller interviews actor Jamie Foxx ("Dad Stop Embarrassing Me");
- Tracy Smith on the travel industry after COVID-19 restrictions; a classical pianist from Easter Island; Conor Knighton interviews travel guru Rick Steves; Norah O'Donnell interviews former President George W. Bush; actress Carey Mulligan ("Promising Young Woman"); Mark Phillips on Prince Philip's funeral; country duo Brothers Osborne;
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- David Pogue on the shift in work and home locations driven by the pandemic; an Italian castle made famous on social media; a tour of the Lyndhurst Mansion; designers using 3D printers to build new homes; Lee Cowan on an entire Alaskan town that is contained in a building; Anthony Mason interviews Crosby, Stills and Nash;
- Lee Cowan covers the dispute over the exact geographic center of North America; Rita Braver visits former senators Bob and Elizabeth Dole; tag sales; Tracy Smith interviews comic Rich Little; David Martin interviews the last surviving World War II Medal of Honor recipient, Herschel "Woody" Williams; map making; time travel;
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- 1979–TV Episode
- 1979–TV Episode
- Bill Bratton, the former police commissioner of New York City and Boston; San Francisco's new Street Crisis Response program; Lee Cowan interviews Edgar Rodriguez, who is both a police chief and pastor in Moville, Iowa; law enforcement in Europe; police in Japan;
- David Pogue on Amazon's use of robots to improve safety for workers; an exhibit of magazines; Lee Cowan on the controversial history of Flamin' Hot Cheetos; Rita Braver on how couples navigate the challenges of marriage; actor Anthony Ramos ("In the Heights"); Jane Pauley interviews author Stephen King; Erin Moriarty on remembering F. Lee Bailey (1933-2021);
- Allison Aubrey on the world of mRNA; a son who became a master canoe builder, using the tools he inherited from his late father; chef Bobby Flay; author Malcolm Gladwell; writer Russell T. Davies and actor Neil Patrick Harris; Rita Braver interviews TV host Seth Meyer ("Late Night with Seth Meyers"); Juneteenth; Happy Father's Day;
- Lou Burbank on an Oregon farmer's thoughts on immigration; Lee Cowan on architect Frank Lloyd Wright; Mo Rocca interviews former Solicitor General Ted Olson; Holly Williams looks at Britain's fractured royal family; John Dickerson interviews TV host Stephen Colbert ("The Late Show with Stephen Colbert"); the Harlem Cultural Festival of 1969; the endangered California condor; Mark Strassman with an update on the condo building collapse in Surfside, Florida;
- Happy Independence Day; Nancy Giles covers a Brooklyn, N.Y. restaurant helping immigrants; the arrival of another Statue of Liberty; Tracy Smith interviews producer/director Quentin Tarantino ("Once Upon a Time - In Hollywood"); the debate over statehood for Washington, D.C.; Faith Salie on learning lessons from ants; pie; journalist Sebastian Junger; the war in Afghanistan;
- Promising therapies for Lou Gehring's disease (ALS); Royal Albert Hall celebrates 150 years; actor James Caan ("Queen Bees"); artist Faith Ringgold; NFTs; "Roadrunner: A Film About Anthony Bourdain", a documentary about Anthony Bourdain; efforts to save the endangered California condor;
- The severe drought plaguing the American West; UNESCO World Heritage sites; two Missouri men who prosecutors say were wrongfully convicted; actor Matt Damon ("Stillwater"); filmmaker Josh Seftel; a man who has become a park bench therapist to passersby; Mo Rocca interviews singer Marilyn Maye;
- 1979– 1h 4mTV-PGTV EpisodeLee Cowan talks to a man who recovered from locked-in syndrome; artist Alice Neel; Martha Teichner interviews businessman Barry Diller and designer Diane von Furstenberg; Tracy Smith interviews actress Geena Davis ("Thelma and Louise"); New York's Coney Island; Wolf Trap National Park for the Performing Arts; navigation skills;
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- 1979–TV Episode
- Chip Reid on the reopening of the Smithsonian Institution; actress Jennifer Hudson ("Respect"); David Martin interviews retired Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman; Luke Burbank on the toxic mess in Butte, Montana; Lee Cowan interviews author Bob McKinnon; artist Wyland; the history of Asian-Americans; Tracy Smith interviews Serena Altschull, a former staffer at MTV;
- People who live in California's back country, keeping watch for the fires ravaging the West; kids whose mental health challenges and life crises emerge from the pressures of privilege; music mogul Clive Davis; actress Marlee Marlin ("CODA");
- David Pogue on garbage in space; Mo Rocca on the hydrangeas in Cape Cod; Colorado's Red Rocks Park and Amphitheater; the 50th anniversary of Jim Morrison's passing; treasure hunting in the Santa Barbara Channel; Tracy Smith interviews actor George Clooney; ancient marble Greek and Roman sculptures;
- The latest from Afghanistan; archer Matt Stulzman; New Orleans antique shop M.S. Rau; David Pogue interviews cellphone inventor Marty Cooper; Dr. Rich Krueger, a neonatologist; Tracy Smith interviews composer John Williams; lakes are restocked by airplanes; a mining town's only resident;
- Ted Koppel on gun violence; El Museo del Barrio; Lee Cowan interviews Zalmay Niazy, interpreter for U.S. forces and contractors in his native Afghanistan; Anthony Mason interviews singers/songwriters David Crosby, Stephen Stills, and Graham Nash; Faith Salie interviews TV personality Padma Lakshmi ("Taste the Nation with Padma Lakshmi"); retired Navy SEAL Eddie Gallagher;
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- 1979–TV Episode
- All aspects of our passion for pets, from viral videos to family pets, to a visit with Bindi Irwin, her brother, husband, and mother, who carry on the mission of their late father, animal conservationist and "Crocodile Hunter" Steve Irwin.
- Erin Moriarty on staffing challenges faced by many businesses across the country; Tracy Smith interviews actor Jeff Daniels; a butter sculptor at the Minnesota State Fair; photographer Richard Drew; Martha Teichner on the legacy of the 9/11 attacks; the world of tennis ball chasers;
- Martha Teichner on the Whimbrels; Ben Mankiewitz interviews comic Cedric the Entertainer ("The Neighborhood"); Rita Braver on sketches by Cezanne on exhibit at New York's Museum of Modern Art; writer David Chase; the reopening of "Wicked" on Broadway; Ground Zero, 20 years after 9/11; Wilma Melville; TV host/author Chris Wallace ("Fox News Sunday", book, "Countdown Bin Laden"); Dan Barry;
- Susan Spencer looks at the challenges facing estranged families; an exhibit of cars and art inspired by cars; former PepsiCola CEO Indra Nooyi; "Tina: The Tina Turner Musical; a modern day jousting competition in Italy; David Pogue looks at "Diana: The Musical"; Lee Cowan interviews game show host Drew Carey (The Price is Right (1972));
- 1979–TV Episode
- Problems in the supply chain; autumn leaves; the battle over Roe vs. Wade; Les Paul guitar auction; Tracy Smith interviews singer/songwriter Olivia Rodrigo; a woman who uses garage sale profits for good deeds; flying car; Billy Porter ("Cinderella"); authors Hillary Clinton and Louise Penny (book, "State of Terror");
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- 1979–TV Episode
- On this Thanksgiving weekend, CBS News' Steve Hartman serves up a hefty helping of good news from around the country.? Among his destinations: an award-winning cafeteria at an elementary school in Cincinnati, Ohio; Portland, Ore., where police hand out bicycle lights to cyclists, and Salem, N.H., home to an 11-year-old girl who raised $5,000 for a dog she found in an animal shelter. This past summer, a Beethoven manuscript misplaced for decades turned up at a seminary near Philadelphia. ?Correspondent Martha Teichner reports on the excitement among Beethoven musicians and scholars over the discovery. Viewers will also hear a rare performance of the missing work, "Grosse Fugue". Painter Grant Wood's "American Gothic" has become the second most recognizable painting in the world after only the "Mona Lisa." CBS News' Lee Cowan has the story behind the artist and his work that is 75 years old this year. Singer/songwriter John Fogerty has had a fabulous, yet tortured, career. The former Creedence Clearwater Revival member talks about his ups and down with CBS News' John Blackstone. When the airlines lose luggage, many wonder where it ultimately ends up. Bill Geist visits the Land of Lost Luggage in Scottsboro, Alabama, also known as The Unclaimed Baggage Center.
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- New depression treatment; Faith Salie on yawning; Jim Axelrod interviews sportscaster Bob Costa; the challenges facing those searching for lithium; Tracy Smith interviews actor Benedict Cumberbatch ("The Electrical Life of Louis Wain", "The Power of the Dog", and "Spider-Man: No Way Home"); an octogenarian pole vaulter; John Dickerson on infamous New York bordello owner Polly Adler; trumpeter Terrance Blanchard;