Host: Jane Pauley.
COVER STORY: A frontline within the abortion divide
The border between Missouri (the place abortion is extraordinarily tough to entry) and Illinois (the place abortion rights are codified) has come to mark one of many nice divisions in America at present. Correspondent Martha Teichner travels to a frontline within the debate over abortion, and visits a first-of-its-kind Regional Logistics Middle serving to ladies from throughout the nation entry abortions.
For more information:
- Deliberate Parenthood of the St. Louis Area and Southwest Missouri
- Rep. Mary Elizabeth Coleman (R-Mo.)
COVER STORY: Roe v. Wade and the Supreme Court docket's legitimacy
Fifty years after the U.S. Supreme Court docket established a constitutional proper to abortion in Roe v. Wade, the present Supreme Court docket seems able to overturn that proper. Correspondent Jim Axelrod appears at how the leaked draft of Justice Sam Alito's opinion (which might eradicate constitutional safety for abortions) demonstrates the courtroom's willingness to insert itself into controversial tradition battle points.
For more information:
MUSIC: Bob Dylan Middle: Exhibiting the voice of a era
In Tulsa, Oklahoma, a former paper warehouse has been remodeled into the Bob Dylan Middle, a repository for 100,000 gadgets from the singer-songwriter's assortment. CBS Information' John Dickerson visits the middle, the place reveals that includes Dylan's unique manuscripts and notebooks supply a window into the painstaking craft of considered one of America's foremost musical artists.
For more information:
- Bob Dylan Middle, opening Could 10 in Tulsa, Okla.
- bobdyland.com (Official website)
- "Sixties: Teenagers Recycle the Period" by Robert Siegel was initially broadcast on NPR's "All Issues Thought-about" on August 7, 1987. © 1987 Nationwide Public Radio, Inc. Used with the permission of NPR. Any unauthorized duplication is strictly prohibited.
BUSINESS: How doughnut outlets turned a candy American Dream
Roughly 80% of doughnut outlets in southern California are owned by Cambodian refugee households, who got here to this nation searching for shelter from genocide. Correspondent Elaine Quijano explores these immigrants' tales of resilience, reinvention and success, wrapped in a particular pink doughnut field.
For more information:
- Blinkie's Donuts, Woodland Hills, Calif.
- Artist Phung Hyunh
- Exhibition: "Doughnut (W)gap" by Phung Huynh, at Self Assist Graphics & Artwork, Los ANgeles (by might 27)
- Lucas Museum of Narrative Artwork, Los Angeles
TV: Phil Rosenthal and Ray Romano's recipe for "Any individual Feed Phil"
On the hit Netflix collection "Any individual Feed Phil," Phil Rosenthal eats his means world wide to find what makes meals, and the individuals who cook dinner it, so fascinating. The concept for the present got here from an encounter years in the past with comic Ray Romano (star of the hit sitcom "All people Loves Raymond," which Rosenthal created). Rosenthal and Romano speak about their bond, and the transformative energy of journey, to CBS Information' Dr. Jon LaPook.
For more information:
- "Any individual Feed Phil," Season 5 debuts Could 25 on Netflix
- "Any individual Feed Phil the Guide: Untold Tales, Behind-the-Scenes Pictures and Favourite Recipes" by Phil Rosenthal and Jenn Garbee (Simon & Schuster), in Hardcover, eBook and Audio Format, accessible October 2022 through Amazon and Indiebound
- Any individual Feed the Individuals
- rayromano.com
- Because of Osteria Mozza, Los Angeles
PASSAGE: In memoriam
WASHINGTON: The Lincoln Memorial at 100 – How a monument to historical past turned part of historical past
On Could 30, 1922, an imposing memorial to the "Nice Emancipator" was devoted in Washington, D.C., in entrance of a big, segregated crowd. Correspondent Religion Salie tells the story of how the Lincoln Memorial – symbolically carved from stone from throughout america – would solely later turn into a logo of inclusion, and a strong platform for the therapeutic of racial divides.
For more information:
- Lincoln Memorial (Nationwide Park Service)
- Nationwide Mall and Memorial Parks, Washington, D.C.
- Scott Sandage, professor, Carnegie Mellon College, Pittsburgh, Pa.
- Salamishah Tillet, professor, Rutgers College, Newark, N.J.
HARTMAN: TBD
BROADWAY: The brand new comedy "POTUS": All of the president's ladies
The Broadway play "POTUS" tells the comical story of the ladies who encompass an incompetent, lecherous president, and the way they wield energy. Correspondent Rita Braver talks with stars Vanessa Williams, Rachel Dratch, Julianne Hough, Julie White, Suzy Nakamura and Lilli Cooper; director Susan Stroman; and playwright Selina Fillinger, making her Broadway debut.
For more information:
- "POTUS: Or, Behind Each Nice Dumbass are Seven Girls Making an attempt to Maintain Him Alive" on the Schubert Theatre, New York Metropolis (by August 14) | Ticket data
COMMENTARY: Gwyneth Paltrow on the fun and stresses of motherhood
The Oscar-winning actress, and the founder and CEO of the approach to life model Goop, talks concerning the emotional highs and lows of changing into a mom, from the expertise of giving delivery, to postpartum melancholy, and the diaper tax, which will increase the price of a necessity right into a luxurious class.
For more information:
POLITICS: David Gergen: At the moment's leaders in Washington ought to step apart
David Gergen, lengthy an advisor to presidents from each events, believes the older era at present working the present in Washington ought to step apart for youthful management. He talks with CBS Information' Robert Acosta about his new e book, "Hearts Touched With Fireplace: How Nice Leaders Are Made," and concerning the present state of American democracy.
PREVIEW: David Gergen's recommendation to Washington institution
For more information:
- "Hearts Touched with Fireplace: How Nice Leaders Are Made" by David Gergen (Simon & Schuster), in Hardcover, eBook and Audio codecs, accessible through Amazon and Indiebound
- David Gergen, Harvard Kennedy Faculty
NATURE: TBD
WEB EXCLUSIVES:
ARCHIVES: From 2001: Carly Simon on listening to the music once more (Video)
Singer-songwriter Carly Simon, who's recorded 13 Prime 40 hits and received an Oscar, is a 2022 inductee to the Rock & Roll Corridor of Fame. On this "Sunday Morning" profile that was broadcast on January 28, 2001, Simon talks with correspondent Rita Braver about her confessional music.
ARCHIVES: From 2007: Annie Lennox on breaking new floor (Video)
4-time Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter Annie Lennox, famend each for her work as a part of the Eurythmics and for her solo profession, is a 2022 inductee to the Rock & Roll Corridor of Fame. On this "Sunday Morning" profile that was broadcast on September 30, 2007, Lennox talks with correspondent Mark Philips about why she does not imagine in standing nonetheless – as an artist or a humanitarian.
"HERE COMES THE SUN": The celebs who performed iconic "First Girls," and cryptocurrency 101
Their names ring out with historic and cultural significance: Eleanor Roosevelt, Betty Ford and Michelle Obama. Leslie Stahl spoke with the ladies who portrayed them: Gillian Anderson, Michelle Pfeiffer and Viola Davis. We even have a narrative on cryptocurrency. You've got heard of it, however do you actually know what it's and the way it works?
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