The year in review: 2018's tops in pop culture
"Sunday Morning" looks back at the year's most popular movies, music, TV and online content. Did you catch it all?
"Sunday Morning" looks back at the year's most popular movies, music, TV and online content. Did you catch it all?
The lovable comic duo of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy, who starred in more than a hundred feature films and shorts together during the Golden Age of Hollywood, are the subjects of a new biopic, "Stan & Ollie," about the aging comedians on a music hall tour of Britain in the post-war years. Lee Cowan talks with stars John C. Reilly and Steve Coogan and director Jon S. Baird.
The chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee tells "Face the Nation" negotiations are "getting nowhere"
CBS News correspondent Ben Tracy discusses what the coming year may bring for North Korea and its nuclear program, and the duel of tariffs between the Trump administration and China.
The comedian says screens embody much of life's obsessions, including parental neglect
CBS News correspondent Seth Doane looks at the prospects for diplomacy in a region torn by war, political upheaval, and, in the case of Saudi Arabia, a scandal involving a political assassination.
"Sunday Morning" host Jane Pauley reviews some of the year's biggest news stories from home and abroad.
The comedian and "Sunday Morning" contributor discusses a 21st century obsession that none of us can escape.
The lovable comic duo of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy, who starred in more than a hundred feature films and shorts together during the Golden Age of Hollywood, are the subjects of a new biopic, "Stan & Ollie," about the aging comedians on a music hall tour of Britain in the post-war years. Lee Cowan talks with stars John C. Reilly and Steve Coogan and director Jon S. Baird.
CBS News correspondent Seth Doane on the prospects for diplomacy in a region torn by war and political upheaval
Two hundred and fifty years ago, in Edinburgh, Scotland, a printer, an engraver, and an editor teamed up to produce the first Encyclopedia Britannica, which contained scholarly essays and short definitional entries about practically everything. It was a revolution in information. But now that we have instant access to all knowledge from throughout human history via our smartphones, what would kids today think of the encyclopedia, which now encompasses 44 million words, in books? Luke Burbank reports.
Change is coming to Congress. CBS News correspondent Chip Reid lays out the challenges facing President Donald Trump, from House Democrats and Special Counsel Robert Mueller, in the coming year.
What about the year gone by? Time for one last look with Jane Pauley
A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the #1 Sunday morning news program
The Montana Democrat said President Trump wants to use taxpayers as an "ATM" to fund a wall on the southwestern border
The handy guide to the world's accumulated knowledge, predating the internet and smartphones by more than two centuries, is still finding young fans in today's Information Age
In an exit interview with the L.A. Times, the outgoing White House chief of staff blamed Sessions for the child separation policy at the border
In an exit interview with the L.A. Times, the outgoing White House chief of staff blamed Sessions for the child separation policy at the border
The following is a transcript of the interview with Gayle Smith, CEO of The ONE Campaign, that aired Sunday, Dec. 30, 2018, on "Face the Nation"
The following is a transcript of the interview with Democratic Sen. Jon Tester of Montana that aired Sunday, Dec. 30, 2018, on "Face the Nation"
The following is a transcript of the interview with Republican Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama that aired Sunday, Dec. 30, 2018, on "Face the Nation"
Alabama (14-0) advanced to the national championship game for the fourth consecutive season, and will face Clemson in the national championship game
A look at the roller-coaster relationship of Shayna Hubers and Ryan Poston and how it ended in murder
A lawyer shot dead at home - his girlfriend admits she pulled the trigger and then dances, twirls and snaps her fingers in a strange police video. Was it self-defense or love gone bad?
Shayna Hubers was taken into custody after calling 911 and reporting to police she'd killed her boyfriend in self-defense -- she was read her rights and asked for an attorney, but she did not remain silent