Jim Carrey to play Joe Biden on "SNL"
Carrey is not the only new addition to "SNL," the show announced this week.
Carrey is not the only new addition to "SNL," the show announced this week.
"If we can have football, we should have voting, too," said the school's chapter of an organization that promotes fair elections.
Ellen Bennett's journey to becoming the so-called "Apron Lady" started when she was a line cook at a Michelin-starred restaurant in Los Angeles. Now as the founder and CEO of Hedley & Bennett, she outfits top chefs, celebrities and home cooks with her functional kitchen gear. But as CBSN producer Jean Song reports, Bennett has been forced to pivot and reinvent the way she operates her business due to the pandemic.
Health and Human Services communications chief Michael Caputo announced a leave of absence Wednesday, just days after he came under fire for urging Trump supporters to prepare for a left-wing insurrection. Politico reported last week that Caputo's team tried to alter data coming out of the CDC to more closely fit the president's narrative. Dan Diamond, a health care reporter for Politico, broke that story and joins "Red and Blue" to discuss his reporting.
After slavery, Barr said stay-at-home orders were the "greatest intrusion on civil liberties in American history."
Jonas Seibert, a high school freshman and Eagle Scout, built an outdoor classroom for a school in his Wisconsin community, hoping to give students a breath of fresh air while learning.
More than half a million people across Alabama, Georgia and Florida were without power Thursday.
This year's Academy of Country Music Awards were, in many ways, a reflection of this time of upheaval. Everything was socially distant, but that didn't stop the night's big winners from reaching out to their fans with powerful performances and a message of hope. Gayle King reports.
Rev. Todd Bell has urged people to put their trust in God over government and questioned the wisdom of masks.
About 1.4 million applied for unemployment benefits, aid last week, as fewer self-employed workers sought help.
Associates of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny say he was likely poisoned with a Soviet-era nerve agent at a hotel in Siberia, not at an airport as originally suspected. As CBS News' Charlie D'Agata reports, new video has emerged that was apparently shot inside the hotel room, not long after Navalny fell ill on a plane.
As the coronavirus pandemic continues, people across the U.S. are losing loved ones to the illness. The victims include singer Trini Lopez, overnight DJ and songwriter Bill Mack, pioneering winemaker Milla Handley, Texas hospice chaplain Adolfo Alvarado, Jr., and LAPD senior detention officer Erica McAdoo. Anthony Mason profiles them in the “CBS This Morning” series Lives to Remember.
As the number of coronavirus cases soar at colleges and universities, there is another major problem many students face when campuses shut down -- finding basic needs like a safe place to live and enough food to eat. For the "CBS This Morning" series A More Perfect Union, Meg Oliver shares how one small college in the South is helping students with nowhere to go.
Science editor and birdwatcher Christian Cooper was influenced by many incidents of racial bias, including his own for his new comic book "It's a Bird." Cooper joins "CBS This Morning" to talk about the book's message about systemic racism and the lessons for young readers.
Preview: In an interview with "CBS Sunday Morning" the musical icon says, "I hated being famous. I hated being a star. I felt exhausted and used up"
More than 25,000 people are enrolled in the drugmaker's late-stage trial of a potential coronavirus vaccine.
Hurricane Sally weakened to a tropical depression but it is still threatening to bring potentially devastating rainfall and flooding to several states. CBS News' Nancy Chen reports on the damage so far, and CBS News meteorologist and climate specialist Jeff Berardelli joined CBSN with more on what to expect.
As part of our series "Black @: Private Education and Race," clinical psychologist and University of Pennsylvania professor Dr. Howard Stevenson joined CBSN to explain how racism leaves long-lasting effects on Black students. He says microaggressions and school policing policies are traumatizing for students, and that excluding Black experiences from the curriculum leaves Black students feeling like their lives don't matter.
Federal officials have rolled out plans for how to distribute a COVID-19 vaccine to Americans free of charge, and top health officials were questioned about it at a Senate hearing Wednesday. Internal medicine physician Dr. Shoshana Ungerleider joined CBSN with more.
The aerospace manufacturer doubled the job cuts it first announced in July, another sign of industry woes.
Associates of Vladimir Putin's biggest critic say he was likely poisoned with Novichok by way of a water bottle in his hotel room.
With scientific evidence of possible life on the 2nd planet from the sun renewing public interest, the Roscosmos chief would like to remind everyone who got there first.
The Big Ten reversed its decision not to have a fall college football season on Wednesday.
At 768 pages, the first volume covers a large part of the former president's life.
These kinds of dystopian weather events, happening often at the same time, are exactly what scientists have been warning about.