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2020

Новости за 02.12.2020

Bryan Cranston on new TV drama "Your Honor," filming during a pandemic

CBSNews.com 

Award-winning actor Bryan Cranston joins "CBS This Morning" live to discuss his role in the new Showtime limited series, "Your Honor." Cranston shares how he prepared for the role and what kind of parts he is drawn to. He'll also discuss his COVID-19 diagnosis earlier this year and how he still has yet to fully recover his sense of taste and smell.

Italy to start coronavirus vaccinations in January; gunmen take over Brazilian city in bank heist

CBSNews.com 

Italy plans to roll out Pfizer's COVID vaccine for widespread use in the country starting in January. Also, dozens of gunmen in Brazil effectively took an entire city hostage overnight in a brazen bank robbery, and the U.N. announced it's signed a deal with Ethiopia to allow unimpeded humanitarian access to parts of the embattled Tigray region. CBS News foreign correspondent Chris Livesay joined "CBSN AM" with today's headlines from around the world.

Oscar-nominated star of "Juno," "Inception" Elliot Page comes out as transgender

CBSNews.com 

Elliot Page, star of such films as "Juno" and "Inception," came out as transgender and non-binary in an emotional and candid social media post. In the post, Page also draws attention to discrimination and violence against transgender people, particularly against Black and Latinx trans women. Vladimir Duthiers reports.



CDC panel votes to give COVID-19 vaccines to health care workers, long-term care facilities

CBSNews.com 

On Tuesday, A CDC advisory panel voted to recommend that health care workers and long-term care facility residents and employees should be the first people in the United States to receive coronavirus vaccines. Dr. Ashish Jha, the dean of Brown University's School of Public Health, joins "CBS This Morning" to discuss the rising coronavirus cases and the latest vaccine news

Health in Her Hue connects Black women to "culturally competent" health providers

CBSNews.com 

Health in Her Hue is on a mission to reduce racial disparities in health care that can be a matter of life or death for more than 21 million Black women in the United States. Co-founders Ashlee Wisdom and Eddwina Bright tell CBSN how they’re aiming to improve health outcomes by connecting Black women with "culturally competent" providers.

VA, Defense Department under new pressure to help ailing veterans who served at toxic base

CBSNews.com 

Hundreds of service members have come forward after a CBS News investigation revealed new evidence of toxic material at a remote base used after 9/11. According to the Defense Department, more than 15,000 troops passed through a base known as K2 to support missions in nearby Afghanistan. Now, nearly 2,500 service members report rare cancers or other illnesses they believe are linked to their deployments. Catherine Herridge reports.

U.K. becomes first country to approve Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine

CBSNews.com 

The United Kingdom has become the first country to approve the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine. Immunizations are set to start next week, with the elderly and health care workers among the first to receive it. Charlie D'Agata reports.

Eye Opener: CDC weighs in on vaccine distribution priorities

CBSNews.com 

A CDC panel has recommended that front-line health care workers as well as those living and working in long-term care facilities should be first to receive a coronavirus vaccine. Also, Attorney General William Barr said he has seen no evidence of widespread election fraud. All that and all that matters in today's Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.

CBS Evening News, December 1, 2020

CBSNews.com 

CDC advisers vote health workers and nursing homes should get COVID-19 vaccine first; Charity provides blankets to children who are struggling





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