Super Bowl 50 preview with James Brown and CBS Sports
"Sunday Morning" checks in with the CBS Sports crew to get details on tonight's NFL championship game.
"Sunday Morning" checks in with the CBS Sports crew to get details on tonight's NFL championship game.
We leave you this Super Bowl Sunday a few miles south of the big game, at California's Moss Landing State Beach. No Panthers and Broncos here ... just sea lions, otters and pelicans. Videography: Scot Miller
TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, and Design, and the annual Vancouver conference begins next week, with speakers as wide-ranging as Al Gore, Norman Lear and John Legend. Videos of its speakers are watched by three million people every day. David Pogue of Yahoo Tech talks TED Talks with some of the most popular speakers.
Days before the New Hampshire primary, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton defends herself against attacks from Florida Sen. Marco Rubio on abortion and from Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders on her ties to Wall Street. The interview aired on the Sunday, February, 7, 2016 broadcast of "Face the Nation."
The British author spoke to CBS News about the American release of her book, the romance genre, and why she's always been an author.
Japan is known for robots, sushi and cherry blossoms. But there's a new attraction: a futuristic museum devoted to high-tech toilets. Seth Doane visits the Toto Museum, and the factory of Japan's largest toilet manufacturer, to learn about the latest in commode design.
The National Park Service turns 100 this year. As part of our new series, "On the Trail," Conor Knighton takes a trip to Acadia National Park in Maine. At just under 50,000 acres, it's one of our smallest national parks, but also one of the most popular.
CBS News special correspondent and host of The Super Bowl Today, James Brown gives “Face the Nation” viewers a sneak peek of today’s Super Bowl showdown on CBS. With so much at stake, who will take home the glory?
In anticipation of Super Bowl 50, DeMaurice Smith sits down with “Face the Nation” host John Dickerson to discuss concussion injuries in the NFL. The executive director of the NFL Players Association says the issue must be addressed head on, tackling “prevention, treatment and medical diagnosis.”
Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders says “the American people know better” than to assume campaign contributions do not impact politicians. The Vermont senator says there is a big difference between his supporters’ donations of “30 or 40 dollars” and large super PAC contributions to his competitors.
Democratic presidential candidate and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders says he does not accept the “media narrative” questioning his foreign policy expertise. Sanders calls the Iraq War the “most important foreign policy issue in modern history,” adding that he opposed it from the beginning.
Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton says she will not take “artful smears” from rival Bernie Sanders’ campaign connecting her to big donors. Clinton argues that President Obama was not “automatically disqualified” from the race in 2008, when he took more money from Wall Street than Democratic predecessors.
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton says Florida Sen. Marco Rubio’s attacks on her abortion stance are “pretty pathetic.” The former secretary of state argues reasonable restrictions to abortion are permitted under Roe v. Wade as long as the mother’s health is taken into account.
Gearing up for the New Hampshire primary just days away, “Face the Nation” has the latest on the Democratic primary race with candidates Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders. Ahead of Sunday’s Super Bowl 50 game, executive director of the NFL Players Association DeMaurice Smith also joins the show.
A national survey finds that nearly 18 percent of Super Bowl viewers will be watching not for the game, but for the ads. Anna Werner reports on what goes into the making of ad campaigns, both big-budget and modest in scope.
"Sunday Morning" pays homage to aerospace scientist Jack Cover, who died seven years ago today, who is best known for his invention: a weapon that shoots electricity. Charles Osgood reports.
Defying international warnings, North Korea has launched a long-range rocket. Jonathan Vigliotti reports from London.
Die hard NFL fans will be watching every second of Super Bowl 50. But what makes people obsess over the rituals of football and other sports? Susan Spencer discovers, as she mingles with super fans, that the roots of their sports love run deep.
Overtime pay will be high for San Francisco and Santa Clara police officers after Sunday's Super Bowl, but who's footing the bill? John Blackstone has a look at whether or not hosting a Super Bowl is as beneficial for a city as it might seem.
With the Carnival celebration underway in Brazil, concern about the Zika virus looms large. This week, over a million tourists will visit Brazil, the country with the highest number of Zika infections. Dr. Jon LaPook reports from Rio de Janeiro.
A year into the pandemic, medical experts are worried about the potential long-term health effects of missed cancer screenings. Mireya Villarreal spoke to two women who experienced late cancer diagnoses. And on "CBS This Morning," Dr. David Agus explained why Americans should not postpone annual cancer screenings. He also addressed reports that some people who received COVID-19 vaccines are mistaking the side effect of swollen lymph nodes for signs of breast cancer.
A 6.4 magnitude earthquake rocked Tainan, a city of nearly two million people on Taiwan's southern coast, early Saturday morning. Mireya Villarreal has more on the search for survivors.
With Hillary Clinton trailing Bernie Sanders 2-to-1 in polls ahead of the New Hampshire primary, Clinton is looking to repeat her 2008 comeback in that state. As Chip Reid reports, Clinton was down ten points in polls against Barack Obama, but pulled off a last-second victory.
With three days to go before the New Hampshire primaries, GOP frontrunners Donald Trump, Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio will all be looking for ways to elevate themselves in Saturday night's debate. Major Garrett has more from Manchester, N.H.
CBS News chief medical correspondent Dr. Jonathan LaPook and freelance producer Kate Steiker-Ginzberg discuss the Zika outbreak in Brazil and what is being done to prevent the virus from continuing to spread.