This week on “Sunday Morning” (June 7)

FAN Editor

Host: Jane Pauley

OPENING: “Abblasen”

george floyd protests
Demonstrators march down Pennsylvania Avenue near the Trump International Hotel during a protest against police brutality and the death of George Floyd, on June 3, 2020 in Washington, D.C. Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

HEADLINES: A week like no other
It was a week when hundreds of thousands of demonstrators in all 50 states, and beyond, risked exposing themselves to coronavirus in order to voice their anguish at the death, in Minneapolis, of George Floyd, another black man killed while being detained by a white police officer. Correspondent Martha Teichner reports on the social and political upheaval of protests, violence, and demands for justice.

         
COVER STORY:
The whole world is watching us
International observers, both America’s friends and adversaries, discuss the anger and polarization in our nation that, they say, represent a United States relinquishing its global leadership and turning its back on the world. Special contributor Ted Koppel talks with Chinese journalist Liu Xin; Economist editor-in-chief Zanny Minton Beddoes; writer-philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy; former Mexican cabinet official Jorge Castañeda; and Russian broadcaster Vladimir Pozner about what the past four years have meant for our country in the eyes of the world.

For more info:

       
CBS NEWS POLL:
Trump tweets
      

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CBS News’ Tony Dokoupil with Pete Davidson on the shore of Staten Island. CBS News

MOVIES: Pete Davidson
“Saturday Night Live” star Pete Davidson was a longshot when he auditioned at just 20 years old. Now, six years later, he is co-author and star of his first major film, “The King of Staten Island,” about a drifting twenty-something. “CBS This Morning” co-host Tony Dokoupil pays a visit with Davidson to New York City’s least-celebrated borough, and also talks with director and co-writer Judd Apatow.

PREVIEW: Pete Davidson says making “The King of Staten Island” has been “cleansing” for him

To watch a trailer for “The King of Staten Island” click on the video player below:

The King of Staten Island – Official Trailer by Universal Pictures on YouTube

For more info:

Little_Boy_9000384_sm_1.jpg
The first atomic bomb, nicknamed “Little Boy,” exploded over Hiroshima, Japan, with a force of approximately fourteen kilotons, on August 6, 1945. U.S. Department of Energy

HISTORY: “Countdown 1945”: The story of the first use of the atomic bomb
Fox News’ Chris Wallace talks about his book chronicling the efforts of President Truman and the top-secret Manhattan Project to create the weapon that would end World War II. CBS News national security correspondent David Martin reports.

READ AN EXCERPT: “Countdown 1945” and the race to the atomic bomb

For more info:

       
SOCIOLOGY:
A crossroads for race relations
Americans are bearing witness to a national reckoning about racism, which has permeated all levels of life, producing different standards for whites and people of color. Correspondent Maurice DeBois talks with activists, educators and writers about wrestling with the problems of race, about white privilege, and about the need for parents to give African American youths “the talk” – instructions on how to behave in front of law enforcement to try to avoid negative repercussions based on their skin color.

For more info:

      
CBS NEWS POLL:
 Police use of force

      
HARTMAN:
TBD

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Correspondent Mo Rocca with one Broadway theatre’s “ghost light.”  CBS News

ON STAGE: Keeping the lights burning on Broadway
COVID-19 has shuttered stages on the Great White Way, but there are some traditions in Broadway theatres that can’t be totally turned off. Mo Rocca talks with “Hadestown” star André De Shields, multiple Tony-winner Bernadette Peters, Broadway producer Jennifer Ashley Tepper, and with Seth Rudetsky & James Wesley, the couple behind the “Stars In the House” web series, about how the theater world is coping with the shutdown, and when shows may be expected to reopen.

For more info:

Obit Chriso
In this Feb. 12, 2005 photo, pedestrians walk along the edge of Harlem Meer under “The Gates” project, by artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude, in New York’s Central Park. Julie Jacobson/AP

PASSAGE: Remembering Christo
The artist Christo, who – teamed with his wife Jeanne-Claude – became renowned for monumental, transformative works of public art, wrapping buildings and landscapes with colorful fabric, died May 31 at age 84. Jane Pauley looks back at his free-spirited art.

FROM THE ARCHIVES: Christo & Jeanne-Claude put Berlin’s Reichstag under wraps (Video)
In this “CBS Sunday Morning” report which originally aired on June 25, 1995, correspondent Martha Teichner reported from Berlin on one of their most famous works: Wrapping the Reichstag in fabric, which revealed as much as it concealed.

GALLERY: The art of Christo (1935-2020)

For more info:

        
HISTORY
: An old fear that still hasn’t gone away
In 1921 a mob of whites in Tulsa, Okla., descended upon a black-owned business district and murdered as many as 300 people. Contributor Kelefa Sanneh, of The New Yorker magazine, looks at how a massacre wasn’t even discussed generations later owing to fears of reprisals. 

See also:

For more info:

       
CBS NEWS POLL:
The next generation

       
NATURE:
TBD
       

WEB EXCLUSIVES:

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Black Lives Matter march in Chicago.  © Ryan Bakerink

SNAPSHOT: Black Lives Matters protest in Chicago (Video)
“Sunday Morning” presents pictures of marchers, and the after-effects of unrest, from a protest in Chicago over the death of George Floyd, by photographer Ryan Bakerink (with gallery).

For more info:

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Itzhak Perlman conducts the Juilliard Orchestra in a virtual group performance of a passage from Edward Elgar’s “Enigma Variations.”  Juilliard School

“SUNDAY MORNING” MATINEE: Video playlist
COVID-19 has shut down the Great White Way and concert halls, but Broadway stars and musicians are performing in videos recorded especially for “Sunday Morning” viewers.

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Song Yang in the Chinese thriller ‘Wrath of Silence.” International Film Festival & Awards Macao

MOVIES: “We Are One” presents a free global film festival online
With theatres closed around world, 21 international film festivals unite to curate streaming content, including features, documentaries, and conversations with filmmakers. Films will be streamed through June 7 at youtube.com/WeAreOne.

For more info:


The Emmy Award-winning “CBS Sunday Morning” is broadcast on CBS Sundays beginning at 9:00 a.m. ET. Executive producer is Rand Morrison.

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