Host: Jane Pauley
COVER STORY: How free speech is under attack in the U.S.
America was built on the premise of free speech, but today’s news is filled with examples of limiting people’s expression – from prohibitions against misinformation, to book bans and state laws restricting how teachers can discuss such topics as racial injustice, sexual orientation, and gender identity. Correspondent David Pogue talks with writers and academics about free speech and a corresponding climate of self-censorship; and with a New Hampshire history teacher who says, “The ghost of Senator McCarthy is alive and well in some of our state house hallways.”
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HEADLINES: Latest on Putin’s advances against Ukraine
Correspondent Holly Williams reports on the developing situation in Europe, while national security correspondent David Martin reports from Washington.
MUSIC: Tears for Fears returns, stronger than ever
Performing as the group Tears for Fears, English pop rockers Roland Orzabal and Curt Smith had hits in the 1980s with such songs as “Shout” and “Everybody Wants to Rule the World.” But after an acrimonious split in 1991, the two didn’t speak to one another for nine years. They have since reunited, and are about to release Tears for Fears’ first album in 17 years, “The Tipping Point.” Correspondent Tracy Smith sits down with Orzabal and Smith – soon to embark on a U.S. tour – to find out how their musical collaboration helped heal a personal tragedy.
“The Tipping Point” by Tears for Fears (Concord Records) will be released February 25. To watch a music video for the album’s title track, click on the player below:
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BUSINESS: Byron Allen on the road to media mastery
Four years ago, comedian and media mogul Byron Allen became the first Black American to own a 24-hour mainstream cable news network when he purchased The Weather Channel for $310 million – in cash. Now, Allen is preparing a bid to buy the Denver Broncos, which – if successful – would make him the NFL’s first Black majority owner. Correspondent Lee Cowan talks with Allen about his entrepreneurial spirit, and his success at increasing minority ownership in broadcasting.
PREVIEW: Broadcast tycoon Byron Allen on being a role model for future Black business leaders
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PASSAGE: Remembering P.J. O’Rourke
ART: The revelatory art of Joseph Yoakum
Joseph Yoakum (1891-1972) didn’t start creating art until he was in his 70s. Self-taught in his use of ballpoint pens, colored pencil and pastels, Yoakum (who claimed Native American ancestry, and whose mother was a formerly-enslaved African American) created fanciful landscapes, now currently on view at New York’s Museum of Modern Art. Correspondent Rita Braver reports.
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HARTMAN: Snowman
STAGE: Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick: The show does go on
Two years ago, Matthew Broderick and Sarah Jessica Parker were set to star in a New York revival of Neil Simon’s “Plaza Suite” when COVID-19 shut down Broadway theatres (and practically everything else). Now, the show is finally set to open, and two years after interviewing the husband-and-wife duo, “Sunday Morning” anchor Jane Pauley sits down once again with Parker and Broderick to talk about the unprecedented hiatus.
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HISTORY: Franklin Pierce – America’s handsomest president?
No survey of America’s worst presidents would be complete without our 14th president, Franklin Pierce, whose reputation for amiability and good looks (and his introduction of perforated postage stamps) was offset by his support for the 1854 Kansas-Nebraska Act, which led to clashes between pro- and anti-slavery forces. Correspondent Mo Rocca looks at the legacy of a president whose actions in office brought the nation closer to civil war.
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COMMENTARY: How the murders of two Black sons ignited social justice movements
New York Times columnist Charles Blow reflects on the similarities between the 1955 lynching of 14-year-old Emmett Till and the 2012 killing of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, and how they each sparked protest movements led by mothers with tears on their cheeks but steel in their spines.
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MILEPOST: TBD
NATURE: Eagles
WEB EXCLUSIVE:
OLYMPICS: The sport of Olympic pin trading
Collectors go for the gold in what is one of the most competitive of Olympics events: trading hard-to-find pins that commemorate the Games. “CBS Sunday Morning” producer Roman Feeser provides the play-by-play.
CBS NEWS SPECIAL: “Here Comes the Sun” (Video)
It seems like Andrew Garfield can do it all, from blockbuster hits to teaming up with Lin-Manuel Miranda for his most recent role in “Tick, Tick … BOOM!” Also: We take a peek behind the counter at some of New York City’s bodegas, where the proprietors are drinking a special kind of coffee.
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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