The Emmy Award-winning “CBS News Sunday Morning” is broadcast on CBS Sundays beginning at 9:00 a.m. ET. “Sunday Morning” also streams on the CBS News app beginning at 11:00 a.m. ET. (Download it here.)Â
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COVER STORY: Trump’s first week
CBS News chief election & campaign correspondent Robert Costa and presidential historian Lindsay Chervinsky take stock of President Trump’s first week in office.
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ALMANAC: January 26
“Sunday Morning” looks back at historical events on this date.
FASHION: The humility of designer Paul Smith: “It’s just fashion”
Sir Paul Smith is one of Britain’s most successful independent designers, with 130 stores in more than 60 countries. He talks with correspondent Seth Doane about his unexpected career; his creative process; and keeping things fun after more than 50 years in the business.
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HARTMAN: Met guard
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BROADWAY: Idina Menzel returns to Broadway in “Redwood”
In her new musical, “Redwood,” the Tony Award-winning superstar plays a woman seeking a refuge, and a purpose, by escaping into a Redwood forest. Correspondent Tracy Smith talks with Menzel about the show, now at Broadway’s Nederlander Theatre (where Menzel debuted in “Rent” 30 years ago), and about such career highlights as “Wicked” and “Frozen.”
To listen to Idina Menzel perform “Great Escape,” from the musical “Redwood,” click on the video player below:
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PASSAGE: In memoriam
“Sunday Morning” remembers some of the notable figures who left us this week.
HISTORY: How a president’s death helped kill Washington’s “spoils system”
In the 1800s, the main job requirement for most federal employees was loyalty to the newly-elected president, who would fill the government bureaucracy with his supporters. But after a rejected office-seeker shot President James Garfield, reformers won long-sought-after changes: workers hired for their expertise, not their fealty. Correspondent Mo Rocca talks with journalist and historian Scott Greenberger about how a meritocracy finally came to the federal government, and finds out what Mark Twain had to do with it.
For more info:
- “The Unexpected President: The Life and Times of Chester A. Arthur” by Scott Greenberger (Da Capo Press), in Hardcover, Trade Paperback, eBook and Audio formats, available via Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Bookshop.org
- Scott Greenberger, executive editor, Stateline
- Mark Twain House & Museum, Hartford, Conn.
- Jason Scappaticci, “Bow Tie Historian”
U.S.: A tour of the Bronx
Comedian and actress Susie Essman was a kid from the Bronx, and maintains a devotion to this monumental, magical and, at times, maligned slice of the Big Apple. She takes “Sunday Morning” viewers on a tour, joined by such Bronx luminaries as writer and humorist Ian Frazier, astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson, actor and playwright Chazz Palminteri, rapper and entrepreneur Fat Joe, and Bronx Borough President Vanessa Gibson.
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MOVIES: The spirit of Sundance
This month, in the Wasatch Mountains of Utah, the Sundance Film Festival is once again providing a showcase for independent filmmakers and documentarians from around the world. But that isn’t all that Sundance does. Correspondent Lee Cowan talked with actor Robert Redford, founder of the non-profit Sundance Institute, about the history of the festival, and of the filmmakers’ labs that help up-and-coming cinematic storytellers hone their craft. Cowan also talks with actress Glenn Close; the Institute’s founding senior director, Michelle Satter; and Sean Wang, director of last year’s breakout festival hit, the coming-of-age story “Didi.”
CURTAIN-RAISER: Sundance 2025 film lineup features Jennifer Lopez, John Malkovich, Lily Gladstone and more
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U.S.: Rebuilding Paradise
The recent wildfires in Los Angeles County destroyed thousands of homes and businesses. But residents of Paradise, Calif., who lost their homes to the devastating Camp Fire in 2018, did not give up. Correspondent Ben Tracy looks at how the community is being reborn, using building materials that are designed not to burn. (An earlier version of this story aired May 29, 2022.)
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MOVIES: Pete Davidson and Dav Pilkey on “Dog Man”
The playful anarchy of author and illustrator Dav Pilkey’s bestselling “Dog Man” series is now on screen in a new animated film. Correspondent Rita Braver talks with Pilkey about the genesis of his hero, a cop who is part-man, part-police dog; and with comedian Pete Davidson, who voices Dog Man’s arch-nemesis, Petey the Cat.
To watch a trailer for “Dog Man,” click on the video player below:
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NATURE: TBD
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FROM THE ARCHIVES: The birth of the movies (YouTube Video)
Watch these classic “Sunday Morning” reports exploring the birth of motion pictures, the greats of early Hollywood, and the continuing attraction of silent movies for filmmakers and audiences, including: The Lumiere Brothers, who revolutionized moving pictures; Charlie Chaplin, the first international superstar; The life and career of Buster Keaton; A newfound fascination for silent film star Mary Pickford; The making of “Wings,” the first film to win a best picture Oscar; A 2005 Turner Classic Movies contest that asked young composers to write a score for a silent Greta Garbo film, “The Temptress”; A look back at comedian Harold Lloyd; Conductor Gillian Anderson on leading orchestra scores for silent films, including “Nosferatu”; The story of Laurence Austin, who operated an L.A. theater devoted to the silent era, until his murder in 1997; and Hollywood’s love affair with a new silent movie, “The Artist.”
FROM THE ARCHIVES: David Lynch on Transcendental Meditation (YouTube Video)
Director David Lynch, renowned for such visionary and surreal works as “Blue Velvet,” “Twin Peaks” and “Mulholland Drive,” died on January 16, 2025, at age 78. A longtime practitioner of Transcendental Meditation (or TM), and founder of the David Lynch Foundation for Consciousness-Based Education and World Peace, he spoke in 2016 with “Sunday Morning” correspondent Mo Rocca about the effects of TM. Rocca also visited a Los Angeles school, where Lynch guided students on the benefits of meditation. [From a report that originally aired January 3, 2016.]
The Emmy Award-winning “CBS News Sunday Morning” is broadcast on CBS Sundays beginning at 9:00 a.m. ET. Executive producer is Rand Morrison.
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“Sunday Morning” also streams on the CBS News app beginning at 11:00 a.m. ET. (Download it here.)Â
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