The Emmy Award-winning “CBS Information Sunday Morning” is broadcast on CBS Sundays starting at 9:00 a.m. ET. “Sunday Morning” additionally streams on the CBS News app starting at 11:00 a.m. ET. (Download it here.)
Hosted by Jane Pauley
COVER STORY: How is synthetic intelligence affecting job searches?
Synthetic intelligence has already develop into a disruptor within the labor market, as job postings declined over the previous 12 months by 6.7 %, with entry-level positions particularly hard-hit. However as David Pogue learns, not all industries are affected by the push for AI.
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ALMANAC: August 31
“Sunday Morning” appears again at historic occasions on this date.
CBS Information
U.S.: This Iowa truck cease is “Disney World for truckers”
The Iowa 80 Truckstop, on Interstate 80, claims to be the world’s largest truck cease – and who would argue? Luke Burbank pulls as much as the Walcott, Iowa truck cease bigger than 150 soccer fields, catering to those that hold America transferring, which options all the pieces from 24-hour eating places and upkeep outlets, to a dentist, ministry workplace, and movie show.
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ARTS: “Portray Vitality”: Alex Katz spotlights his favourite artists
Painter Alex Katz, acclaimed for his figurative artwork and landscapes from a seven-decade profession, is now targeted on the work of different artists. He is gifted a set of greater than 100 work by rising and established artists to Maine’s Portland Museum of Artwork. Elaine Quijano talks with Katz concerning the exhibition “Portray Vitality.”
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MUSIC: “John’s Model”: John Fogerty on rerecording Creedence Clearwater Revival hits
One of many founding members of Creedence Clearwater Revival, John Fogerty misplaced management of his personal songs when the band broke up within the early Nineteen Seventies. Now, after shopping for again rights to his Creedence catalog, Fogerty (who not too long ago turned 80) has come again to his music, recording the album “Legacy.” He talks with Robert Costa about rerecording such classics as “Proud Mary,” “Unhealthy Moon Rising” and “Lucky Son.”
You possibly can stream John Fogerty’s album “Legacy: The Creedence Clearwater Revival Years (John’s Model)” by clicking on the embed beneath (Free Spotify registration required to listen to the tracks in full):
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PASSAGE: In memoriam
“Sunday Morning” remembers a number of the notable figures who left us this week.
THESE UNITED STATES: The rise of union energy
Within the Thirties, strikes by employees on the “Huge 3” automakers led to recognition of the United Auto Employees union – and to a common strengthening of labor rights that reshaped America. Jane Pauley stories.
Lou Bopp
U.S.: “Portrait of an individual who’s not there”: Documenting the bedrooms of college taking pictures victims
Over the previous six years, the mother and father of college taking pictures victims opened their doorways to CBS Information’ Steve Hartman and photographer Lou Bopp, inviting them to see what it is wish to stay alongside their youngsters’s bedrooms, simply as they left them. [First aired 11/14/2024.]
INTERACTIVE: “Everything as it was”: Explore the bedrooms of kids killed in school shootings
COMMENTARY: How do you make a portrait of a child who isn’t there? Photographer Lou Bopp found a way, but it wasn’t easy
The photographer who labored with Steve Hartman describes in poignant element the emotional challenges of working with the households of college taking pictures victims.
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CBS Information
HEALTH: Dr. Sanjay Gupta on the mysteries of persistent ache
Latest analysis into persistent ache, which afflicts tens of millions of People, has led to a stunning supply: the mind. “Sunday Morning” host Jane Pauley talks with Dr. Sanjay Gupta (a neurosurgeon and chief medical correspondent for CNN) about his new guide, “It Would not Need to Damage,” and concerning the physique’s defenses towards ache. She additionally talks with heavy metallic musician Ed Mowery, whose decades-long expertise with complicated regional ache syndrome (or CRPS) led to a revolutionary surgical procedure and therapy.
READ AN EXCERPT: “It Doesn’t Have to Hurt” by Dr. Sanjay Gupta
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COMMENTARY: Jim Gaffigan on the summer season harvest: Too many cukes!
The comic and aspiring gardener talks concerning the benefits, and drawbacks, of a bountiful harvest.
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MILEPOST: So lengthy, Jessica Frank!
“Sunday Morning” says goodbye to our longtime affiliate director Jessica Frank, who for 26 years introduced a shining solar (hundreds of them!) to our broadcast. Serena Altschul stories.
GALLERY: Here comes the sun! “Sunday Morning” sun art
NATURE: Sea Lions at Monterey Bay
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FROM THE ARCHIVES: Hurricanes Katrina and Rita (YouTube Video)
In 2005, the Gulf Coast was slammed by two monumental hurricanes – first, Katrina, the most expensive U.S. storm as much as that point, which killed at the least 1,800 individuals in and round New Orleans; then, simply weeks later, Rita, which made landfall between Louisiana and Texas, additional devastating areas laborious hit by Katrina. Twenty years later, we glance again at “Sunday Morning” stories concerning the devastation attributable to the storms and the breaking of levees; the political storm that adopted; and the rebuilding. That includes:
- Lee Cowan on the week of New Orleans’ struggles from Katrina (2005)
- Martha Teichner with a historical past of how New Orleans got here to be (2005)
- The position of the Military Corps of Engineers in levee reconstruction and upkeep (2005)
- Invoice Whitaker on residents alongside the Mississippi coast battered by Katrina (2005)
- Barry Petersen compares the response following Asia’s tsunami to the aftermath of Katrina (2005)
- Anthony Mason on the Federal Emergency Administration Company’s efficiency throughout and after the storm (2005)
- Steve Hartman with an examination of one of the best and worst of human nature evident from Katrina (2005)
- Documentary filmmaker Ken Burns holds out hope that New Orleans shall be healed by jazz (2005)
- Ben Stein requires serving to pets within the aftermath of Katrina (2005)
- Susan Spencer on what Katrina revealed about poverty in America (2005)
- Checking out the aftermath of Katrina (2005)
- John Roberts, Harry Smith and Lee Cowan on the results of Hurricane Rita in cities alongside the Gulf Coast (2005)
- Anthony Mason on the long-term financial impression from the storms (2005)
- Erin Moriarty on volunteers looking for youngsters separated from their households after Katrina (2005)
- Charles Osgood on the resumption of streetcar service in New Orleans two years after Katrina (2007)
- Michelle Miller on how New Orleans is rebuilding 5 years after the hurricanes (2010)
- Martha Teichner visits New Orleans ten years after Katrina (2015)
- New Orleans chef John Besh helps convey again town via delicacies (2015)
- Steve Hartman profiles Burnell Colton, who’s attempting to revive the Decrease Ninth Ward (2015)
FROM THE ARCHIVES: Bruce Springsteen on the making of “Born to Run” (YouTube Video)
From 2005, Anthony Mason speaks with Bruce Springsteen and producer Jon Landau concerning the creation of Springsteen’s breakthrough album, “Born to Run.”
The Emmy Award-winning “CBS Information Sunday Morning” is broadcast on CBS Sundays starting at 9:00 a.m. ET. Government producer is Rand Morrison.
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“Sunday Morning” additionally streams on the CBS News app starting at 11:00 a.m. ET. (Download it here.)
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