The annual South by Southwest Festival kicks off this weekend in Austin, Texas, and "CBS This Morning" is teaming up with National Geographic's "Your Shot" photo community to host a photo walk. It's all part of National Geographic's five-day SXSW programming at the "Nat Geo Further Base Camp" in Austin. Use the hashtag #sunrisethismorning to submit your sunrise photos, and they could be featured on our Instagram feed!
Employees of the Central Intelligence Agency find themselves in challenging times. The agency is dealing with the release by WikiLeaks of top-secret documents, apparently detailing highly-classified surveillance methods, and a fraught relationship with President Trump, who has criticized the intelligence community ever since he campaigned for president. CBS News senior security contributor Michael Morell, former deputy director of the CIA, discusses the state of the agency, and what it means for America's security.
After leaving the Bronx for New Orleans at age 17, front woman Alynda Segarra learned how to busk on the streets, met her band mates, and in 2008 completed her first album. This week she released her sixth studio effort, "Navigator," an album that explores her Puerto Rican heritage.
From action on the battlefield to the running of the bulls, the works of famed author Ernest Hemingway take us on amazing adventures. But Hemingway's own life was full of adventure, too, including a little-known chapter when he was apparently a player in the world of international espionage. Anthony Mason talks with author Nicholas Reynolds about his new biography, "Writer, Sailor, Soldier, Spy: Ernest Hemingway's Secret Adventures, 1935-1961."
Born and raised in Vermont, she was four years old when she told her parents she wanted to become a chef
Hurray for the Riff Raff front woman Alynda Segarra released her sixth studio effort, "Navigator," this week. The album explores her Puerto Rican heritage.
Heather Terhune didn't struggle for long in deciding on a career; she was four years old when she told her parents she wanted to become a chef. Born and raised in Vermont, "farm-to-table" was her family's way of life. Her culinary career criss-crossed the country, and she soon found her way to the Midwest, where she is now executive chef at Tre Rivali and The Outsider, both in Milwaukee's Klimpton Hotel. She joins us at The Dish.
After leaving the Bronx for New Orleans at age 17, front woman Alynda Segarra learned how to busk on the streets, met her band mates, and in 2008 completed her first album. This week she released her sixth studio effort, "Navigator," an album that explores her Puerto Rican heritage. Hurray for the Riff Raff performs "Rican Beach" from the album.
In his weekly address President Donald Trump tried to rally support for the House GOP's plan to repeal and replace Obamacare, despite attacks by many conservative Republicans. Meanwhile, Democrats kept up the heat on questions surrounding investigations into the Trump campaign and Russia. Errol Barnett reports.
If you've been dreaming of international travel, it may be time to pack your bags. Airfares to some foreign destinations haven't been this low in years, and in some U.S. markets, there's actually a serious price war going on, due in part to a number of "disruptor airlines" taking over long-haul routes and injecting some serious competition. CBS News travel editor Peter Greenberg reports on some of the best deals.
This week the CDC published a "Vital Signs" report highlighting the growing incidence of arthritis, estimated to affect about 54 million adults in the country. Also: CBS News chief medical correspondent Dr. Jon LaPook previews his "Sunday Morning" report on immunotherapy, which harnesses the body's own immune system to find and destroy cancer cells; and CBS News contributor Dr. Tara Narula reports on an innovation in stroke treatment.
A BBC interview featuring a professor of political science in South Korea became an Internet sensation on Friday, when the Skype video showed professor Robert E. Kelly's two children burst in on the serious political discussion. Anthony Mason and Alex Wagner report on Kelly's surprising reaction to the video's viral nature.
Bob Hurley is one of just three high school coaches to be inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. After five decades on the sidelines of St. Anthony's in Jersey City, N.J., Hurley is still at the top of his game. But the school's dire financial situation is putting the legendary sports program in peril. Dana Jacobson reports on Hurley and his Friars of St. Anthony's.
White House bowling got started back in 1947. Everyone from Dwight Eisenhower and Richard Nixon to Bill Clinton and Barack Obama have all tried their hand at knocking down the official White House pins. Anthony Mason reports.
President Trump is pushing the healthcare plan offered by Republicans in the House of Representatives. But some conservative members of the GOP are balking, and Democrats are calling the plan, dubbed "Trumpcare," a disaster. Michael Feldman, a former Democratic staffer, strategist, and a veteran of past healthcare battles on Capitol Hill, discusses the latest skirmishes.
The American Society of Civil Engineers has given the nation's roads, railways, bridges and dams a grade of D+, and is calling for even more spending on infrastructure repair than the $1 trillion touted by President Trump. Kris Van Cleave reports.
Iraqi troops, backed by U.S.-led coalition forces, are pushing deeper into Mosul in their offensive to drive out ISIS from the country's second-largest city. Soldiers from Iraq's emergency response division are reportedly close to storming the city's old quarter. Observers say this could lead to an ISIS counter-offensive. The Iraqi push to re-take Mosul comes as some ISIS fighters are having second thoughts about what they are fighting for. Holly Williams reports from the frontlines.
CBS News contributor and New York Times Magazine chief national correspondent Mark Leibovich joined "CBS This Morning" to discuss the most recent developments in stories that have shaken Washington: the sudden firings of dozens of U.S. attorneys, Congressional investigations into the Trump administration's ties to Russia, and President Trump's accusations of being wiretapped.
The spring-like weather of February that a large part of the nation enjoyed a few days ago is now just a memory. Millions of Americans woke to bone-chilling temperatures as an Arctic blast swept from the Great Lakes to New England and the Mid-Atlantic States, with wind chills well below zero. And at Boston's Logan International Airport, the battle against the elements took a dangerous turn. Meteorologist Ed Curran from Chicago station WBBM has the frigid news.