Margaret Brennan, David Ignatius, Michael Crowley, and David Nakamura discuss President Trump and President Putin's meeting at the G-20 summit and consequences for Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. election.
Former Dallas Police Chief David Brown reflects on the one-year anniversary of the Dallas police massacre and discusses his new book "Called to Rise" about race and policing.
Margaret Brennan, David Ignatius, Michael Crowley, and David Nakamura present different strategies and tactics for responding to North Korea's missile test.
Guests included Nikki Haley, John McCain, Ted Cruz, David Brown, David Ignatius, Margaret Brennan and David Nakamura.
Senator Ted Cruz, R-Texas, discusses the path forward for the Senate health care bill with Face the Nation moderator John Dickerson.
From the Juno spacecraft flyby of Jupiter's Great Red Spot to an honor for Disney villains, "Sunday Morning" takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead. Jane Pauley reports.
Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee John McCain, R-Arizona, says Russia has to pay a price for its meddling in democratic elections.
The U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, discusses President Trump's face to face meeting with President Putin and North Korea's missile test.
Louise Penny's immersive murder mysteries, set in her home province of Quebec, have drawn a large and loyal fan base. But writing came as a second career for the New York Times bestselling author, a former broadcaster who faced a debilitating struggle with alcoholism before taking up writing fiction. Martha Teichner visits Penny in the small town of Knowlton, which could be a stand-in for her fictional town of Three Pines, where too often there is murder afoot.
This week on "Face the Nation," host John Dickerson interviews Ambassador Nikki Haley, Senator John McCain, and Senator Ted Cruz regarding the G-20 summit, the North Korea missile test, and the health care bill.
The Sports Illustrated cover girl and actress Christie Brinkley has become the bubbly, hands-on advocate for Bellissima, a sparkling Italian Prosecco. Mark Phillips pays a visit. Originally broadcast November 20, 2016.
"Snowflake" has become the "it" insult that's caused a blizzard on the political landscape. Critics on the right and the left have used it to heatedly paint their opponents as delicate and hyper-sensitive. "Sunday Morning" contributor Faith Salie is here to put the chill on its continued use.
From a rendezvous with Jupiter's Great Red Spot to Major League Baseball's All-Star Game, "Sunday Morning" takes a look at some notable events of the week ahead
"I've got an old mule and her name is Sal, Fifteen years on the Erie Canal..." It's a treasured melody that celebrates life on a canal boat in the 19th century. Singer Dave Ruch performs "Low Bridge - Everybody Down" (a.k.a. "The Erie Canal Song"), by songwriter Thomas S. Allen. For more visit www.daveruch.com.
"If you build it, they will come." In the case of one tennis-obsessed fan who built a replica of Wimbledon's center court on his Iowa farm, people have come from around the world to his All-Iowa Lawn Tennis Club, to play on his court of dreams. Steve Hartman reports.
The singer-songwriter-producer, former lead guitarist of Fun, and the heart of the indie pop group Bleachers, has collaborated with some of the biggest artists of the day. Tracy Smith talks with Jack Antonoff, who has turned personal heartache into something close to joy. Smith also talks with writer-actress Lena Dunham, Antonoff's girlfriend, who directed the music video for "Don't Take the Money," from the new Bleachers album, "Gone Now."
P.J. Ball and Jordan Green are masters in one of the fastest-growing sports, one increasingly popular among young people: Sport Stacking, a contest to stack cups in formation as quickly as humanly possible without knocking them over. Luke Burbank reports from the Junior Olympics of Sports Stacking. Originally broadcast February 5, 2017.
Two hundreds years ago, construction began on a 363-mile canal linking the Great Lakes to the Hudson River and New York City - an engineering and commercial triumph as revolutionary as the Internet. But the Erie Canal was dismissed at first. New York politician DeWitt Clinton spent 10 years fighting to sell the project to a deeply skeptical public, and Presidents Jefferson and Madison refused to help fund it. Yet the canal quickly changed the geography and commerce of the young nation. Richard Schlesinger... Читать дальше...
Jane Pauley digs into the mailbag for some correspondence from our viewers
Broadway musical legend Stephen Sondheim treasures the role that teachers have played in his life, and today helps honor educators with the annual Kennedy Center/Stephen Sondheim Inspirational Teacher Awards. In this web exclusive, Mo Rocca talks with Sondheim about the teachers who have inspired him, and visits with a recent award recipient, Tracey Rains of Gatlinburg-Pittman High School in Tennessee, whose selfless mentoring of student Chelsea Hayes was nothing short of life-altering.