Skip to main content

tv   CBS News Sunday Morning  CBS  May 5, 2024 7:00am-8:31am PDT

7:00 am
cbs supports mental health awareness month. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
7:01 am
good morning. i'm jane pauley and this is "sunday morning." we've heard a lot lately about the possible risks of artificial intelligence, but along with warnings, there is promise. when a stroke in 2013 all but took away country music superstar randy travis's singing voice, he feared he would never record new music again. yet, more than a decade later, the seven time grammy winner is back with a new song, one that blends art with artificial intelligence. lee cowan takes us into the recording studio for a most improbable encore. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: he has one of the most recognizable voices in country music, until he mostly lost his ability to speak more than a decade ago.
7:02 am
so, what exactly is this? ♪ ♪ >> reporter: how randy travis got back on the radio coming up on "sunday morning." she's a lightning rod talk show host, winner of an oscar and emmy, tony and grammy, and now whoopi goldberg is the author of a new memoir. she is looking back this morning with seth doane. >> reporter: she grew up but few financial resources, but enriched by her mother and brother. and today wishes she could share this place with them. >> they are not coming back. so i wanted to write all of this down just in love, because i was so in love with the two of them. >> reporter: relaxing and reminiscing in italy with whoopi goldberg later this "sunday morning."
7:03 am
after spending a year of your life living biblically, what do you do? you could try to live constitutionally, which is exactly what author a.j. jacobs has just done. he tells our john dickerson all about it. >> reporter: writer a.j. jacobs spent a year living constitutionally as if it were 1789. >> i notice when you hold up your hand, you are in fact a wretch. >> thank you, i am an ink stained wretch. >> reporter: a most unusual exploration of the u.s. constitution ahead on "sunday morning." most of us know bob schieffer as the retired host of our "sunday morning" neighbor "face the nation," but bob's found a new and artful way to cover the news as we'll see with sharyn alfonsi. tracy smith talks about the end of television's "blue bloods" and more with actor tom selleck.
7:04 am
david pogue shares the story of the little copter that could and did on mars. plus, martha teichner on an exhibit remembering the victims of the october 7th attack in israel. a story from steve hartman and more this "sunday morning" for may 5th, cinco de mayo, 2024. we'll be right back. who is it being to be? is it mystic dan or was to see air a lyon?
7:05 am
7:06 am
nothing dims my light like a migraine. with nurtec odt, i found relief. the only migraine medication that helps treat and prevent, all in one. to those with migraine, i see you. for the acute treatment of migraine with or without aura and the preventive treatment of episodic migraine in adults. don't take if allergic to nurtec odt. allergic reactions can occur, even days after using. most common side effects were nausea, indigestion, and stomach pain. it's time we all shine. talk to a healthcare provider about nurtec odt from pfizer.
7:07 am
we've all heard about the promise and perils of artificial intelligence, but lest you have any doubts about its potential, consider this report from our lee cowan. ♪ you may think that i'm talking foolish ♪ >> reporter: even if you're not into country, you can't help but bathe in the baritone that is randy travis. ♪ oh, darling i'm gonna love you forever ♪ ♪ forever and ever a, amen ♪ >> reporter: his voice goes down like whiskey. always has. ever since his first album in 1986 with record producer kyle lehning. >> i thought we sold 40,000 copies, they might let us make a
7:08 am
second. it was 4 million. ♪ there are three wooden crosses on the right side of the highway ♪ >> reporter: randy travis and that voice helped build warner music nashville into what it is today. chris lacey is the co-president. what was it about his voice that was so unique? >> how do you describe a thing that just hits you in the center of your chest? unconsciously makes you feel full and familiar and known. how do you describe something like that? ♪ last night i took your picture out ♪ >> reporter: his was a god-given talent, and then fate took it away. >> a serious medical blow to country music star randy travis. he suffered a stroke at a hospital in texas. >> it felt like it could be the end of an era. >> i thought we were going to lose him. >> reporter: he was given just a 2% chance of survival.
7:09 am
besides the paralysis, the area of his brain that controls speech and language was hit the hardest. >> music is what he is made of. it's his heart, his soul. >> reporter: his wife, mary, does most of the talking these days. >> he knows what he wants to say. >> reporter: it doesn't come out? >> hmm-mm. >> reporter: you made peace with it? >> yeah. >> reporter: how do you do that? >> i don't know. >> reporter: three years after the stroke with mary at his side, randy travis was inducted into the country music hall of fame. he gave amazing grace new meaning. ♪ amazing grace how sweet the sound ♪ >> reporter: there wasn't a dry eye in the house. ♪ saved a wretch like me ♪ ♪ i told you so ♪ >> reporter: in his absence,
7:10 am
though, he has heard a lot of a.i.-generated fakes of his voice. a simple google search brings up sites like these promising to convert anyone's vocal into a randy travis sound-alike. >> it doesn't sound good or real because it's not. >> reporter: and that got his record label thinking. >> we started with the concept of what would a.i. for good look like for us. and the first thing that came to mind was we would give randy travis's voice back. >> reporter: there were, however, more than a few skeptics. >> it sounded like a parlor trick or something. >> reporter: but kyle lehning, w randy's blessing, decided to try by pulling 42 tracks from the vault. ♪ operator please connect me ♪ >> reporter: like this one, the original recording of his hit 1982. and then they stripped away the music leaving only the vocal.
7:11 am
♪ for what i didn't do ♪ ♪ i sure do need to tell her ♪ >> reporter: that was half the recipe. the other half needed to be provided by a donated or surrogate voice. >> i have to get a level on you. >> reporter: in this case, that voice came from james dupre. >> being a part of new randy travis music, that's like, what? ♪ she had eyes like diamonds when they caught the light ♪ >> that's what was put into the model. >> reporter: the model. it's the secret sauce. >> here is the vocal. float it in. >> reporter: an a.i. program that takes randy travis' voice and overlays it on top of james dupre's singing. it's hardly an exact science. >> it's about how it feels. >> reporter: that's not something a computer can figure out. >> not yet. >> reporter: kyle knows randy's
7:12 am
voice almost better than randy does. they worked together 40 years. this time the task was to take a computer generated voice and giving it randy's heart. >> him being here and able to be a vital part of the decision makig process makes all the difference. >> reporter: in the end, they finally landed on something they felt worthy of a voice known, but those who knew him best, could replicate. >> it's randy travis. randy is on the other side of the microphone. it's his vocal. there is no reason he shouldn't be able to make music. to deprive him of that, if he still wants to do that, that's unconscionable to me. >> reporter: two months ago warner music gathered a small circle of fellow musicians in a recording studio. randy sat with a cher ire cat grin, and then they hit play. ♪ she had eyes like diamonds ♪ >> holy crap. >> reporter: the reaction to his first song in more than a decade was a mix of joy and wonder.
7:13 am
♪ of a day where dark and deeper ♪ >> reporter: for his wife, tears. >> you forget how much you missed it. until you hear it again. >> reporter: for randy's country friends like grammy-winning superstar carrie underwood, there was confusion. >> how? >> reporter: for cole swindell, who just won three acm awards -- ♪ ♪ >> reporter: remained him why he became a country singer in the first place. >> you've got to let me hear it. that means a lot. i am glad to hear you sing. >> reporter: and veteran country star clay walker. ♪ and there ain't no more ♪ >> reporter: he was simply over the moon. [ laughter ] >> reporter: even randy's own family hadn't heard it.
7:14 am
until two weeks ago. >> it's so weird to kind of explain everything that goes through your head when you are listening to it. >> reporter: it was perfection with a caveat. >> we don't exactly know how to get here again. >> you want to laugh at me while i try to sing this chorus? ♪ she set her diamond ring next to another round of password ♪ >> reporter: the second song is proving a harder nut to crack. ♪ sometimes angels spill whiskey on their wings ♪ >> that so so crazy. >> the bravado doesn't work, right? >> reporter: there is work to be done, clearly. and a lot of questions to answer about what this all means going forward. but after a decade-long absence, randy travis is back on the radio. his post-stroke debut song,
7:15 am
"where that came from," was released this past week. for randy travis it's not just a single. it's a victory. >> it's a life inspiration. speak kindly, love fully, live completely, and leave the rest to god. you know? >> sounds like there is a song in there somewhere. >> reporter: we can only hope. ♪ there just ain't nowhere that came from ♪ what if there was a cruise that felt like no other? a cruise created by foodies— for foodies. one chef for every 10 guests, every meal prepared to order, and every plate a personal discovery. welcome to the world of oceania cruises, the world's greatest cities and off the beaten path secrets. one memorable bite and toast at a time. it's more than a feeling. it's more than a cruise— it's oceania cruises.
7:16 am
introducing, ned's plaque psoriasis. he thinks his flaky red patches are all people see. otezla is the #1 prescribed pill to treat plaque psoriasis. otezla can help you get clearer skin. don't use otezla if you're allergic to it. serious allergic reactions can happen. otezla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. some people taking otezla had depression, suicidal thoughts, or weight loss. upper respiratory tract infection and headache may occur. live in the moment. ask your doctor about otezla. for your most brilliant smile, crest has you covered. ♪♪ (laughing) nice smile, brad. nice! thanks? crest 3d white. 100% more stain removal. crest. (♪♪) (♪♪) try dietary supplements from voltaren, for healthy joints.
7:17 am
♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
7:18 am
♪ this portion of "sunday morning" is brought to you by nurtec odt. the only migraine medication that helps treat and prevent, all in one. to those with migraine, i see you. for the acute treatment of migraine with or without aura and the preventive treatment of episodic migraine in adults. don't take if allergic to nurtec odt. allergic reactions can occur, even days after using. most common side effects were nausea, indigestion, and stomach pain. it's time we all shine. talk to a healthcare provider about nurtec odt from pfizer. if you love to travel, capital one has a rewards credit card that's perfect for you. with venture x, earn unlimited double miles on everything you buy and get access to over 1300 airport lounges. open up a world of possibilities with capital one. what's in your wallet?
7:19 am
♪♪ stay ahead of your child's moderate—to—severe eczema, and they can show off clearer skin and less itch with dupixent. the number one prescribed biologic by dermatologists and allergists, that helps heal your child's skin from within. serious allergic reactions can occur that can be severe. tell your doctor about new or worsening eye problems such as eye pain or vision changes, including blurred vision, joint aches and pain, or a parasitic infection. don't change or stop asthma medicines without talking to your doctor. ask your child's eczema specialist about dupixent. no as a broadcaster, our friend and colleague bob schieffer's talent has always been plain to see. these days sharyn alfonsi of "60
7:20 am
minutes" explains you can see another side of him now on display. ♪ >> reporter: bob schieffer has not slowed down in retirement. >> hi! >> re from now to mid-may, you will find the long time newsman mingling with a packed washington crowd at the american university museum. where he has presented 24 original oil paintings in an exhibit he has titled looking for light. >> i want to thank you for coming tonight. >> reporter: the former "face the nation" moderator has put the pen down for the paint brush. the collection is schieffer's new take on the news. it's a project four years in the making that began in his washington, d.c., dining room during the pandemic lockdowns. oh, my. the dining room, huh? >> this used to be the dining room. >> reporter: and schieffer has been painting here close to 70
7:21 am
canvasses total ever since. the show is called looking for light. tell me about that. >> after january 6th happened, i was offended. to me, the united states capitol is to american politics what the sistine chapel is to catholics and christians. it's kind of the holy place. >> reporter: did you say in that moment, i've got to paint this? >> i did. i did. and i wasn't sure how i was going to paint it or what i was going to do about it, but i had pretty much come close to finishing that painting when amanda gorman, the youth poet laureate, spoke at biden's inauguration. >> when day comes we ask ourselves where can we find light in this never-ending shade. >> and i will never forget georgia tech that, when she said the light is always there if only we are brave enough to see
7:22 am
it. if only we are brave enough to be it. and i thought right there, that's it. and at that moment i decided i would call this collection looking for the light. >> reporter: you were looking for light in that moment? >> yes. >> reporter: the collection depicts events that rocked the nation such as george floyd's murder, an suburb crisis as seen in this stark painting of vladimir putin inspired by signs at protests for ukraine. >> well, this was the easiest one to find a title for. i called it the face of evil. >> reporter: schieffer collected images he saw in print and on television and gives full credit to the photographers who captured them. is there something that makes a bob schieffer painting a bob schieffer painting? >> well, they are large. >> reporter: that's the texan in you, right? schieffer has always gone big. he was the first reporter from a
7:23 am
texas newspaper to report from vietnam. then at cbs news he covered the pentagon, state department, congress, and the white house. later in his career he wrote and performed country music. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: and hosted "face the nation" every sunday for 24 years. i can't think of anybody else whose moderated presidential debates, played at the grand ole opry, and now is having their own exhibition. as a young artist, i mean, was this the plan all along? >> i don't know what the plan was all along. maybe i just like to show off. >> reporter: those who know this show-off know he deeply loves this country and the people who changed for the better. he included portraits of people he administered, including the late senator john mccain and supreme court justice ruth bader
7:24 am
ginsburg. in your show, you say america's always been a work in progress and remains so. do you think that's true? >> i think it is so, and i hope that's so, because if it stops being a work in progress, we are done with it, and i don't think we are. >> reporter: the final painting in schieffer's show shows off his texas-sized sense of humor. >> reporter: where are the cowboy boots? it's a nod to norman rockwell's painting titled triple self-portrait, making this washington institution a part of the history he paints. >> i must say, in some ways i find this kind of humorous. i'm leading into a new career at age 87. 87 years old, and, you know, i am striking out on a new adventure. >> reporter: i think it's so bob schieffer. no one thought you'd go quietly off to the golf course. >> well, i say now, painting is the one thing that i can do today better than everything else i ever did.
7:25 am
in life. when my doctor gave me breztri for my copd things changed for me. breztri gave me better breathing, symptom improvement, and reduced flare-ups. breztri won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. it is not for asthma. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. don't take breztri more than prescribed. breztri may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur.
7:26 am
ask your doctor about breztri. we've had word of sad passing. world famous artist frank stella died in manhattan yesterday. a restless innovator who regularly reinvented himself, stella ushered in an era of cool minimalism, all but ending the art world's abstract
7:27 am
expressionism. he became a towering figure in post-war american art. moving from a pallet of black to stripes of angular vibrant colors, stella consistently resisted being categorized or interpreted. famously saying, what you see is what you see. he talked with our martha teichner in 2021. >> i guess it's restless up to a point, yeah. i can't help it. >> stella would restlessly abandon flat surfaces for asem blacks and more. when the museum opened in 2015, the retrospective was an exhibit of the works of frank stella. but stella wasn't looking back. he was moving on to star-shaped creations like this one he called jasper split star. it stands in the plaz at new york's rebuilt world trade center.
7:28 am
the artist's wife told "the new york times" he died of lymphoma. the word for star in italian is stella. by any measure, 87-year-old frank stella was a star.
7:29 am
♪♪ we're in the middle of... seizing the date! ♪♪ in the middle of... trying new things! ♪♪ in the middle of the perfect pairing ... and parking it here for the night! ♪♪ so come get away... together... to the incredible, unforgettable illinois— the middle of everything. ♪♪ we're still going for that nice catch. we're still going for that perfect pizza. and with higher stroke risk from afib not caused by a heart valve problem,... ...we're going for a better treatment than warfarin. eliquis. eliquis reduces stroke risk. and has less major bleeding. over 97% of eliquis patients did not experience a stroke. don't stop taking eliquis without talking to your doctor as this may increase your risk of stroke. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding.
7:30 am
don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. while taking, you may bruise more easily... ...or take longer for bleeding to stop. get help right away for unexpected bleeding or unusual bruising. it may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. the number one cardiologist-prescribed blood thinner. ask your doctor about eliquis. ever imagine what it must have been like to live in america back in the time of the founding fathers? as john dickerson explains, author a.j. jacobs did a lot more than just imagine. >> there. gorgeous. >> reporter: for more than a year now, author a.j. jacobs pulled on woollen leggings more often than he put on socks. tell me why you are wearing what you're wearing. >> a couple of years ago i
7:31 am
realized i have never read the american constitution. but every day i'd open the news and there is another story about how this 230-year-old document is affecting our lives. i said, i need to know more about our founding document. and the way i like to learn is i like to go all in. >> reporter: all in means total immersion. for his best-selling book, the know it all, jacobs spent 18 months reading the entire enpsych pete yeah britannica. he tried to follow the rules in the old and new testaments. >> i look absurd, but i am also deeply serious about this project. >> reporter: and now his latest immersion, the year of living constitutionally. >> part of my goal is to get inside the minds of these founding fathers as much as i can. >> reporter: accordingly, jacobs joined the new jersey third
7:32 am
regiment of revolutionary war re-enactors. >> i actually died. i died for my country, but i died in the shade. these re-enactors are very committed. of course, we are not using lead balls. we were using blanks. this is the real deal from the 1700s. i got it online, which i assume is not how they did it back then. >> reporter: to explore his second amendment rights, jacobs also carried his antique firearm around new york city. >> i was at a coffee shop in line with my musket and the guy in front of me said, you go ahead, i'm not messing with you. >> reporter: we played along, speaking with him at the 1765 morris-jumel mansion in manhattan where general george washington briefly made his military headquarters. what scared the creators of the constitution? >> they had just fought a war to get rid of the monarch.
7:33 am
that's one of the most brilliant parts of the constitution, is how they built in these mechanisms to stop some one person or one branch from taking over this balance of power. i never really appreciated the balance of power. it has helped keep us from having a tyrant so far. >> reporter: a.j. jacobs' research also took him to washington, d.c.. >> 423 signatures. >> reporter: to dive into the first amendment right to petition the government, jacobs brought a very long one to oregon senator ron wyden to reconsidering ben franklin's idea of having more than one president. >> you are injecting logic and common sense, which often is lacking in public discourse. >> reporter: how did he receive your petition? >> i think he considered it for about five seconds, and that was the end of the consideration. i will say he totally bought my
7:34 am
underlying thesis that the president has too much power. >> reporter: while doing his research, jacobs used a quill pen, which meant living the rest of his day with stained fingertips. >> i love writing by hand. there is something wonderful about taking out a quill pen, dipping it in ink and writing the sentences. >> reporter: a.j.'s wife not so much. >> we lived through a lot together. this is nothing. this is nothing. >> reporter: are you the world's most patient wife? >> i think so. feel free to call me saint julie. >> reporter: a.j. not only wrote with a quill pen, he scratched his words on parchment. >> it's not paper. it is a stretched and dried animal skin, like a calf skin, goat skin or sheepskin. >> reporter: to learn how it's made. >> what would you describe the smell as? >> reporter: rotting flesh or
7:35 am
rotten cheese. >> reporter: a lesson from jesse and stephen myer who run pergamena one of the few places parchment is made in north america. >> this is what they did for the constitution. >> reporter: and now that parchment is under glass displayed at the national archives in washington. >> you cannot break this glass. it's in the state-of-the-art, all the air that it needs to breathe is in there. >> reporter: is it regular air? does the constitution breathe special air? >> yeah. >> reporter: historian jessie kratz gave jacobs an early morning tour. >> people come and look at it and they are rejuvenated and maybe they will vote in the presidential and local elections. >> i don't want to say just read the constitution. that's not really the point. read the constitution and talk about it. talk with people, especially people who disagree with you. that, to me, is what democracy is about. >> reporter: all this running around might seem like a
7:36 am
gimmick, but jacobs says the immersive approach helped focus him on the key lessons of the system we still live under today. >> they thought about rights, but also thought about responsibilities. it was so ingrained in them that they had a responsibility to their community, to their country, but i feel we've lost some of that. it's all about putting others before yourself sometimes. >> reporter: that lesson isn't just a pleasing notion. it's vital to the constitution's survival. were you more optimistic or pessimistic after this project? >> george washington sat in a wooden chair at the constitutional convention and it had a carving on the back of the sun. not the full sun, just the top half. you couldn't tell. is it setting or rising? at the end of the convention, against all odds, they have this constitution. ben franklin says, now i know the sun is rising on america.
7:37 am
and my question was, is the sun still rising on america? it's up to us, because if we do nothing, then the sun will set. (vo) it's shrimp your way. choose three flavors for just $20*. like new street corn shrimp. and our famous garlic shrimp scampi. it's time to grab some cheddar bays and get flavorfull. hurry in to try shrimp your way, only at red lobster.
7:38 am
voices of people with cidp: cidp disrupts. cidp derails. let's be honest... all: cidp sucks! voices of people with cidp: but living with cidp doesn't have to. when you sign up at shiningthroughcidp.com, you'll find inspiration in real patient stories, helpful tips, reliable information, and more.
7:39 am
cidp can be tough. but finding hope just got a little easier. sign up at shiningthroughcidp.com. all: be heard. be hopeful. be you. ♪ ♪ ♪
7:40 am
♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
7:41 am
it's your time to cache in... so don't just play... stay at northern california's premier casino resort. book your getaway now... ...at cachecreek.com. ♪♪ when you have moderate—to—severe eczema, it's okay to show off. with dupixent, show off your clearer skin and less itch. because you have plenty of reasons to show off your skin. with dupixent, the number one prescribed biologic by dermatologists and allergists, you can stay ahead of your eczema. it helps block a key source of inflammation inside the body that can cause eczema to help heal your skin from within. many adults saw 90% clearer skin. some even achieved long—lasting clearer skin and fast itch relief after first dose.
7:42 am
serious allergic reactions can occur that can be severe. tell your doctor about new or worsening eye problems such as eye pain or vision changes including blurred vision, joint aches and pain, or a parasitic infection. don't change or stop asthma medicines without talking to your doctor. ♪♪ show off to the world. ask your eczema specialist about dupixent. ♪ ♪ from "magnum p.i." to "blue bloods" and more, actor tom
7:43 am
selleck ascended to heights he never imagined. now he is taking in the view with our tracy smith. >> watch your step. there is no handrail. >> reporter: it is a little steep. on the highest hill at tom selleck's california ranch, it's hard to beat the panorama. i tell you, for a guy who voalus his privacy, you couldn't pick a better spot. at 79, you could say the actor is very familiar with the view from the top. >> come on. don't overthink this, guys. you're as tough as they come. >> reporter: from are not past 14 years, selleck starred in the hit cbs show "blue bloods" as the head of the nypd and the head of a strong and often head srong family. >> you and dad, i knew you would be for that ruling even if it wasn't a rule. >> but the rule does make enormous sense. >> reporter: the show is set to end this year, but there has
7:44 am
been some push back o that, most notably from selleck himself. is "blue bloods" ending? >> that's a good question. i will continue to think that cs will come to their senses. we are the third highest scripted show in all of broadcast. we are winning the night. all the cast wants to come back. and i can tell you this. we aren't sliding off down a cliff. we are doing good shows and still holding our place. so i don't know. you tell me. >> reporter: it's not the first time tom selleck has been at odds with the powers that be in a career that has been long and legendary. ♪ >> reporter: his most famous role in the '80s, thomas magnum wore a detroit tigers baseball cap. that's a nod to the town in which tom selleck himself was born. long before magnum and the mustache, he was an athlete at the university of southern
7:45 am
california and after a less than stellar academic career, he found work in ads. >> people are switching to -- >> reporter: selling products and bar soap. >> good morning. he smells just the way a man should smell. clean. >> reporter: yep, that's teri garr and penny marshall when they were all young and struggling. you told yourself early on going to auditions and interviews you would literally say to yourself this the car, you're good enough, tom? >> i'd say you're enough. but, thank you. maybe that good would have helped. i didn't think of that. >> reporter: you're enough, tom. >> i did. >> reporter: little of what he did in his early career was ever enough. not the soap opera gig or the six tv pilots he made. and then he was signed to do "magnum p.i." and around the same time selleck
7:46 am
was offered another role from steven speilberg. >> he said, here is the script. go read it. tell me if you like it, because we want you for indiana jones. so i got to about apage 8 in hi office and i went, oh, this is really good. >> reporter: but in a story that's become legend, he was forced to turn ound "raiders of the lost ark" for magnum. in a long-awaited memoir out this week, selleck shares the details of what he calls the world series of disappointments and how he quickly made peace with it. >> you can make yourself a victim or just smile and say, that's really ironic. >> reporter: you chose to smile? >> i had a good job coming up. a job i would have dreamed of. raiders or not. >> reporter: "magnum p.i." debuted in 1980 on cbs, a about former navy s.e.a.l. and vietnam
7:47 am
vet turned private investigator. the studio wanted to lose the vietnam element. back then the wounds of the war were still fresh. but selleck and his producer fought hard to keep it in. the show was a hit. mopping the biggest fans, frank sinatra, told laramie manetti he would like to be on the show. >> he comes to me and says, frank wants to do the show. he wants to be asked. you have to call him. he wanted to do it right away. so i said, well, we are going to have to write it for you. what do you want to do? he said, oh, i don't care, just make sure i get to beat somebody up. >> reporter: that whis conditio? >> yeah, that's frank. >> ahhh! >> reporter: the "magnum p.i." guest shot was sinatra's last
7:48 am
acting job. >> you got it. >> reporter: but it was only the beginning of tom selleck's reign of an '80s sex symbol. that smile, that swagger, that mustache. in private, however, selleck was smitten by british actor jillie mack whom he spotted when she was in the london production of "cats." >> i got checked out by the cast. one of the cast members told her, you know who keeps staring at you? tom selleck. i don't know how to clean this up. she just said, who the [ bleep ] is that? she didn't know who i was from adam, which to me was the greatest thing in the world. >> reporter: he married in secret in 1987, just before magnum entered the final season. they have been together ever since. by that time selleck says he was burned out. but he knew he helped create something that was more than just a tv show. >> when magnum ended, we got a
7:49 am
call from the smithsonian. they said we want to honor magnum, we need artifacts. they took my hat, the team i war in vietnam and my hawaiian shirt, the red one. we wept back there. they read the citation. they gave us credit for being the first show that showed vietnam veterans in a positive light. so, the fight was worth it. >> he said it was for him. >> reporter: these days he spends most of his nonworking time on his ranch. it's not hard to see why. >> hopefully, i'll keep working enough to hold on to the place. >> reporter: seriously, that's an issue, if you stopped working? >> it's always an issue. if i stopped working, yeah. am i set for life? yeah, but maybe not a 63-acre ranch. >> reporter: happily, he likes his job, and after 60 years in front of the camera, he knows he
7:50 am
is enough. when you look down the road, what do you see? hopefully, work. as an actor, you never lose, i don't lose anyway, the sense that every time i finish a job, it's my last job. >> reporter: you still have that sense? >> i like the fact that there is no excuses. you just go to work and you do the work, and i have a lot of reverence for what i call the work. and i love it, and i'd like to keep doing it.
7:51 am
7:52 am
- lift the clouds off of... - virtual weather, only on kpix and pix+. perhaps nowhere was the horror of the recent hamas-led attack in israel more evident than the site of the nova music festival. hundreds were killed, dozens taken hostage. an exhibit in their honor recently arrived in manhattan just steps from the 9/11 memorial. martha teichner takes us inside.
7:53 am
>> reporter: it almost feels like trespassing. disturbing a crime scene as you make your way through the exhibit in new york, and that's the point. what you see, all the innocent, ordinary stuff was what was actually left behind, strewn on the sand after the october 7th hamas attack on the nova music festival. where more than 360 people died and more than 40 were taken hostage. you're allowed to touch, but nobody does. >> we had this exhibit in tel aviv, in israel, and they brought all of the stuff. so, hopefully, we can go there like the survivors and find our sufficient, you know? >> reporter: really?
7:54 am
>> so, what you see here means that people couldn't find their stuff. >> reporter: meaning they're dead? >> yeah. >> reporter: for 23-year-old danielle, an inconceivable end to a joyous, all-night holiday weekend celebration where kids, most of them were kids, just went to dance. on saturday, last october 7th, at 6:29 a.m., as the sun rose, the music suddenly stopped. and the killing started. and the kidnapping and the sexual assaults. hamas recorded the carnage and the chaos as people ran for their lives. many of those videos are in the
7:55 am
exhibit. >> i remember thinking to myself, just shoot me. i can't run anymore. and i remember saying to myself, no, no. >> reporter: she hid in a tree. as camouflage, she covered herself with the new green scarf she had just bought. >> so powerful to me. >> reporter: as she tells us about what happened, her hands tell us more. >> it saved my life. >> i think the events of nova not only forgotten, they are being ignored. >> reporter: entertainment industry entrepreneur scooter braun was instrumental in bringing the exhibit to new york. >> right here all of these red circles, these are the actual bullet holes. they just started shooting into them one by one and killing the people inside. this is real. this happened. >> reporter: what do you want
7:56 am
the message to be presenting this exhibit? >> i definitely don't want it to be political. i don't think this is a -- >> reporter: how can it not be political? >> it's about music. why are musicians not screaming from the top of their lungs that music should be a safe place. ask yourself on either side, kids dancing, do they deserve to die? the answer is no. given an opportunity and have emp any in your heart for all sides. >> reporter: a hard ask, given that just a few miles away pro-palestinian protests have paralyzed at least three new york city college campuses with dozens of others in turmoil nationwide. mutual empathy, a casualty. and antisemitism on the rise. at the nova exhibit there is heavy security. >> that's my beautiful daughter. her radiant smile.
7:57 am
th i miss her very much. >> reporter: each day since it opened a couple of weeks ago, she stands in the room filled with photographs of the festival dead. >> they were supposed to get married in february. >> reporter: to tell the stories behind the smiles. >> they were radiant people. they were happy people. they were butchered and massacred and raped and mutilated by monsters. >> reporter: her anger and pain are fresh and raw. >> it was a wake-up call for the jewish people. we had to go to gaza. we had to take care that we won't be massacred again. >> reporter: but at the great cost of tens of thousands of lives. >> i don't appreciate any loss of lives. but if a terrorist hides behind them, what can we do?
7:58 am
>> reporter: these lives are her concern. a song was written for her daughter. we asked her to sing it. >> i don't think i can. it's too hard. how can i go on without you? the one i loved the most. i go on every day. w have to stand tall and we have to go on living because this is the world that these radiant people left us. type 2 diabetes? discover the ozempic® tri-zone. ♪ ♪ i got the power of 3. i lowered my a1c, cv risk, and lost some weight. in studies, the majority of people reached an a1c under 7 and maintained it. i'm under 7. ozempic® lowers the risk of major cardiovascular events such as stroke, heart attack, or death
7:59 am
in adults also with known heart disease. i'm lowering my risk. adults lost up to 14 pounds. i lost some weight. ozempic® isn't for people with type 1 diabetes. don't share needles or pens, or reuse needles. don't take ozempic® if you or your family ever had medullary thyroid cancer, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop ozempic® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. gallbladder problems may occur. tell your provider about vision problems or changes. taking ozempic® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase low blood sugar risk. side effects like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea may lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. living with type 2 diabetes? ask about the power of 3 with ozempic®. i love that my daughter still needs me. but sometimes i can't help due to burning and stabbing pain in my hands, so i use nervive. nervive's clinical dose of ala reduces nerve discomfort in as little as seven days. now i can help again feel the difference with nervive.
8:00 am
8:01 am
steve hartman this morning explains how sometimes small acts of kindness can have huge consequences. >> reporter: inside an outdoor sporting store in baton rouge, louisiana, we met a great american success story. >> it's about you. >> reporter: at 42, owner matt busbice and his partners have built and sold several outdoor companies worth hundreds of millions. matt says he has never felt richer than he did the day he got the doll early. >> i hahaven't had that much fa in hue man think in a very long time. >> reporter: it began a month ago. it was early morning in the fire alarm going off inside his condo complex. so matt shot out of bed and raced down the stairs only to discover there was no fire.
8:02 am
but he is awake now, so even though he was wearing mismatched clothes and all disheveled, he decided to go out nor a cup of coffee. and as he was about to enter the shop, he remembered he hadn't done his morning prayer. so, as the security cameras show, he stepped to the corner of the patio. >> and i start to slowly open my eyes and there is a kid coming at me about my height. >> reporter: with his fist clenched, so he prepared for battle. >> he goes, and reveals a dollar bill. and i go, what? >> if you are homeless, here's a dollar. >> reporter: this is 9-year-old kelvin ellis jr. >> i always wanted to help a homeless person and i finally had the opportunity. >> reporter: kelvin says he had just gotten the dollar for good grades. it was the only money he had to
8:03 am
his name. matt was so touched, he invited kelvin in with a snack, connected with the boy's father who was next door and promised to stay in touch. adds a reward for his kindness, matt gave kelvin a shopping spree, 40 seconds to pick out whatever he wanted in the store, including a new bike. kelvin says it was great. but definitely not what he wanted to get for his dollar. what were you hoping would come from that? >> joy. >> reporter: joy? >> because i helped someone. give something away, you feel like you've got a lot of things from it. >> if you give, you're actually going to get more out of that. i couldn't grasp that as a kid. if we can spread that around, everything changes. >> reporter: a dollar, so well spent. >> cheers to friends forever.
8:04 am
i'm so glad i can still come here. you see, i was diagnosed with obstructive hcm. and there were some days i was so short of breath. i thought i'd have to settle for never stepping foot on this trail again. i became great at making excuses. but i have people who count on me so i talked to my cardiologist. i said there must be more we can do for my symptoms. he told me about a medication called camzyos. he said camzyos works by targeting what's causing my obstructive hcm. so he prescribed it and i'm really glad he did. camzyos is used to treat adults with symptomatic obstructive hcm. camzyos may improve your symptoms and your ability to be active. camzyos may cause serious side effects, including heart failure that can lead to death. a risk that's increased if you develop a serious infection or irregular heartbeat or when taking certain other medicines. so do not stop, start or change medicines or the dose without telling your healthcare provider. you must have echocardiograms before and during treatment. seek help if you experience new or worsening symptoms of heart failure. because of this risk, camzyos is only available through a restricted program. before taking camzyos,
8:05 am
tell your doctor about all of your medical conditions, including current or planned pregnancy. today with camzyos, i don't lose my breath as often. my symptoms have improved, helping me go from expecting less to experiencing more. my name is mike. and this is my camzyos moment. call your cardiologist today and see if a camzyos moment may be in your future too. cordless outdoor power, brings you the ego power+ string trimmer with powerload technology. feed the line, push the button and get back to work. ego, exclusively at lowe's, ace and ego authorized dealers. (chef vo) fancy feast. chef-inspired. cat-adored. every silky broth, every impeccable paté, every delicious detail... brings you and your cat... closer together. fancy feast. love is in the details.
8:06 am
hey you, i'm sam wheat. can you hear me? sam wheat! say it. >> talk to me, say something. >> sam wheat. >> it's "sunday morning" on cbs and here again is jane pauley. >> whoopi goldberg won an os ser for her standout performance in the move "ghost." she has done it all. and this morning she is telling all to our seth doane. >> reporter: whoopi goldberg has been in the spotlight for four decades. >> yeah. >> reporter: this is your spot? >> this is it. this is it. this is everything. >> reporter: what she craves today is this quiet spot in the sun. >> lots of people just need
8:07 am
someplace they can go and just, ah. >> reporter: she found a vacation home and tranquillity on the italian island of sardinia. >> the more i wrote about my mom, i thought i would have loved to have given this to her. same with my brother. > reporter: she has been thinking a lot about her mother, emma, and brother clyde, who both passed away. they are subjects of her new memoir, which is out this week. in the book you paint your childhood as pretty idyllic here. and it was? >> i was very lucky. >> reporter: before taking the name whoopi goldberg, she was karen johnson, growing up in this housing project in new york city's chelsea neighborhood. >> for me it was a great time. and to be able to have the freedom with a mother who really just said, listen, you're going to have to figure some of this out for yourself. i can't give you all of the
8:08 am
answers. >> reporter: her mom was a teacher here. and when the young karen johnson dropped out of school, she made a pact with her mom to use the city's museums and libraries to keep learning. >> you know, a lot of folks had two parents. i only had one. and that parent acted like 900 people. she never made it about what we didn't have. she made it about what we did have and how to celebrate that. >> reporter: whoopi goldberg started acting on stage, broadway -- >> i'm like, whoa. >> reporter: and landed an oscar nomination for her first major film role. >> until you do right by me, everything you think about is going to crumble. ♪ >> reporter: for a period it said she became the highest paid actress in hollywood. >> why? you don't have any rhythm.
8:09 am
>> reporter: she'd also see her mom had a talent for acting, like when marlon brando stopped by. >> my mother would turn into the other emma. she came in. i got up specifically to say, as she is coming towards us, don't be freaked out, that is marlon brando sitting on the couch. y all i could say, hey, mom, come meet marlon brando, who came to visit us. and she just went like this. mr. brando. wait, wait, who are you? >> reporter: after making more than 100 films -- >> here there are lots of places to sit. >> reporter: even in italy, hollywood is never far. patrick swayze wanted you in "ghost"? >> yeah. this particular part of the peninsula reminds me of him.
8:10 am
>> molly, you're in danger. >> you can't just blurt it out like that. quit moving around. you are starting to make me dizzy. i tell her in my own way. molly, you in danger, girl. >> reporter: goldberg won an oscar for the supporting role as a psychic in "ghost." >> write it down. >> he wants you to write it down. >> i ain't no damn secretary. just do it. >> reporter: add to that two emmys -- >> whoopi goldberg. >> reporter: a grammy and a tony, making her one of just about 20 people with egot status. her book chronicles the start of her career and does not hold back, detailing problems with drugs, going on welfare, and learning marriage is not for her after three tries. are you still in love with the idea of being in love, or that's just gone? >> i think other people seem to sparkle when they're in love, and i like to see that.
8:11 am
but for me, it's like i sparkle when i'm not in love. it's kind of okay. you know? the older i get, the happier i am. and so just in case, and i'm directing this to folks who may want to write me on the internet, here's the deal. i know how cute i am. so you don't have to tell me i'm not attractive enough to have a boyfriend because, shockingly, i have many. >> reporter: are you always as confident as you seem? >> i am very confident, but i am also confident in the fact that i make gigantic mistakes. i step in lots of poo along the way. >> reporter: on the talk show she co-hosted for 16 years -- >> as it turns out, there are a lot of major issues happening -- >> reporter: goldberg made a remark about the holocaust, which she says was
8:12 am
misunderstood. she apologized, but abc suspended her for two weeks in 2022. when you look back at that holocaust comment on "the view," the one you were suspended for, do you regret that? >> i'm in a quandary at how to answer that because people are waiting for me to say something. i said what i had to say. they suspended me. i respected what they said. i respected everybody's opinion. and if anyone's ever really interested in its entirety, they can look it up. but i will not put myself in that position again. >> reporter: she has been a long-time advocate on a range of issues, often using the show as a platform. >> the whole idea of some man
8:13 am
deciding what happens with my body is so abhorrent to me. >> reporter: you can see now you are on the peninsula, there is water on that side, water on this side. here in sardinia she can detach through the world. she motors through audio books, has about 9,000 of them, and sometimes just sits. my gosh, how do you ever leave? >> very reluctantly. >> reporter: she dreams of finding a way to spend six months a year in sardinia. >> i'm ready to not be scrutinized quite as tightly as i am. and i think the further away i get from opinion television, the easier it might be for a while. >> reporter: at 68 years old, she is a great-grandmother. whoopi goldberg's trailblazing journey has been one of reinvention and determination. >> i'm a singular kind of person, i think.
8:14 am
>> reporter: she says she was well equipped, starting with those lessons from her mom in that two-bedroom apartment in new york. it makes her perch here all the more impressive. >> it's the end of a peninsula. i mean, i come from the projects. i got a peninsula. >> reporter: this is a long way from chelsea. >> this is a long way from chelsea. ♪♪ stay ahead of your moderate—to—severe eczema, and show off clearer skin and less itch with dupixent. the number one prescribed biologic by dermatologists and allergists, that helps heal your skin from within. serious allergic reactions can occur that can be severe. tell your doctor about new or worsening eye problems such as eye pain or vision changes including blurred vision, joint aches and pain,
8:15 am
or a parasitic infection. don't change or stop asthma medicines without talking to your doctor. ask your eczema specialist about dupixent. every day, more dog people, and more vets are deciding it's time for a fresh approach to pet food. they're quitting the kibble. and kicking the cans. and feeding their dogs dog food that's actually well, food. developed with vets. made from real meat and veggies. portioned for your dog. and delivered right to your door. it's smarter, healthier pet food. get 50% off your first box at thefarmersdog.com/realfood finish ultimate. engineered for the toughest conditions. dry burnt-on stains.
8:16 am
old dishwashers. very hard water. finish ultimate, with cyclesync technology, helps deliver the ultimate clean. (♪♪) ♪(fun music)♪ mom, can i help? camping was fun, but it looks we brought the woods back with us. if you're a mom, then you really need weathertech for mother's day. it's the ultimate way to kid proof your vehicle. from laser-measured floorliners for the front and rear... to cargoliner...seat protector... and seat back protectors... we've got mom's covered. your turn. (hose spraying and laughter) find all these american made gifts, perfect for mother's day, at wt.com
8:17 am
we've all heard the tale of the little engine that could. david pogue has a modern variation that's truly out of this world. >> and lift-off. the countdown to mars continues. >> reporter: in 2020, nasa's perseverance rover launched for mars -- >> the vehicle's gone to closed loop guidance. >> reporter: with a stowaway. the helicopter, ingenuity, actually stowed away on the belly pan. it was a tiny four-pound drone created by nasa's jet propulsion laboratory in pasadena, california. travis brown was its chief engineer. >> this is the solar panel. then moving down, we have what we call the web or warm electronics box. >> reporter: i net met this machine in 2018 when it was still under development. why? what's it for? >> we as human beings have never fl flown in the atmosphere of mars. this is like wright brothers
8:18 am
equivalent on mars. >> reporter: according to then-project manager mimi aung, mars has 1% of the atmosphere of earth. that's hard for a flying machine. >> the entire vehicle has to be very light. >> reporter: oh, my gosh. it's like a dead leaf. i am not kidding. i could blow this thing like a kleenex. nasa classified ingenuity as a tech demo, a low-budget, high-risk side experiment incorporating off-the-shelf parts to save money. was this idea of a stowaway technology demo embraced? >> no. no, it was not. they were definitely, there were people against it. not just concerned, but wholeheartedly against it. >> reporter: project manager teddy tzanetos. >> mars 2020 is a science mission. go get samples and prepare to bring the samples back home.
8:19 am
anything that's not that is taking away resources. >> reporter: in the end, nasa decided that ingenuity could fly briefly, five times tops, in the first 30 days. after that, no more distractions from the main mission. by some miracle, ingenuity survived the 7-month journey to mars. the landing sequence and the dropoff. now, mars is so far away that it takes up to 20 minutes for a signal to reach the helicopter. so every instruction would have to be transmitted in advance. >> we will uplink a flight on monday. if we are lucky, it gets there tuesday. sometimes longer. >> reporter: for all you know, it's a smoking heap of wreckage on mars and you won't know until the weekend's over? >> that's right. that happens all the time. >> reporter: so on april 19, 2021, the team waited for the news of the drone's very small first flight. >> altimeter data.
8:20 am
the ingenuity has performed the first flight of a powered aircraft to another planet. >> reporter: the hardest part was surviving the frigid martian nights. 80 below zero fahrenheit. >> the joke is it's a battery and heater that flies once in a while. most of the mass is battery. most of that battery is spent heating. >> reporter: despite the cold, the helicopter flew four more times. five in all. mission complete. but then an administrative miracle. >> when people saw this thing flying and taking pictures, you know, i think everybody realized this is more than just a toy. this is a real flying machine. >> reporter: the chief pilot. >> nasa told us, hey, you guys get to continue. can you scout on behalf of the rover so we can see where the best ingress points are into this area? >> reporter: ingenuity was no longer a techdomo nasa promoted it to be the rover's eye in the
8:21 am
sky. scouting ahead to help the rover choose the routes and destinations. so ingenuity kept flying. kept beatening its own records for distance, speed, altitude, duration, for 100, 200, 400 days. through the long mars spring, summer, and fall. then winter came. tell us about mars day 427. >> radio silence. so the first thing you're thinking is, okay, well, battery froze. everything broke. we're probably dead. mission is over. >> reporter: for three days, the team tried to get a response, and then on the third day another miracle. >> in the morning when the sun rose and the system thawed and charged up enough, the electronics turned on. lo and behold, it came back and talked to us. here is your flight plan. fly now. late in the afternoon, you do that flight, knowing full well
8:22 am
the controllers here on earth she would freeze again the next day. >> reporter: so the thing froze to death every night all winter? >> yeah. >> reporter: and then thawed in the morning? >> yeah, hundreds of times. it was like groundhog day. so until finally you got through winter and got to spring again. >> reporter: even ingenuity didn't have an infinite supply of miracles. >> the thing cannot last forever. so we were sort of ready. >> reporter: this past january, nasa got the bad news. ingenuity had suffered a hard landing. >> the top blade is clipped on one side and completely missing on the other. we are missing enough of the rotor system, there is no way she will fly. it's still ticking. >> reporter: you are using the present tense. this thing grounded. it's still alive in terms of sending messages and data? >> yeah. i talked to it this morning. we can collect solar data, take pictures. >> we have a phrase on the team, we are not dead yet. >> reporter: it's true.
8:23 am
three years after the mission was supposed to end, the helicopter is still running, now as a ground station. we no longer receive its photos and measurements because the rover was its relay station and the rover has driven on. but ingenuity could keep collecting data for kdecades to be retrieved later. the little copter that could has changed nasa's thinking forever. >> we are working on the next generation of helicopters for mars and go to areas like a cliff wall, fly down a lava tube, go the poles, equator, you name it. >> reporter: as for that wright brothers analogy, turning out the mars stowaway helicopter harbored a stowaway of its own. >> the fabric used for the wings on the wright brother flyer, we have a piece a size of the quarter and it's our good luck charm and ballast for the baby. >> reporter: did everybody in the chain of command know this was there? >> no. i'm sworn to secrecy about
8:24 am
certain details. no. the chain was not aware of that. >> reporter: in all, ingenuity flew 72 times over the course of 1,000 days for a total of over two hours in the thin air of mars. >> a small scrappy team of engineers, right, very, very passionate about what they were doing. >> it has a special place in the history of nasa for being the first flight on another planet. > we are all amazed. everybody here is amazed. we didn't expect it. we just are really proud of it.
8:25 am
if you love to travel, capital one has a rewards credit card that's perfect for you. with venture x, earn unlimited double miles on everything you buy and get access to over 1300 airport lounges. open up a world of possibilities with capital one. what's in your wallet? if you have chronic kidney disease you can reduce the risk of kidney failure with farxiga. because there are places you'd like to be. farxiga can cause serious side effects, including ketoacidosis that may be fatal, dehydration, urinary tract, or genital yeast infections, and low blood sugar. a rare, life-threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur. stop taking farxiga and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of this infection, an allergic reaction, or ketoacidosis. ♪ far-xi-ga ♪ not flossing well? then add the whoa! of listerine to your routine. new science shows listerine is 5x more effective than floss at reducing plaque above the gumline. for a cleaner, healthier mouth.
8:26 am
ahhhhh. listerine. feel the whoa! ♪ ♪
8:27 am
♪ i have moderate to severe crohn's disease. now, there's skyrizi. ♪ things are looking up, i've got symptom relief. ♪ ♪ control of my crohn's means everything to me. ♪ ♪ control is everything to me. ♪ feel significant symptom relief at 4 weeks with skyrizi, including less abdominal pain and fewer bowel movements. skyrizi is the first il-23 inhibitor that can deliver remission and visibly improve damage of the intestinal lining. and the majority of people experienced long-lasting remission at one year. serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or a lower ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine or plan to. liver problems may occur in crohn's disease. ♪ now's the time to ask your gastroenterologist
8:28 am
how you can take control of your crohn's with skyrizi. ♪ ♪ control is everything to me. ♪ ♪ learn how abbvie could help you save. sup? -who are you? i'm your inner child. get in. listen, what you really need in life is some freakin' torque. what? horsepower keeps you going, but torque gets you going. what happened to my inner child craving love and acceptance? how about you love and accept this? p-p-p-p-powershot! when can i drive? you already are! the dodge hornet r/t... the totally torqued-out crossover. no, my denture's uncomfortable! dracula, let's fight back against discomfort.
8:29 am
with new poligrip power max hold & comfort. it has superior hold plus keeps us comfy all day with it's pressure absording layer. time for a bite! if your mouth could talk it would ask for... poligrip. (vo) explore the world the viking way from the quiet comfort of elegant small ships... with no children and no casinos. we actually have reinvented ocean voyages, designing all-inclusive experiences for the thinking person. viking - voted world's best by both travel + leisure and condé nast traveler. learn more at viking.com. we leave you this sunday morning with bighorn sheep and
8:30 am
lambs at valley of fire state park in southern nevada. >> i'm jane pauley. please join us when our trumpet sounds again next sun sunl. are i'm margaret brennan and this week on "face the nation," campus chaos continues from coast to coast. plus south dakota republican governor kristi noem kicks off her book tour today. and we've got the first interview. campus protests tied to the war between israel and hamas spilled into the weekend. and with no breakthrough yet in

0 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on