This week on "Sunday Morning" (May 26)

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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 12:00 p.m. ET. (Download it here.) 

Hosted by Jane Pauley

CBS News' David Martin
CBS News' David Martin

COVER STORY: World War II veterans speak to the ages | Watch Video
Vincent Speranza, who served as a paratrooper during the Battle of the Bulge, died last year at age 98. But visitors to the National WWII Museum in New Orleans can still talk to him, and – thanks to voice recognition software and artificial intelligence – hear answers to their questions about Speranza's experiences during and after the war. CBS News national security correspondent David Martin talks with the museum's vice president Peter Crean about the race against time to preserve the stories of the men and women who fought in the war effort, and with some of the veterans who will be able to "speak" to future generations.

For more info:

The National WWII Museum, New OrleansStoryFile

     
ALMANAC: May 26 (Video)
"Sunday Morning" looks back at historical events on this date.

Works by artist Jeffrey Gibson are representing the United States at this year's Venice Biennale.  / Credit: CBS News
Works by artist Jeffrey Gibson are representing the United States at this year's Venice Biennale. / Credit: CBS News

ARTS: Indigenous artist Jeffrey Gibson, on view at the Venice Biennale (Video)
Jeffrey Gibson, a member of the Mississippi band of Choctaw Indians and of Cherokee descent, is the first Indigenous artist to be chosen to represent the United States with a solo exhibition at the Venice Biennale, which is considered the Olympics of the art world. Correspondent Seth Doane visits the site of the Biennale, and meets with Gibson at his studio in Upstate New York, where he created his exhibition titled "the space in which to place me."

For more info:

La Biennale di Venezia (through November 24)Jeffrey Gibson: Venice 2024Site Santa Fe: Jeffrey Gibson, "the space in which to place me"

Pomegranate Glazed Pork Ribs, from KG BBQ in Austin.  / Credit: CBS News
Pomegranate Glazed Pork Ribs, from KG BBQ in Austin. / Credit: CBS News

FOOD: Texas BBQ, with a foreign flavor (Video)
The Lone Star State's distinctive barbecue is getting some impressive variations, with the help of pitmasters with roots in such places as Egypt, Vietnam and Japan. Correspondent Lee Cowan talks with some of the new bright lights of Texas BBQ, and with Daniel Vaughn, barbecue editor of Texas Monthly. (This story was originally broadcast November 19, 2023.)

For more info:

KG BBQ, AustinKhói Barbecue, HoustonKemuri Tatsu-ya, AustinDaniel Vaughn, barbecue editor, Texas Monthly

Actress Pam Grier, with correspondent Tracy Smith, at Pam's Coffy, a Hollywood coffee shop named in her honor.   / Credit: CBS News
Actress Pam Grier, with correspondent Tracy Smith, at Pam's Coffy, a Hollywood coffee shop named in her honor. / Credit: CBS News

TV: Pam Grier is comfortable with being an icon | Watch Video
She was a gun-toting goddess who made her name in blaxploitation films like "Coffy" and "Foxy Brown," and inspired director Quentin Tarantino to write a film especially for her. But action star Pam Grier proved to be more than just proficient at taking down drug dealers; she also beat cancer. The actress talks with correspondent Tracy Smith about starring in the Amazon Prime horror series "Them: The Scare," and why she agreed to work in a genre that she finds terrifying.

For more info:

"Them: The Scare" is streaming on Amazon PrimePam's Coffy, at the Vista Theater, Hollywood (Instagram)

     
PASSAGE: In memoriam (Video)
"Sunday Morning" remembers some of the notable figures who recently left us, including stunt woman Susan Blacklinie, who played the first victim of the shark in Steven Spielberg's "Jaws."

Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb, accused of the May 21, 1924 kidnapping and killing of Robert Franks of Chicago, are seen   flanked by guards in the courtroom.  / Credit: New York Daily News via Getty Images
Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb, accused of the May 21, 1924 kidnapping and killing of Robert Franks of Chicago, are seen flanked by guards in the courtroom. / Credit: New York Daily News via Getty Images

HISTORY: Leopold & Loeb and the crime of the century (Video)
One hundred years ago, two affluent and academically-gifted young men – Nathan Leopold, 19, and Richard Loeb, 18 – decided to commit the perfect murder, when they abducted and killed 14-year-old Bobby Franks in Chicago. "48 Hours" correspondent Erin Moriarty reports on how Leopold & Loeb's murder was solved, and why the crime that shocked the nation still haunts us today.

For more info:

Chicago History Museum, ChicagoUniversity Archives, Northwestern University

     
HARTMAN: Summer vacation and delayed gratification (Video)
When he was a child, correspondent Steve Hartman missed out on playing Hillbilly Golf when his parents drove through Gatlinburg, Tennessee. He has never forgotten that missed opportunity, but finally, decades later, he had a chance to play on the miniature golf course of his dreams.

For more info:

Hillbilly Golf, Gatlinburg, Tenn. (Facebook)

The cast of
The cast of

STAGE: Kyra Sedgwick and the lighter side of disability in "All of Me" | Watch Video
For more than 40 years Emmy Award-winner Kyra Sedgwick has starred in films and on TV, including the series "The Closer," and has shared the world stage with her husband, fellow actor Kevin Bacon. Now, in the Off-Broadway comedy "All of Me," Sedgwick plays the mother of a young disabled woman who is romantically involved with a disabled man. Correspondent Mo Rocca talks with Sedgwick about the play she calls a "family dysfunction story," and with actors Madison Ferris and Danny J. Gomez who say they like the play for not indulging in what's been called "inspiration porn."

For more info:

"All of Me" at the Alice Griffin Jewel Box Theatre at the Pershing Square Signature Center, New York City | Ticket infoFollow Kyra Sedgwick on InstagramFollow Madison Ferris (maddd.hatter) on InstagramFollow Danny J. Gomez on Instagram

Daria Kasatkina serves against Naomi Osaka of Japan in their women's singles third-round match during Day Six of the 2024 Italian Open, May 11, 2024   at Foro Italico in Rome. / Credit: Dan Istitene/Getty Images
Daria Kasatkina serves against Naomi Osaka of Japan in their women's singles third-round match during Day Six of the 2024 Italian Open, May 11, 2024 at Foro Italico in Rome. / Credit: Dan Istitene/Getty Images

SPORTS: Daria Kasatkina, the world's bravest tennis player | Watch Video
For the first half-dozen years of her pro career, Russian-born Daria Kasatkina was an ascending tennis player, not known for being political or particularly outspoken. Then, in February 2022, Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine, and she condemned her country for it. Five months later, an emboldened Kasatkina made another statement she knew could trigger backlash in her homeland, one famously hostile to gay rights: She was in a relationship with another Russian athlete, former Olympic skater Natasha Zabiiako. Kasatkina and Zabiiako talk with "60 Minutes" correspondent Jon Wertheim about the importance of speaking out, and why they can't go home.

For more info:

Follow Daria Kasatkina on InstagramWhat The Vlog by Zabiiako & Kasatkina (YouTube)

     
NATURE: Desert Wildflowers (Extended Video)
We leave you this Sunday with wildflowers in the wind in southern California, at Anza-Borrego Desert State Park. Videographer: Jamie McDonald.
   

WEB EXCLUSIVES:

FROM THE ARCHIVES: Author Caleb Carr (Video)
Caleb Carr, a military historian and novelist who wrote the bestsellers "The Alienist" and "The Angel of Darkness," died on Thursday, May 23, 2024 at the age of 68. In this "CBS Sunday Morning" profile that originally aired on June 5, 2005, Carr talked with correspondent Tracy Smith about the "torturous process" of writing (and building a house); his early encounters with Beat Generation writers who visited his parents' home; teaching military history; and how violence had shaped his worldview and his art.

FROM THE ARCHIVES: Richard Sherman (YouTube Video)
Richard Sherman, half of the Sherman Brothers songwriting duo who penned Disney classics like "It's a Small World" and music for "Mary Poppins," died Saturday, May 25, 2024 at the age of 95. In this October 20, 2013 "Sunday Morning" report, Nancy Giles sat down at the piano with Robert Sherman for a supercalifragilisticexpialidocious trip down memory lane, complete with earworms.

EXTENDED INTERVIEW: Dan Rather (YouTube Video)
In this extended interview with "CBS Sunday Morning" correspondent Lee Cowan, legendary CBS News veteran Dan Rather, now 92, talks about his early life and years in broadcasting, including his experiences with Edward R. Murrow and Walter Cronkite; his proudest moments as a correspondent; the effects that the assassination of President John F. Kennedy and the Vietnam War had on his reporting; the role of social media in journalism today; and why covering some stories means that journalists must accept "danger is your business." 

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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